38 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
38 lines
1.6 KiB
Markdown
git-annex extends git's usual remotes with some [[special_remotes]], that
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are not git repositories. This way you can set up a remote using say,
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Amazon S3, and use git-annex to transfer files into the cloud.
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First, export your Amazon AWS credentials:
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# export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID="08TJMT99S3511WOZEP91"
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# export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="s3kr1t"
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Now, create a gpg key, if you don't already have one. This will be used
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to encrypt everything stored in S3, for your privacy. Once you have
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a gpg key, run `gpg --list-secret-keys` to look up its key id, something
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like "2512E3C7"
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Next, create the S3 remote, and describe it.
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# git annex initremote cloud type=S3 chunk=1MiB keyid=2512E3C7
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initremote cloud (encryption setup with gpg key C910D9222512E3C7) (checking bucket) (creating bucket in US) (gpg) ok
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# git annex describe cloud "at Amazon's US datacenter"
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describe cloud ok
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The configuration for the S3 remote is stored in git. So to make another
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repository use the same S3 remote is easy:
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# export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID="08TJMT99S3511WOZEP91"
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# export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY="s3kr1t"
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# git pull laptop
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# git annex enableremote cloud
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enableremote cloud (gpg) (checking bucket) ok
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Notice that to enable an existing S3 remote, you have to provide the Amazon
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AWS credentials because they were not stored in the repository. (It is
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possible to configure git-annex to do that, but not the default.)
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See [[public_Amazon_S3_remote]] for how to set up a Amazon S3 remote that
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can be used by the public, without them needing AWS credentials.
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See [[special_remotes/S3]] for details about configuring S3 remotes.
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