diff options
author | Joey Hess <joey@kitenet.net> | 2013-12-11 17:20:34 -0400 |
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committer | Joey Hess <joey@kitenet.net> | 2013-12-11 17:26:27 -0400 |
commit | fff752a19ced6f8d5f9881efc3c1742b7f17c2c9 (patch) | |
tree | b78a1a574080e1e2ad5988650f95fd0853d2d7a0 /doc/design | |
parent | 1eaff9e88f40a7235290f1278955ce631ab69341 (diff) |
refine protocol
More complicated, but less asynchronous, which will make it easier for
special remote programs to use it, at the expense of some added complexity
in git-annex.
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/design')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/design/external_special_remote_protocol.mdwn | 211 |
1 files changed, 141 insertions, 70 deletions
diff --git a/doc/design/external_special_remote_protocol.mdwn b/doc/design/external_special_remote_protocol.mdwn index da6f14ae8..7256a90d9 100644 --- a/doc/design/external_special_remote_protocol.mdwn +++ b/doc/design/external_special_remote_protocol.mdwn @@ -3,9 +3,9 @@ See [[todo/support_for_writing_external_special_remotes]] for motivation. This is a design for a protocol to be used to communicate between git-annex and a program implementing an external special remote. -The program has a name like `git-annex-remote-$bar`. When -`git annex initremote foo type=$bar` is run, git-annex finds the -appropriate program in PATH. +The external special remote program has a name like +`git-annex-remote-$bar`. When `git annex initremote foo type=$bar` is run, +git-annex finds the appropriate program in PATH. The program is started by git-annex when it needs to access the special remote, and may be left running for a long period of time. This allows @@ -13,44 +13,79 @@ it to perform expensive setup tasks, etc. Note that git-annex may choose to start multiple instances of the program (eg, when multiple git-annex commands are run concurrently in a repository). -Communication is via the programs stdin and stdout. Therefore, the program -must avoid doing any prompting, or outputting anything like eg, progress to -stdout. (Such stuff can be sent to stderr instead.) +## protocol overview + +Communication is via stdin and stdout. Therefore, the external special +remote must avoid doing any prompting, or outputting anything like eg, +progress to stdout. (Such stuff can be sent to stderr instead.) The protocol is line based. Messages are sent in either direction, from -git-annex to the program, and from the program to git-annex. No immediate -reply is made to any message, instead a later message can be sent to reply. +git-annex to the special remote, and from the special remote to git-annex. + +## example session + +The special remote is responsible for sending the first message, indicating +the version of the protocol it is using. + + VERSION 0 + +Once it knows the version, git-annex will send a message telling the +special remote to start up. + + PREPARE -## example +The special remote can now ask git-annex for its configuration, as needed, +and check that it's valid. git-annex responds with the configuration values -For example, git-annex might request that a key be sent to the -remote (Key will be replaced with the key, and File with a file that has -the content to send): + GETCONFIG directory + /media/usbdrive/repo + GETCONFIG automount + true - TRANSFER STORE Key File +Once the special remote is satisfied with its configuration and is +ready to go, it tells git-annex. -Any number of messages can be sent back and forth while that upload -is going on. A common message the program would send is to tell the -progress of the upload (in bytes): + PREPARE-SUCCESS - PROGRESS STORE Key 10240 - PROGRESS STORE Key 20480 +Now git-annex will tell the special remote what to do. Let's suppose +it wants to store a key. -Once the file has been sent, the program can reply with the result: + TRANSFER STORE somekey tmpfile - TRANSFER-SUCCESS STORE Key +The special remote can continue sending messages to git-annex during this +transfer. It will typically send progress messages, indicating how many +bytes have been sent: -## git-annex messages + PROGRESS STORE somekey 10240 + PROGRESS STORE somekey 20480 -These are the messages git-annex may send to the special remote program. +Once the key has been stored, the special remote tells git-annex the result: -* `CONFIGURE KEY=VALUE ...` - Tells the remote its configuration. Any arbitrary KEY(s) can be passed. - Only run once, at startup. + TRANSFER-SUCCESS STORE somekey + +Once git-annex is done with the special remote, it will close its stdin. +The special remote program can then exit. + +## git-annex request messages + +These are the request messages git-annex may send to the special remote +program. None of these messages require an immediate reply. The special +remote can send any messages it likes while handling the requests. + +Once the special remote has finished performing the request, it should +send one of the corresponding replies listed in the next section. + +* `PREPARE` + Tells the special remote it's time to prepare itself to be used. + Only run once, at startup, always immediately after the special remote + sends VERSION. * `INITREMOTE` - Request that the remote be initialized. CONFIGURE will be passed first. - Note that this may be run repeatedly, as a remote is initialized in + Request that the remote initialized itself. This is where any one-time + setup tasks can be done, for example creating an Amazon S3 bucket. + (PREPARE is still sent before this.) + Note: This may be run repeatedly, as a remote is initialized in different repositories, or as the configuration of a remote is changed. + So any one-time setup tasks should be done idempotently. * `GETCOST` Requests the remote return a use cost. Higher costs are more expensive. (See Config/Cost.hs for some standard costs.) @@ -65,30 +100,21 @@ These are the messages git-annex may send to the special remote program. Requests the remote check if a key is present in it. * `REMOVE Key` Requests the remote remove a key's contents. - -## special remote messages +## special remote replies -These are the messages the special remote program can send