Author: | [email protected] |
---|---|
Date: | 2020-09-18 |
Copyright: | The Linux Foundation and contributors |
License: | GPLv3+ |
Version: | 2.0.0 |
Grokmirror was written to make replicating large git repository collections more efficient. Grokmirror uses the manifest file published by the origin server in order to figure out which repositories to clone, and to track which repositories require updating. The process is lightweight and efficient both for the primary and for the replicas.
The origin server publishes a json-formatted manifest file containing information about all git repositories that it carries. The format of the manifest file is as follows:
{ "/path/to/bare/repository.git": { "description": "Repository description", "head": "ref: refs/heads/branchname", "reference": "/path/to/reference/repository.git", "forkgroup": "forkgroup-guid", "modified": timestamp, "fingerprint": sha1sum(git show-ref), "symlinks": [ "/location/to/symlink", ... ], } ... }
The manifest file is usually gzip-compressed to preserve bandwidth.
Each time a commit is made to one of the git repositories, it automatically updates the manifest file using an appropriate git hook, so the manifest.js file should always contain the most up-to-date information about the state of all repositories.
The mirroring clients will poll the manifest.js file and download the
updated manifest if it is newer than the locally stored copy (using
Last-Modified
and If-Modified-Since
http headers). After
downloading the updated manifest.js file, the mirrors will parse it to
find out which repositories have been updated and which new repositories
have been added.
Grokmirror 2.0 introduces the concept of "object storage repositories", which aims to optimize how repository forks are stored on disk and served to the cloning clients.
When grok-fsck runs, it will automatically recognize related repositories by analyzing their root commits. If it finds two or more related repositories, it will set up a unified "object storage" repo and fetch all refs from each related repository into it.
- For example, you can have two forks of linux.git:
- torvalds/linux.git:
- refs/heads/master refs/tags/v5.0-rc3 ...
and its fork:
- maintainer/linux.git:
- refs/heads/master refs/heads/devbranch refs/tags/v5.0-rc3 ...
Grok-fsck will set up an object storage repository and fetch all refs from both repositories:
- objstore/[random-guid-name].git
- refs/virtual/[sha1-of-torvalds/linux.git:12]/heads/master refs/virtual/[sha1-of-torvalds/linux.git:12]/tags/v5.0-rc3 ... refs/virtual/[sha1-of-maintainer/linux.git:12]/heads/master refs/virtual/[sha1-of-maintainer/linux.git:12]/heads/devbranch refs/virtual/[sha1-of-maintainer/linux.git:12]/tags/v5.0-rc3 ...
Then both torvalds/linux.git and maintainer/linux.git with be configured to use objstore/[random-guid-name].git via objects/info/alternates and repacked to just contain metadata and no objects.
The alternates repository will be repacked with "delta islands" enabled, which should help optimize clone operations for each "sibling" repository.
Please see the example grokmirror.conf for more details about configuring objstore repositories.
Install grokmirror on the origin server using your preferred way.
IMPORTANT: Only bare git repositories are supported.
You will need to add a hook to each one of your repositories that would update the manifest upon repository modification. This can either be a post-receive hook, or a post-update hook. The hook must call the following command:
/usr/bin/grok-manifest -m /var/www/html/manifest.js.gz \ -t /var/lib/gitolite3/repositories -n `pwd`
The -m flag is the path to the manifest.js file. The git process must be able to write to it and to the directory the file is in (it creates a manifest.js.randomstring file first, and then moves it in place of the old one for atomicity).
The -t flag is to help grokmirror trim the irrelevant toplevel disk path, so it is trimmed from the top.
The -n flag tells grokmirror to use the current timestamp instead of the exact timestamp of the commit (much faster this way).
Before enabling the hook, you will need to generate the manifest.js of all your git repositories. In order to do that, run the same command, but omit the -n and the `pwd` argument. E.g.:
/usr/bin/grok-manifest -m /var/www/html/manifest.js.gz \ -t /var/lib/gitolite3/repositories
The last component you need to set up is to automatically purge deleted
repositories from the manifest. As this can't be added to a git hook,
you can either run the --purge
command from cron:
/usr/bin/grok-manifest -m /var/www/html/manifest.js.gz \ -t /var/lib/gitolite3/repositories -p
Or add it to your gitolite's D
command using the --remove
flag:
/usr/bin/grok-manifest -m /var/www/html/manifest.js.gz \ -t /var/lib/gitolite3/repositories -x $repo.git
If you would like grok-manifest to honor the git-daemon-export-ok
magic file and only add to the manifest those repositories specifically
marked as exportable, pass the --check-export-ok
flag. See
git-daemon(1)
for more info on git-daemon-export-ok
file.
You will need to have some kind of httpd server to serve the manifest file.
Install grokmirror on the replica using your preferred way.
Locate grokmirror.conf and modify it to reflect your needs. The default configuration file is heavily commented to explain what each option does.
Make sure the user "mirror" (or whichever user you specified) is able to write to the toplevel and log locations specified in grokmirror.conf.
You can either run grok-pull manually, from cron, or as a systemd-managed daemon (see contrib). If you do it more frequently than once every few hours, you should definitely run it as a daemon in order to improve performance.
Git repositories should be routinely repacked and checked for corruption. This utility will perform the necessary optimizations and report any problems to the email defined via fsck.report_to ('root' by default). It should run weekly from cron or from the systemd timer (see contrib).
Please examine the example grokmirror.conf file for various things you can tweak.
Because it's developed at kernel.org and "grok" is a mirror of "korg". Also, because it groks git mirroring.
Rsync is extremely inefficient for the purpose of mirroring git trees that mostly consist of a lot of small files that very rarely change. Since rsync must calculate checksums on each file during each run, it mostly results in a lot of disk thrashing.
Additionally, if several repositories share objects between each-other, unless the disk paths are exactly the same on both the remote and local mirror, this will result in broken git repositories.
It is also a bit silly, considering git provides its own extremely efficient mechanism for specifying what changed between revision X and revision Y.