Commit graph

34314 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Hess
8e322f76bc
updates 2024-06-27 12:57:08 -04:00
Joey Hess
3dad9446ce
distributed cluster cycle prevention
Added BYPASS to P2P protocol, and use it to avoid cycling between
cluster gateways.

Distributed clusters are working well now!
2024-06-27 12:20:22 -04:00
Joey Hess
effaf51b1f
avoid loop between cluster gateways
The VIA extension is still needed to avoid some extra work and ugly
messages, but this is enough that it actually works.

This filters out the RemoteSides that are a proxied connection via a
remote gateway to the cluster.

The VIA extension will not filter those out, but will send VIA to them
on connect, which will cause the ones that are accessed via the listed
gateways to be filtered out.
2024-06-26 15:29:59 -04:00
Joey Hess
4172109c8d
support multi-gateway clusters
VIA extension still needed otherwise a copy to a cluster can loop
forever.
2024-06-26 15:07:03 -04:00
Joey Hess
8b6708e745
update for multi-gateway clusters 2024-06-26 14:40:25 -04:00
Joey Hess
07e899c9d3
git-annex-shell: proxy nodes located beyond remote cluster gateways
Walking a tightrope between security and convenience here, because
git-annex-shell needs to only proxy for things when there has been
an explicit, local action to configure them.

In this case, the user has to have run `git-annex extendcluster`,
which now sets annex-cluster-gateway on the remote.

Note that any repositories that the gateway is recorded to
proxy for will be proxied onward. This is not limited to cluster nodes,
because checking the node log would not add any security; someone could
add any uuid to it. The gateway of course then does its own
checking to determine if it will allow proxying for the remote.
2024-06-26 12:56:16 -04:00
Joey Hess
1ec2fecf3f
set up proxies for cluster nodes that are themselves proxied via a remote
When there are multiple gateways to a cluster, this sets up proxying
for nodes that are accessed via a remote gateway.

Eg, when running in nyc and amsterdam is the remote gateway,
and it has node1 and node2, this sets up proxying for
amsterdam-node1 and amsterdam-node2. A client that has nyc as a remote
will see proxied remotes nyc-amsterdam-node1 and nyc-amsterdam-node2.
2024-06-26 11:24:55 -04:00
Joey Hess
02bf3ddc3f
updatecluster: support multiple gateways
Just look at the existing proxied remotes that correspond to already
existing nodes of the cluster, and keep those nodes in the cluster.
While adding any remotes of the local repo that are configured as
cluster nodes. This allows removing cluster nodes from the local repo
and updating, without it also removing nodes provided by other gateways.
2024-06-26 10:51:14 -04:00
Joey Hess
0b72b85df5
added git-annex extendcluster
This works, but updatecluster does not work yet in multi-gateway
clusters, nor do gateways relay to other gateways.
2024-06-26 10:26:54 -04:00
Joey Hess
798d6f6a46
todo 2024-06-25 17:58:45 -04:00
Joey Hess
e3dd29409b
improve docs 2024-06-25 17:50:22 -04:00
Joey Hess
0a1001dbfb
update 2024-06-25 17:26:26 -04:00
Joey Hess
9a8dcb58cd
design for distributed clusters 2024-06-25 17:20:49 -04:00
Joey Hess
b9889917a3
thoughts on cycles
Rejected the idea of automatically instantiating remotes for proxies-of-proxies.
That needs cycle protection, while the current behavior, which happened
for free, is that running git-annex updateproxy on the proxy can be used
to configure it, but only for topologies that actually exist.
2024-06-25 15:32:11 -04:00
Joey Hess
cec2848e8a
support annex.jobs for clusters 2024-06-25 14:54:20 -04:00
Joey Hess
5ede109ae5
gave up on upload fanout to cluster's proxy
The problem with that idea is that the cluster's proxy is necessarily a
remote, and necessarily one that we'll want to sync with, since the git
repository is stored there. So when its preferred content wants a file,
and the cluster does too, the file will get uploaded to it as well as to
the cluster. With fanout, the upload to the cluster will populate the
proxy as well, avoiding a second upload. But only if the file is sent to
the cluster first. If it's sent to the proxy first, there will be two
uploads.