back to -git-annex. +These should be sent only in response to the git-annex request messages. +(Any sent unexpectedly will be ignored.) +They do not have to be sent immediately after the request; the special +remote can send other messages and queries (listed in sections below) +as it's performing the request. -* `VERSION Int` - Supported protocol version. Current version is 0. Must be sent first - thing at startup, as until it sees this git-annex does not know how to - talk with the special remote program! -* `ERROR ErrorMsg` - Generic error. Can be sent at any time if things get messed up. - It would be a good idea to send this if git-annex sends a command - you do not support. The program should exit after sending this, as - git-annex will not talk to it any further. +* `PREPARE-SUCCESS` + Sent as a response to PREPARE once the special remote is ready for use. * `TRANSFER-SUCCESS STORE|RETRIEVE Key` Indicates the transfer completed successfully. * `TRANSFER-FAILURE STORE|RETRIEVE Key ErrorMsg` Indicates the transfer failed. -* `PROGRESS STORE|RETRIEVE Key Int` - Indicates the current progress of the transfer. May be repeated any - number of times during the transfer process. This is highly recommended - for STORE. (It is not necessary for RETRIEVE.) * `HAS-SUCCESS Key` Indicates that a key has been positively verified to be present in the remote. @@ -107,41 +133,87 @@ git-annex. Indicates the cost of the remote. * `COST-UNKNOWN` Indicates the remote has no opinion of its cost. -* `CONFIGURE-SUCCESS` - Indicates the CONFIGURE provided an acceptable configuration. -* `CONFIGURE-FAILURE ErrorMsg` - Indicates that CONFIGURE provided a bad configuration. -* `INITREMOTE-SUCCESS KEY=VALUE ...` +* `INITREMOTE-SUCCESS Setting=Value ...` Indicates the INITREMOTE succeeded and the remote is ready to use. - The keys and values can optionally be returned. They will be added + The settings and values can optionally be returned. They will be added to the existing configuration of the remote (and may change existing - values in it), and sent back the next time it calls CONFIGURE. + values in it). * `INITREMOTE-FAILURE ErrorMsg` Indicates that INITREMOTE failed. +## special remote messages + +These are messages the special remote program can send to +git-annex at any time. It should not expect any response from git-annex. + +* `VERSION Int` + Supported protocol version. Current version is 0. Must be sent first + thing at startup, as until it sees this git-annex does not know how to + talk with the special remote program! +* `ERROR ErrorMsg` + Generic error. Can be sent at any time if things get messed up. + When possible, use a more specific reply from the list above. + It would be a good idea to send this if git-annex sends a command + you do not support. The program should exit after sending this, as + git-annex will not talk to it any further. +* `PROGRESS STORE|RETRIEVE Key Int` + Indicates the current progress of the transfer. May be repeated any + number of times during the transfer process. This is highly recommended + for STORE. (It is optional but good for RETRIEVE.) + +## special remote queries + +After git-annex has sent the special remote a request, and before the +special remote sends back a reply, git-annex enters quiet mode. It will +avoid sending additional messages. While git-annex is in quiet mode, +the special remote can send queries to it. Queries can not be sent at any +other time. + +When it sees a query, git-annex will respond a line containing +*only* the requested data. + +* `DIRHASH Key` + Gets a two level hash associated with a Key. Something like "abc/def". + This is always the same for any given Key, so can be used for eg, + creating hash directory structures to store Keys in. +* `GETCONFIG Setting` + Gets one of the special remote's configuration settings. +* `SETSTATE Key Value` + git-annex can store state in the git-annex branch on a + per-special-remote, per-key basis. This sets that state. +* `GETSTATE Key` + Gets any state previously stored for the key from the git-annex branch. + Note that some special remotes may be accessed from multiple + repositories, and the state is only eventually consistently synced + between them. If two repositories set different values in the state + for a key, the one that sets it last wins. + ## Simple shell example [[!format sh """ #!/bin/sh set -e -send () { - echo "$@" -} - -send VERSION 0 +echo VERSION 0 while read line; do set -- $line case "$1" in - CONFIGURE) - send CONFIGURE-SCCESS - ;; INITREMOTE) - send INITREMOTE-SUCCESS + # XXX do anything necessary to create resources + # used by the remote. Try to be idempotent. + # Use GETCONFIG to get any needed configuration + # settings. + echo INITREMOTE-SUCCESS ;; GETCOST) - send COST-UNKNOWN + echo COST-UNKNOWN + ;; + PREPARE) + # XXX Use GETCONFIG to get configuration settings, + # and do anything needed to start using the + # special remote here. + echo PREPARE-SUCCESS ;; TRANSFER) key="$3" @@ -150,40 +222,39 @@ while read line; do STORE) # XXX upload file here # XXX when possible, send PROGRESS - send TRANSFER-SUCCESS STORE "$key" + echo TRANSFER-SUCCESS STORE "$key" ;; RETRIEVE) # XXX download file here - send TRANSFER-SUCCESS RETRIEVE "$key" + echo TRANSFER-SUCCESS RETRIEVE "$key" ;; esac ;; HAS) key="$2" - send HAS-UNKNOWN "$key" "not implemented" + echo HAS-UNKNOWN "$key" "not implemented" ;; REMOVE) key="$2" # XXX remove key here - send REMOVE-SUCCESS "$key" + echo REMOVE-SUCCESS "$key" ;; *) - send ERROR "unknown command received: $line" + echo ERROR "unknown command received: $line" exit 1 ;; esac done + +# XXX anything that needs to be done at shutdown can be done here """]] ## TODO * Communicate when the network connection may have changed, so long-running remotes can reconnect. -* Provide a way for remotes to set/get the content of a per-key - file in the git-annex branch. Needed for eg, storing urls, or access keys - used to retrieve a given key. +* uuid discovery during initremote. * Support for splitting files into chunks. -* git-annex hash directory lookup for a key? * Use same verbs as used in special remote interface (instead of different verbs used in Types.Remote). |