Mercurial > hg > silvermirror
view silvermirror-whitepaper.txt @ 11:0c11c8102fba
more robust way of getting interfaces
author | k0s <k0scist@gmail.com> |
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date | Wed, 17 Feb 2010 16:17:25 +0000 |
parents | d3d0b9414e19 |
children | 584a847d2491 |
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SilverMirror Whitepaper It is necessary to maintain parallel directory structures of various resources across an arbitrary number of computers. The traditional approach is the central server model, where files live in one canonical location and the network is used to give access to the data. However, this model has deficiencies, chiefly among them that if the server goes down or must be moved a considerable amount of effort must be extended to set up a new central server. Distributed version control, often of nominal use (in the case where a canonical trunk exists) is ideally suited to provide mirroring of desired resources across computers. Implementation A front end to a DVCS - most likely mercurial but potentially bzr - will be written to keep resources in sync across an arbitrary number of computers. The front end, called SilverMirror, may be used to push or pull changes to resources. Optionally, a daemon will monitor changes to resources and push or pull changes at desired intervals. The use should be as natural as possible and require no interaction for everday tasks. A resource consists of a directory and all subdirectories and their contents. Once a resource is denoted as versioned, any change to the resource's directory structure should be mirrored across machines without user intervention. Files matching a pattern may be ignored, either globally or on a per resource basis, for the purpose of versioning. Configuration SilverMirror is configured via an INI file containing a section for each resource and a section for application configuration. The main section, denoted [::SilverMirror::], has the following options: * directory: base directory for SilverMirror. The SilverMirror configuration is stored in ${directory}/.silvermirror . If omitted, the user's home directory is used. * ignore: global patterns of files and directories to ignore. Paths matching these patterns will not be versioned. * reflector: which back-end to use (unison, hg, etc) Each section has the following configuration options: * directory: path of the resource. If a relative path is used, it is joined with the directory setting from the main section. If this setting is not specified, the section name is used as a relative path. * ignore: paths not to version on a per resource basis. This is in addition to the patterns specified by the ignore setting in the main section. * conflict: handler to resolve conflict. * hosts: hosts to push/pull from In order to ensure coherency among resources, all relevant configuration options must be synced prior to push/pull transactions. Default Configuration: [::SilverMirror::] conflict = ClobberRemote Example of a more complex configuration: [::SilverMirror::] conflict.push = ClobberRemote conflict.pull = ClobberLocal Push Push changes to remote resources. When resources are pushed, first changes are pulled from each remote host in turn, conflicts between local and remote changes are resolved (see Behavior on Conflicts), then local modifications are pushed. This is done to keep the resources in sync. When new files are added to the resource they are automatically added to the hg repository. When resource files are edited the changes are pushed to the repository. When a conflict occurs between local resources and remote resources, the conflict handler is used. Pull Get changes to the cloud filesystem resources. If no host is specified, pull changes from all known + accessible hosts. Namespaced Resources It is possible to maintain versioning of a subdirectory within a resource. Example: [docs] directory = /path/to/docs [docs:private] This configuration snippet describes a resource, [docs:private], namespaced within the [docs] resource. [docs:private] inherits configuration and behavior from [docs] but may be dealt with separately. For example, some computers in the cloud may not have [docs:private] specified in their configuration and so will not get a copy of it upon pulling. A common use case is specifying a subdirectory to be omitted with the ignore option in the configuration file, then, when this subdirectory needs to be shared between multiple computers, removing it from the ignore values and including as a namespaced resource. In the above example, because the directory option was not specified in the [docs:private] section, the path to [docs:private] is taken from its namespace (private) and the directory of its parent resource. So its base directory is /path/to/docs/private . If a relative path was specified in the directory option of the [docs:private] section, it would be joined with the base directory of [docs]. Behavior on Conflicts Conflict handlers are set via setuptools entry points. Several conflict handlers are provided with SilverMirror: * ClobberLocal: replace local changes with changes from remote files * ClobberRemote: replace remote file changes with changes from local files * Edit: invoke an editor (default: $EDITOR) to interactively resolve the conflicts The conflict handler may also be specified from the command line: silvermirror push -d ClobberRemote Command Line Usage silvermirror [push|pull] [resource] [options] In the simplest invocation, SilverMirror is used with no command line arguments: silvermirror This pushes changes of the resource as determined by the current working directory after pulling outstanding changes from all applicable remote computers and invoking the conflict handler for push. If the current working directory is not within a resource, all resources will be pushed. Finer control is obtained by specifying command line arguments: [push|pull] : whether to use the push method (which includes pulling for changes; see above) or the pull method. If not specified, the resource is pushed. [resource] : which resource to act upon. This can be the resource name, as specified in the .ini file, or the path to the base directory of the resource. Note that if a path is specified, it must be to the base directory of the resource as SilverMirror has no notion of disparate versioning within a resource. If the resource is not specified, the resource that the current working directory is within is used. If the current working directory is not in a resource path, all resources are acted upon in turn. If the key word "--all" is used, all resources will also be acted upon. [options] : several command line switches are available to the silvermirror program: * -d <handler> : specify which conflict handler to use. <handler> should be the name of the desired conflict handler. A list of all conflict handlers is available with the "--conflict-handlers" option. * -H <host>, --host=<host> : pull and/or push only to specified hosts. If this option is used more than once, the hosts specified will be acted upon. * --conflict-handlers : list the name and description (if specified) for all available conflict handlers. * --help : displays help and usage information Behavior Respecting Versioned Directories SilverMirror does not desire to duplicate versioning on directories already under version control (svn, bzr, hg). These resources are automatically ignore. In a future implementation, these resources would optionally be checked out or updated upon a pull. Automatic Syncronization SilverMirror includes a script that will automatically invoke syncronizing the resources in a specified period of time. This daemon, called silvermirrord, is invoked from the command line with options parallel to the silvermirror program. One additional option, -s, tells how many seconds between syncs. Upon invocation, this program puts itself in the background and performs the desired sync every number of seconds specified. It is important that the conflict handler specified is noninteractive, otherwise the daemon will hang forever. As an alternative, the silvermirror program may be invoked from a cron job. Future Work SilverMirror implements a cloud filesystem which may be accessed nearly transparently by an arbitrary number of computers. Several improvements could extend SilverMirror to solve several deficiencies of modern filesystem. * tagging: in most filesystems, a file has a canonical location. However, it may be desirable to have the file accesible via multiple paths. In practice, this is achieved via symbolic links. However, this requires manual maintaince of links vs the canonical location. Noting that this problem is identical to tagging, a solution minimizing manual intervention could be added to SilverMirror. * update of web documents: modern computers deal heavily with documents via URLs. It is noted that this includes files, the URL of a file with path ${PATH} being file://${PATH} noted implicitly from contexts. However, existing shells and operating systems have no mechanism for indicating that a "file" is a web resource. Such functionality could be added to SilverMirror so that up-to-date versions of web resources could be maintained. This infrastructure could also include notions for updating versioned resources (see Behavior Respecting Versioned Directories) with parallel notation. * portable SilverMirror: a utility should be created to put a SilverMirror backup scheme on portable media. This not only includes a backup of the files, but also the SilverMirror program and all of the files necessary to create a new SilverMirror node.