Another, lesser problem is that a repository can proxy for more than one
cluster. So when does it make sense to drop content from the repository?
It could be done when dropping from one cluster, but what of the other
one?

This complication was not necessary anyway. Instead, if it's desirable
to have some content accessed from close to the proxy, one of the
cluster nodes can just be put on the same filesystem as it. That will be
just as fast as storing the content on the proxy.
2024-06-25 13:35:12 -04:00
Joey Hess
1bfe7f8a53
honor preferred content settings of cluster nodes
Except when no nodes want a file, it has to be stored somewhere, so
store it on all. Which is not really desirable, but neither is having to
pick one.

ProtoAssociatedFile deserialization is rather broken, and this could
possibly affect preferred content expressions that match on filenames.

The inability to roundtrip whitespace like tabs and newlines through is
not a problem because preferred content expressions can't be written
that match on whitespace such as a tab. For example:

joey@darkstar:~/tmp/bench/z>git-annex wanted  origin-node2 'exclude=*CTRL-VTab*'
wanted origin-node2
git-annex: Parse error: Parse failure: near "*"

But, the filtering of control characters could perhaps be a problem. I think
that filtering is now obsolete, git-annex has comprehensive filtering of
control characters when displaying filenames, that happens at a higher level.
However, I don't want to risk a security hole so am leaving in that filtering
in ProtoAssociatedFile deserialization for now.
2024-06-25 11:43:09 -04:00
Joey Hess
202ea3ff2a
don't sync with cluster nodes by default
Avoid `git-annex sync --content` etc from operating on cluster nodes by default
since syncing with a cluster implicitly syncs with its nodes. This avoids a
lot of unncessary work when a cluster has a lot of nodes just in checking
if each node's preferred content is satisfied. And it avoids content
being sent to nodes individually, so instead syncing with clusters always
fanout uploads to nodes.

The downside is that there are situations where a cluster's preferred content
settings can be met, but those of its nodes are not. Or where a node does not
contain a key, but the cluster does, and there are not enough copies of the key
yet, so it would be desirable the send it there. I think that's an acceptable
tradeoff. These kind of situations are ones where the cluster itself should
probably be responsible for copying content to the node. Which it can do much
less expensively than a client can. Part of the balanced preferred content
design that I will be working on in a couple of months involves rebalancing
clusters, so I expect to revisit this.

The use of annex-sync config does allow running git-annex sync with a specific
node, or nodes, and it will sync with it. And it's also possible to set
annex-sync git configs to make it sync with a node by default. (Although that
will require setting up an explicit git remote for the node rather than relying
on the proxied remote.)

Logs.Cluster.Basic is needed because Remote.Git cannot import Logs.Cluster
due to a cycle. And the Annex.Startup load of clusters happens
too late for Remote.Git to use that. This does mean one redundant load
of the cluster log, though only when there is a proxy.
2024-06-25 10:24:38 -04:00
Joey Hess
b8016eeb65
add annex-proxied
This makes git-annex sync and similar not treat proxied remotes as git
syncable remotes.

Also, display in git-annex info remote when the remote is proxied.
2024-06-24 10:16:59 -04:00
Joey Hess
0c111fc96a
fix git-annex sync --content with proxied remotes
Loading the remote list a second time was removing all proxied remotes.
That happened because setting up the proxied remote added some config
fields to the in-memory git config, and on the second load, it saw those
configs and decided not to overwrite them with the proxy.

Now on the second load, that still happens. But now, the proxied
git configs are used to generate a remote same as if those configs were
all set. The reason that didn't happen before was twofold,
the gitremotes cache was not dropped, and the remote's url field was not
set correctly.

The problem with the remote's url field is that while it was marked as
proxy inherited, all other proxy inherited fields are annex- configs.
And the code to inherit didn't work for the url field.

