git-annex/doc/clusters.mdwn
2024-06-20 10:57:43 -04:00

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A git-annex repository can provide access to its remotes as nodes of a
cluster. This allows other repositories to access the cluster as a single
logical repository.
[[!toc ]]
## using a cluster
For example, a remote "bigserver" that is configured as a cluster will
make available an additional remote "bigserver-mycluster", as well as some
remotes for each node eg "bigserver-node1", "bigserver-node2", etc.
The user can get files from the cluster without caring which node it comes
from:
$ git-annex get foo --from bigserver-mycluster
copy foo (from bigserver-mycluster...) ok
And the user can send files to the cluster, without caring what nodes
they are stored to:
$ git-annex move bar --to bigserver-mycluster
move bar (to bigserver-mycluster...) ok
In fact, a single upload can be sent to every node of the cluster at once.
$ git-annex whereis bar
whereis bar (3 copies)
acae2ff6-6c1e-8bec-b8b9-397a3755f397 -- my cluster [bigserver-mycluster]
9f514001-6dc0-4d83-9af3-c64c96626892 -- node 1 [bigserver-node1]
d81e0b28-612e-4d73-a4e6-6dabbb03aba1 -- node 2 [bigserver-node2]
5657baca-2f11-11ef-ae1a-5b68c6321dd9 -- node 3 [bigserver-node3]
Notice that the file is shown as present in the cluster, as well as on
individual nodes. But the cluster itself does not count as a copy of the file,
so the 3 copies are the copies on individual nodes.
Most other git-annex commands that operate on repositories can also operate on
clusters.
Clusters can only be accessed via ssh.
## configuring a cluster
A new cluster first needs to be initialized. Run [[git-annex-initcluster]] in
the repository that will serve the cluster to clients. In the example above,
this was the "bigserver" repository.
$ git-annex initcluster mycluster
Once a cluster is initialized, the next step is to add nodes to it.
To make a remote be a node of the cluster, configure
`git config remote.name.annex-cluster-node`, setting it to the
name of the cluster.
In the example above, the three cluster nodes were configured like this:
$ git remote add node1 /media/disk1/repo
$ git remote add node2 /media/disk2/repo
$ git remote add node3 /media/disk3/repo
$ git config remote.node1.annex-cluster-node true
$ git config remote.node2.annex-cluster-node true
$ git config remote.node3.annex-cluster-node true
Finally, run `git-annex updatecluster` to record the cluster configuration
in the git-annex branch. That tells other repositories about the cluster.
$ git-annex updatecluster mycluster
Added node node1 to cluster: mycluster
Added node node2 to cluster: mycluster
Added node node3 to cluster: mycluster
Started proxying for node1
Started proxying for node2
Started proxying for node3
## preferred content of clusters
The preferred content of the cluster can be configured. This tells
users what files the cluster as a whole should contain.
To configure the preferred content of a cluster, as well as other related
things like [[groups|git-annex-group]] and [[required_content]], it's easiest
to do the configuration in a repository that has the cluster as a remote.
For example:
git-annex wanted bigserver-mycluster standard
git-annex group bigserver-mycluster archive
By default, when a file is uploaded to a cluster, it is stored on every node of
the cluster. To control which nodes to store to, the [[preferred_content]] of
each node can be configured.
If the preferred content configuration of nodes make none of them
want a copy of a file, the upload to the cluster will fail. That is done to
avoid git-annex picking an arbitrary node. But, the user can bypass the
cluster and send content to any individual node, even if it's not preferred
content of that node.