Difference between revisions of "INTERNETARCHIVE.BAK/git-annex implementation"
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* after filling up shard1, the git repo had grown to 196 mb | * after filling up shard1, the git repo had grown to 196 mb | ||
* We aimed for 4 copies of every file downloaded, but a few files got 5-8 copies made, due to eg, races and manual downloads. Want to keep an eye on this with future shards. | * We aimed for 4 copies of every file downloaded, but a few files got 5-8 copies made, due to eg, races and manual downloads. Want to keep an eye on this with future shards. | ||
* We got SHARD1 fully downloaded between April 1-6th. It took a while to ramp up as people came in, so later shards may download faster. Also, 2/3 of SHARD2 was | * We got SHARD1 fully downloaded between April 1-6th. It took a while to ramp up as people came in, so later shards may download faster. Also, 2/3 of SHARD2 was downloaded during this same time period. | ||
downloaded during this same time period. | |||
== Status == | == Status == | ||
You can find an initial graph of the status of [http://teamarchive1.fnf.archive.org/ia.bak/ here], and exact numbers [http://iabak.archiveteam.org/stats/ here]. | You can find an initial graph of the status of [http://teamarchive1.fnf.archive.org/ia.bak/ here], and exact numbers [http://iabak.archiveteam.org/stats/ here]. |
Revision as of 10:44, 8 April 2015
This page addresses a git-annex implementation of INTERNETARCHIVE.BAK.
For more information, see http://git-annex.branchable.com/design/iabackup/
First tasks
Some first steps to work on:
- Get a list of files, checksums, and urls. (done)
- Write a script to generate a git-annex repository with 100k files from the list. (done)
- Set up a server to serve up the git repos. Any linux system with a few hundred gb of disk and ssh and git-annex installed will do. It needs to accept incoming ssh connections from registered clients, only letting them run git-annex-shell. (done)
- Put one shard repo on the server to start. (done)
- Manually register a few clients to start, have them manually download some files, and `git annex sync` their state back to the server. See how it all hangs together. (done)
- Get that first shard backed up enough to be able to say, "we have successfully backed up 1/1770th of the IA!" (done!)
Middle tasks
- get fscking and dead client expiry working for 1st shard
- Test a restore of that first shard. Tell git-annex the content is no longer in the IA. Get the clients to upload it to our server.
Later tasks
- Create all 1770 shards, and see how that scales.
- Write pre-receive git hook, to reject pushes of branches other then the git-annex branch (already done), and prevent bad/malicious pushes of the git-annex branch
- Write client registration interface, which generates the client's ssh private key, git-annex UUID, and sends them to the client
- Client runtime environment (docker image maybe?) with warrior-like interface (all that needs to do is configure things and get git-annex running)
SHARD1
This is our first part of the IA that we want to get backed up. If we succeed, we will have backed up 1/1770th of the Internet Archive. This git-annex repository contains 100k files, the entire collections "internetarchivebooks" and "usenethistorical".
To help backing up shard1, checkout this git repository: <https://github.com/ArchiveTeam/IA.BAK>
The iabak script will set you up and get you downloading files from the IA into your backup drive.
Some stats about the files this repository is tracking:
- number of files: 103343
- total file size: 2.91 terabytes
- size of the git repository itself was 51 megabytes to start
- after filling up shard1, the git repo had grown to 196 mb
- We aimed for 4 copies of every file downloaded, but a few files got 5-8 copies made, due to eg, races and manual downloads. Want to keep an eye on this with future shards.
- We got SHARD1 fully downloaded between April 1-6th. It took a while to ramp up as people came in, so later shards may download faster. Also, 2/3 of SHARD2 was downloaded during this same time period.
Status
You can find an initial graph of the status of here, and exact numbers here.