173 lines
5 KiB
Markdown
173 lines
5 KiB
Markdown
# goals
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* be configured like a regular git remote, with an unusual url
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or other configuration
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* receive notifications when a remote has received new commits,
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and take some action
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* optionally, do receive-pack and send-pack to a remote that
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is only accessible over an arbitrary network transport
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(like assistant does with XMPP)
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* optionally, send/receive git-annex objects to remote
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over an arbitrary network transport
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# difficulties
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* authentication & configuration
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* multiple nodes may be accessible over a single network transport,
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with it desirable to sync with any/all of them. For example, with
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XMPP, there can be multiple friends synced with. This means that
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one git remote can map to multiple remote nodes. Specific to git-annex,
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this means that a set of UUIDs known to be associated with the remote
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needs to be maintained, while currently each remote can only have one
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annex-uuid in .git/config.
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# payoffs
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* support [[assistant/telehash]]!
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* Allow running against a normal ssh git remote. This would run
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git-annex-shell on the remote, watching for changes, and so be able to
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notify when a commit was pushed to the remote repo. This would let the
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assistant immediately notice and pull. So the assistant would be fully
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usable with a single ssh remote and no other configuration!
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**do this first**
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* clean up existing XMPP support, make it not a special case, and not
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tightly tied to the assistant
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* git-remote-daemon could be used independantly of git-annex,
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in any git repository.
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# design
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Let git-remote-daemon be the name. Or for git-annex,
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`git annex remotedaemon`.
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It runs in one of two ways:
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1. Forked to background, using a named pipe for the control protocol.
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2. With --foreground, the control protocol goes over stdio.
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Either way, behavior is the same:
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* Get a list of remotes to act on by looking at .git/config
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* Automatically notices when a remote has changes to branches
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matching remote.$name.fetch, and pulls them down to the appropriate
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location.
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* When the control protocol informs it about a new ref that's available,
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it offers the ref to any interested remotes.
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# control protocol
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This is an asynchronous protocol. Ie, either side can send any message
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at any time, and the other side does not send a reply.
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It is line based and intended to be low volume and not used for large data.
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TODO: Expand with commands for sending/receiving git-annex objects, and
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progress during transfer.
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TODO: Will probably need to add something for whatever pairing is done by
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the webapp.
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## emitted messages
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* `CONNECTED uri`
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Sent when a connection has been made with a remote.
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* `DISCONNECTED uri`
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Sent when connection with a remote has been lost.
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* `SYNCING uri`
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Indicates that a pull or a push with a remote is in progress.
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Always followed by DONESYNCING.
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* `DONESYNCING uri 1|0`
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Indicates that syncing with a remote is done, and either succeeded
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(1) or failed (0).
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* `WARNING uri string`
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A message to display to the user about a remote.
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## consumed messages
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* `PAUSE`
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The user has requested a pause.
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git-remote-daemon should close connections and idle.
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* `LOSTNET`
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The network connection has been lost.
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git-remote-daemon should close connections and idle.
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* `RESUME`
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Undoes PAUSE or LOSTNET.
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Start back up network connections.
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* `CHANGED ref ...`
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Indicates that a ref is new or has changed. These can be offered to peers,
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and peers that are interested in them can pull the content.
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* `RELOAD`
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Indicates that configs have changed. Daemon should reload .git/config
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and/or restart.
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Possible config changes include adding a new remote, removing a remote,
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or setting `remote.<name>.annex-sync` to configure whether to sync with a
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particular remote.
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* `STOP`
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Shut down git-remote-daemon
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(When using stdio, it also should shutdown when it reaches EOF on
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stdin.)
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# encryption & authentication
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For simplicity, the network transports have to do their own end-to-end
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encryption. Encryption is not part of this design.
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(XMPP does not do end-to-end encryption, but might be supported
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transitionally.)
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Ditto for authentication that we're talking to who we intend to talk to.
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Any public key data etc used for authentication is part of the remote's
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configuration (or hidden away in a secure chmodded file, if necessary).
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This design does not concern itself with authenticating the remote node,
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it just takes the auth token and uses it.
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For example, in telehash, each node has its own keypair, which is used
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or authentication and encryption, and is all that's needed to route
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messages to that node.
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# network level protocol
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How do peers communicate with one another over the network?
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This seems to need to be network-layer dependant. Telehash will need
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one design, and git-annex-shell on a central ssh server has a very different
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(and much simpler) design.
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## ssh
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`git-annex-shell notifychanges` is run, and speaks a simple protocol
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over stdio to inform when refs on the remote have changed.
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No pushing is done for CHANGED, since git handles ssh natively.
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TODO: test!
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## telehash
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TODO
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## xmpp
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Reuse [[assistant/xmpp]]
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