Now it all works, but git-annex sync is left running git push/pull on
the proxied remote, which doesn't work. That still needs to be fixed.
2024-06-24 09:45:51 -04:00
Joey Hess
60413a2557
update 2024-06-23 16:38:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
5d8bdac38e
upload fanout resume seems free of fenceposts
Tested it with small chunk sizes (like 2) and resumes that were
eg 1 byte from the end of the file or beginning of file.

Also, git-annex testremote passes now against a cluster!
2024-06-23 16:22:39 -04:00
Joey Hess
9e070470f4
update 2024-06-23 12:48:22 -04:00
Joey Hess
3cd7969823
update 2024-06-23 12:31:00 -04:00
Joey Hess
d0aec8f623
always check numcopies when moving from cluster
When the destination does not start with a copy, the cluster has one or
more copies. If more, dropping would reduce the number of copies, so
numcopies must be checked.

Considered checking how many nodes of the cluster contain a copy. If
only 1 node does, it could allow a move without checking numcopies.
The problem with that, though, is that other nodes of the cluster could
have copies that we don't know about. And dropping from a cluster tries
to drop from all nodes, so will drop even from those. So any drop from a
cluster can remove more than 1 copy.
2024-06-23 12:00:50 -04:00
Joey Hess
ec5b6454f4
todo 2024-06-23 10:09:35 -04:00
Joey Hess
2762f9c4ce
fix location log update for copy to 1-node cluster 2024-06-23 09:53:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
5b332a87be
dropping from clusters
Dropping from a cluster drops from every node of the cluster.
Including nodes that the cluster does not think have the content.
This is different from GET and CHECKPRESENT, which do trust the
cluster's location log. The difference is that removing from a cluster
should make 100% the content is gone from every node. So doing extra
work is ok. Compare with CHECKPRESENT where checking every node could
make it very expensive, and the worst that can happen in a false
negative is extra work being done.

Extended the P2P protocol with FAILURE-PLUS to handle the case where a
drop from one node succeeds, but a drop from another node fails. In that
case the entire cluster drop has failed.

Note that SUCCESS-PLUS is returned when dropping from a proxied remote
that is not a cluster, when the protocol version supports it. This is
because P2P.Proxy does not know when it's proxying for a single node
cluster vs for a remote that is not a cluster.
2024-06-23 09:43:40 -04:00
Joey Hess
7bbd822a17
avoid using cluster nodes in drop proof when dropping from cluster
This is obviously necessary in order for dropping from a cluster to be able to
drop from all nodes.

It also avoids violating numcopies when a cluster node is a special remote.
If it were used in the drop proof, nothing would prevent the cluster from
dropping from it.
2024-06-23 06:20:11 -04:00
Joey Hess
5a4b4b59b9
update 2024-06-23 05:26:45 -04:00
Joey Hess
53674e8abb
Merge branch 'master' into proxy 2024-06-20 11:20:26 -04:00
Joey Hess
53598e5154
merge from proxy branch 2024-06-20 11:20:16 -04:00
Joey Hess
d89ac8c6ee
Merge branch 'master' of ssh://git-annex.branchable.com 2024-06-20 11:03:30 -04:00
Joey Hess
9173095d11
add my distribits talk 2024-06-20 11:03:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
ff5fe4e759
clusters documentation 2024-06-20 10:57:43 -04:00
Joey Hess
032d3902d8
wording 2024-06-20 10:15:24 -04:00
joris
b35be4b656 Added a comment 2024-06-20 09:58:05 +00:00
jochen.keil@38b1f86ab65128dab3e62e726403ceee4f5141bf
4da453e30c 2024-06-19 15:46:26 +00:00
Joey Hess
54307af8c0
more on proxying special remotes 2024-06-19 06:40:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
097ef9979c
towards a design for proxying to special remotes 2024-06-19 06:15:03 -04:00
Joey Hess
f18740699e
P2P protocol version 2, adding SUCCESS-PLUS and ALREADY-HAVE-PLUS
Client side support for SUCCESS-PLUS and ALREADY-HAVE-PLUS
is complete, when a PUT stores to additional repositories
than the expected on, the location log is updated with the
additional UUIDs that contain the content.

