summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/doc/walkthrough.mdwn
blob: ab0067470db36b7671337a891d008048e813b975 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
A walkthrough of the basic features of git-annex.

[[!toc]]

## creating a repository

This is very straightforward. Just tell it a description of the repository.

	# mkdir ~/annex
	# cd ~/annex
	# git init
	# git annex init "my laptop"

## adding a remote

Like any other git repository, git-annex repositories have remotes.
Let's start by adding a USB drive as a remote.

	# sudo mount /media/usb
	# cd /media/usb
	# git clone ~/annex
	# cd annex
	# git annex init "portable USB drive"
	# git remote add laptop ~/annex
	# cd ~/annex
	# git remote add usbdrive /media/usb

This is all standard ad-hoc distributed git repository setup.
The only git-annex specific part is telling it the name
of the new repository created on the USB drive.

Notice that both repos are set up as remotes of one another. This lets
either get annexed files from the other. You'll want to do that even
if you are using git in a more centralized fashion.

## adding files

	# cd ~/annex
	# cp /tmp/big_file .
	# cp /tmp/debian.iso .
	# git annex add .
	add big_file ok
	add debian.iso ok
	# git commit -a -m added

When you add a file to the annex and commit it, only a symlink to
the annexed content is committed. The content itself is stored in
git-annex's backend.

## renaming files

	# cd ~/annex
	# git mv big_file my_cool_big_file
	# mkdir iso
	# git mv debian.iso iso/
	# git commit -m moved

You can use any normal git operations to move files around, or even
make copies or delete them.

Notice that, since annexed files are represented by symlinks,
the symlink will break when the file is moved into a subdirectory.
But, git-annex will fix this up for you when you commit --
it has a pre-commit hook that watches for and corrects broken symlinks.

## getting file content

A repository does not always have all annexed file contents available.
When you need the content of a file, you can use "git annex get" to
make it available.

We can use this to copy everything in the laptop's annex to the
USB drive.

	# cd /media/usb/annex
	# git pull laptop master
	# git annex get .
	get my_cool_big_file (copying from laptop...) ok
	get iso/debian.iso (copying from laptop...) ok

Notice that you had to git pull from laptop first, this lets git-annex know
what has changed in laptop, and so it knows about the files present there and
can get them.

## transferring files: When things go wrong

After a while, you'll have serveral annexes, with different file contents.
You don't have to try to keep all that straight; git-annex does 
[[location_tracking]] for you. If you ask it to get a file and the drive
or file server is not accessible, it will let you know what it needs to get
it:

	# git annex get video/hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov
	get video/_why_hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov (not available)
	  I was unable to access these remotes: usbdrive, server
	  Try making some of these repositories available:
	  	5863d8c0-d9a9-11df-adb2-af51e6559a49  -- my home file server
	   	58d84e8a-d9ae-11df-a1aa-ab9aa8c00826  -- portable USB drive
	   	ca20064c-dbb5-11df-b2fe-002170d25c55  -- backup SATA drive
	failed
	# sudo mount /media/usb
	# git annex get video/hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov
	get video/hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov (copying from usbdrive...) ok
	# git commit -a -m "got a video I want to rewatch on the plane"

## removing files

You can always drop files safely. Git-annex checks that some other annex
has the file before removing it.

	# git annex drop iso/debian.iso
	drop iso/Debian_5.0.iso ok
	# git commit -a -m "freed up space"

## removing files: When things go wrong

Before dropping a file, git-annex wants to be able to look at other
remotes, and verify that they still have a file. After all, it could
have been dropped from them too. If the remotes are not mounted/available,
you'll see something like this.

	# git annex drop important_file other.iso
	drop important_file (unsafe)
	  Could only verify the existence of 0 out of 1 necessary copies
	  I was unable to access these remotes: usbdrive
	  Try making some of these repositories available:
	   	58d84e8a-d9ae-11df-a1aa-ab9aa8c00826  -- portable USB drive
	   	ca20064c-dbb5-11df-b2fe-002170d25c55  -- backup SATA drive
	  (Use --force to override this check, or adjust annex.numcopies.)
	failed
	drop other.iso (unsafe)
	  Could only verify the existence of 0 out of 1 necessary copies
          No other repository is known to contain the file.
	  (Use --force to override this check, or adjust annex.numcopies.)
	failed

Here you might --force it to drop `important_file` if you trust your backup.
But `other.iso` looks to have never been copied to anywhere else, so if
it's something you want to hold onto, you'd need to transfer it to
some other repository before dropping it.

## using ssh remotes

So far in this walkthrough, git-annex has been used with a remote
repository on a USB drive. But it can also be used with a git remote
that is truely remote, a host accessed by ssh.

Say you have a desktop on the same network as your laptop and want
to clone the laptop's annex to it:

	# git clone ssh://mylaptop/home/me/annex ~/annex
	# cd ~/annex
	# git annex init "my desktop"

Now you can get files and they will be transferred by `scp`:

	# git annex get my_cool_big_file
	get my_cool_big_file (getting UUID for origin...) (copying from origin...)
	WORM:1285650548:2159:my_cool_big_file       100% 2159     2.1KB/s   00:00
	ok

When you drop files, git-annex will ssh over to the remote and make
sure the file's content is still there before removing it locally:

	# git annex drop my_cool_big_file
	drop my_cool_big_file (checking origin..) ok

Note that normally git-annex prefers to use non-ssh remotes, like
a USB drive, before ssh remotes. They are assumed to be faster/cheaper to
access, if available. There is a annex-cost setting you can configure in
`.git/config` to adjust which repositories it prefers. See
[[the_man_page|git-annex]] for details.

Also, note that you need full shell access for this to work -- 
git-annex needs to be able to ssh in and run commands.

## moving file content between repositories

Often you will want to move some file contents from a repository to some
other one. For example, your laptop's disk is getting full; time to move
some files to an external disk before moving another file from a file
server to your laptop. Doing that by hand (by using `git annex get` and
`git annex drop`) is possible, but a bit of a pain. `git annex move`
makes it very easy.

	# git annex move my_cool_big_file --to usbdrive
	move my_cool_big_file (moving to usbdrive...) ok
	# git annex move video/hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov --from fileserver
	move video/hackity_hack_and_kaxxt.mov (moving from fileserver...)
	WORM:1274316523:86050597:hackity_hack_and_kax 100%   82MB 199.1KB/s   07:02
	ok

## using the URL backend

git-annex has multiple key-value [[backends]]. So far this walkthrough has
demonstrated the default, WORM (Write Once, Read Many) backend. 

Another handy backend is the URL backend, which can fetch file's content
from remote URLs. Here's how to set up some files in your repository
that use this backend:

	# git annex fromkey --backend=URL --key=http://www.archive.org/somefile somefile
	fromkey somefile ok
	# git commit -m "added a file from the Internet Archive"

Now you if you ask git-annex to get that file, it will download it, 
and cache it locally.

	# git annex get somefile
	get somefile (downloading)
	#########################################################################100.0%
	ok

You can always drop files downloaded by the URL backend. It is assumed
that the URL is stable; no local backup is kept.

	# git annex drop somefile
	drop somefile (ok)