Plan 9 from Bell Labs’s /usr/web/sources/contrib/nemo/sys/man/8/repl

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.TH REPL 8
.SH NAME
prune, scandb, syncdb \- peer to peer replica management
.SH SYNOPSIS
.B repl/prune
.IR repl ...
.br
.B repl/scandb
[
.B -tv
]
[
.B -p
.I nb
]
[
.B -n
.I id
]
[
.B -r
.I replid
]
[
.B -i
.I excldir
]
.I dir
.I db
.br
.B repl/syncdb
[
.B -12lnrv
]
.I dir1
.I dir2
.I db1
.I db2
[
.IR dir ...
]
.SH DESCRIPTION
These programs implement a peer-to-peer replica management system
for file trees. Each peer is called a replica and holds both the
replicated file tree and a data base. The data base contains
a textual representation of the file tree together with the history
of updates for each file as described below.
Any number of replicas can be defined and
any pair can be synchronized at any time. There is no centralized
server nor there is a synchronization order required to detect
conflicts.
.PP
Replication is done using causal histories as defined by Lamport.
Each file entry in the data base holds
a history of change events.
When a replica creates, changes, or deletes
a file, a change event is added
to the file's history. A change event is a single character
that identifies the replica that did the change. The character is
lower case for creation, data changes, and metadata changes. The
character is upper case for deletion events.
.PP
To synchronize a file between two replicas, their histories for
the file are compared. The file is considered
up to date if the histories are equal. If one of them is a prefix of the
other, it is considered out of date with respect to the other. In this
case the file and its history are updated in the other replica. If the
histories differ, but no one is a prefix of the other, there was
a concurrent update and a conflict is reported.
.PP
.I Scandb
is used to scan the file tree at
.I dir
for changes. It builds a new data base that corresponds to the
tree in disk and compares it with
.IR db .
The program prunes from the scan process any directory not modified
since the last scan performed. Flag
.B -t
disables such prunning and is intended for use in file systems
that do not propagate modification times from the changed file
up to the root directory of the file system.
.PP
The history for a file in the new data base is that found in
.I db
perhaps followed by a change event (when the file has changed).
.PP
Option
.B -n
can be used when there is no
.I db
file. This happens when defining a new replica.
The option argument is the name for the replica and must be a lower
case letter. The change histories in the new data base
will contain a single event (a change in the replica being defined).
.PP
Option
.B -r
can be used to define a new replica with name
.I replid
while creating an initial data base for name
.IR id .
This is useful to build a data base for an already updated
replica that has been copied by other means. See the example below.
.PP
Flag
.B -v
makes the program verbose. It will report any change event noticed.
.PP
To ignore a directory give its name to option
.B -i
using an relative path name starting at the replica directory.
The directory contents will be ignored. The option can be used
multiple times to ignore multiple directories. Be careful to
give the
.B same
ignore arguments to all the replicas.
.PP
To prune the history, you can use
.B -p
and pass the identifier (a number) for the prune event. Such identifier
must be used at all the replicas. See the discussion below.
.PP
.I Syncdb
is used to synchronize replicas. Its arguments are the two
directories and data bases for the replicas being synchronized.
.I Syncdb
operates as said above to detect updates and conflicts. It copies,
creates, and deletes files to bring both replicas to a synchronized
state. If any
.I dir
is supplied, relative to the top-dir of a replica, synchronization applies only to it.
.PP
Flag
.B -v
makes the program report any change made. Flag
.B -n
performs a dry run to report changes between both replicas
without synchronizing them.
The flag
.B -l
can be used to syncrhonize just the left replica (in command line
order) with respect to the other. Flag
.B -r
does the same for the right replica.
.PP
Flags
.B -1
and
.B -2
can be used to resolve conflicts in favor of the first replica (the left one)
and in favor of the second one (the right one).
When there are different conflicts to be gained by different replicas,
one replica can be updated by hand, and then used as the prefered to
settle down all the conflicts.
.PP
To prune file histories follow this procedure.
.IP 1
Be sure that all the peers are synchronized.
.IP 2
Use
.I prune
to prune all the peers. You can pass the names for all the
.I repl
configuration files.
.LP
This program calls
.I scandb
for each replica using the
.B -p
flag. The effect is
to remove all but the last event in the histories for files within the database.
Any other procedure would be very costly or complex,
because it would require finding the maximum common prefix for each
history and removing it from all the replicas.
.PP
Database files are exclusive-open text files that contain the replica
identifier in the first line, followed by one line per file entry.
Each entry contains the file name, the update history,
the user and group identifers, file permissions (8 hex digits),
modification
time (8 hex digits), file length (decimal), and Qid version. The file name
starts with '/' and is relative
to the top directory of the replicated file tree. All fields are separated
by space. Entries for deleted files have their history terminated on uppercase.
.SH EXAMPLE
This defines for the system file tree, excluding
.B /usr
and
.BR /dist ,
a replica called
.BR a .
The same is done for
.B /usr/nemo
excluding the directory
.B /usr/nemo/dist
and
.BR /usr/nemo/tmp .
.EX
	; repl/scandb -n a -i usr -i dist /root /dist/sys.db
	; repl/scandb -n a -i tmp -i dist $home $home/dist/home.db

.EE
.LP
.LP
Now we can replicate both the system and
.B /usr/nemo
into a new laptop by defining two replicas,
named
.BR b ,
and synchronizing them.
.EX
	# at the laptop, booted from the network.
	; mount -c /dev/sdC0/fossil /n/fossil
	; repl/scandb -n b /n/fossil /dist/nautilus.db
	; replica/syncdb /root /fossil /dist/sys.db /dist/nautilus.db
	; mkdir /fossil/$home /fossil/$home/dist
	; repl/scandb -n b -i tmp -i dist /fossil/$home $home/dist/laptop.db
	; replica/syncdb (/ /fossil)^$home $home/dist/^(home.db laptop.db)

.EE
.SH SOURCE
.B /sys/src/cmd/repl
.SH SEE ALSO
.IR repl (1),
.IR replica (1).
.SH BUGS
Append only files are not synchronized to prevent duplication
of file contents.

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