Started implementing PUT fanout to multiple remotes for clusters.
It is untested, and I fear fencepost errors in the relative
offset calculations. And it is missing proxying for the protocol
after DATA.
2024-06-18 16:21:40 -04:00
Joey Hess
fb0fd78485
only use a remote as a node when git configuration is set
Avoids someone writing to cluster.log and nominating remotes
of someone else's repository as a cluster.
2024-06-18 11:37:38 -04:00
Joey Hess
f049156a03
checkpresent support for clusters
This assumes that the proxy for a cluster has up-to-date location
logs. If it didn't, it might proxy the checkpresent to a node that no
longer has the content, while some other node still does, and so
it would incorrectly appear that the cluster no longer contains the
content.

Since cluster UUIDs are not stored to location logs,
git-annex fsck --fast when claiming to fix a location log when
that occurred would not cause any problems. And presumably the location
tracking would later get sorted out.

At least usually, changes to the content of nodes goes via the proxy,
and it will update its location logs, so they will be accurate. However,
if there were multiple proxies to the same cluster, or nodes were
accessed directly (or via proxy to the node and not the cluster),
the proxy's location log could certainly be wrong.

(The location log access for GET has the same issues.)
2024-06-18 11:16:16 -04:00
Joey Hess
88d9a02f7c
initial, working support for getting from clusters
Currently tends to put all the load on a single node, which will need to
be improved.
2024-06-18 11:01:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
8290f70978
update 2024-06-18 10:08:15 -04:00
yarikoptic
28029d6668 original report / question 2024-06-18 13:57:23 +00:00
Joey Hess
e2fd2ee2bd
update 2024-06-17 09:31:44 -04:00
Joey Hess
3970bbb03b
Merge branch 'master' into proxy 2024-06-17 09:29:34 -04:00
Joey Hess
64afbb0b93
don't count clusters as copies, continued
Handled limitCopies, as well as everything using fromNumCopies and
fromMinCopies.

This should be everything, probably.

Note that, git-annex info displays a count of repositories, which still
includes cluster. I think that's ok. It would be possible to filter out
clusters there, but to the user they're pretty much just another
repository. The numcopies displayed by eg `git-annex info .` does not
include clusters.
2024-06-16 15:14:53 -04:00
Joey Hess
780367200b
remove dead nodes when loading the cluster log
This is to avoid inserting a cluster uuid into the location log when
only dead nodes in the cluster contain the content of a key.

One reason why this is necessary is Remote.keyLocations, which excludes
dead repositories from the list. But there are probably many more.

Implementing this was challenging, because Logs.Location importing
Logs.Cluster which imports Logs.Trust which imports Remote.List resulted
in an import cycle through several other modules.

Resorted to making Logs.Location not import Logs.Cluster, and instead
it assumes that Annex.clusters gets populated when necessary before it's
called.

That's done in Annex.Startup, which is run by the git-annex command
(but not other commands) at early startup in initialized repos. Or,
is run after initialization.

Note that is Remote.Git, it is unable to import Annex.Startup, because
Remote.Git importing Logs.Cluster leads the the same import cycle.
So ensureInitialized is not passed annexStartup in there.

Other commands, like git-annex-shell currently don't run annexStartup
either.

So there are cases where Logs.Location will not see clusters. So it won't add
any cluster UUIDs when loading the log. That's ok, the only reason to do
that is to make display of where objects are located include clusters,
and to make commands like git-annex get --from treat keys as being located
in a cluster. git-annex-shell certainly does not do anything like that,
and I'm pretty sure Remote.Git (and callers to Remote.Git.onLocalRepo)
don't either.
2024-06-16 14:39:44 -04:00