180 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
180 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
# Moving repositories managed by GitLab
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Sometimes you need to move all repositories managed by GitLab to
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another filesystem or another server. In this document we will look
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at some of the ways you can copy all your repositories from
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`/var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories` to `/mnt/gitlab/repositories`.
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We will look at three scenarios: the target directory is empty, the
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target directory contains an outdated copy of the repositories, and
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how to deal with thousands of repositories.
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**Each of the approaches we list can/will overwrite data in the
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target directory `/mnt/gitlab/repositories`. Do not mix up the
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source and the target.**
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## Target directory is empty: use a tar pipe
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If the target directory `/mnt/gitlab/repositories` is empty the
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simplest thing to do is to use a tar pipe. This method has low
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overhead and tar is almost always already installed on your system.
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However, it is not possible to resume an interrupted tar pipe: if
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that happens then all data must be copied again.
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```
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# As the git user
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tar -C /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories -cf - -- . |\
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tar -C /mnt/gitlab/repositories -xf -
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```
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If you want to see progress, replace `-xf` with `-xvf`.
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### Tar pipe to another server
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You can also use a tar pipe to copy data to another server. If your
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'git' user has SSH access to the newserver as 'git@newserver', you
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can pipe the data through SSH.
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```
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# As the git user
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tar -C /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories -cf - -- . |\
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ssh git@newserver tar -C /mnt/gitlab/repositories -xf -
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```
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If you want to compress the data before it goes over the network
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(which will cost you CPU cycles) you can replace `ssh` with `ssh -C`.
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## The target directory contains an outdated copy of the repositories: use rsync
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If the target directory already contains a partial / outdated copy
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of the repositories it may be wasteful to copy all the data again
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with tar. In this scenario it is better to use rsync. This utility
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is either already installed on your system or easily installable
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via apt, yum etc.
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```
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# As the 'git' user
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rsync -a --delete /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/. \
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/mnt/gitlab/repositories
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```
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The `/.` in the command above is very important, without it you can
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easily get the wrong directory structure in the target directory.
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If you want to see progress, replace `-a` with `-av`.
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### Single rsync to another server
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If the 'git' user on your source system has SSH access to the target
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server you can send the repositories over the network with rsync.
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```
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# As the 'git' user
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rsync -a --delete /var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories/. \
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git@newserver:/mnt/gitlab/repositories
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```
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## Thousands of Git repositories: use one rsync per repository
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Every time you start an rsync job it has to inspect all files in
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the source directory, all files in the target directory, and then
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decide what files to copy or not. If the source or target directory
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has many contents this startup phase of rsync can become a burden
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for your GitLab server. In cases like this you can make rsync's
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life easier by dividing its work in smaller pieces, and sync one
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repository at a time.
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In addition to rsync we will use [GNU
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Parallel](http://www.gnu.org/software/parallel/). This utility is
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not included in GitLab so you need to install it yourself with apt
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or yum. Also note that the GitLab scripts we used below were added
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in GitLab 8.1.
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** This process does not clean up repositories at the target location that no
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longer exist at the source. ** If you start using your GitLab instance with
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`/mnt/gitlab/repositories`, you need to run `gitlab-rake gitlab:cleanup:repos`
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after switching to the new repository storage directory.
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### Parallel rsync for all repositories known to GitLab
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This will sync repositories with 10 rsync processes at a time. We keep
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track of progress so that the transfer can be restarted if necessary.
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First we create a new directory, owned by 'git', to hold transfer
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logs. We assume the directory is empty before we start the transfer
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procedure, and that we are the only ones writing files in it.
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```
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# Omnibus
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sudo mkdir /var/opt/gitlab/transfer-logs
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sudo chown git:git /var/opt/gitlab/transfer-logs
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# Source
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sudo -u git -H mkdir /home/git/transfer-logs
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```
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We seed the process with a list of the directories we want to copy.
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```
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# Omnibus
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sudo -u git sh -c 'gitlab-rake gitlab:list_repos > /var/opt/gitlab/transfer-logs/all-repos-$(date +%s).txt'
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# Source
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cd /home/git/gitlab
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sudo -u git -H sh -c 'bundle exec rake gitlab:list_repos > /home/git/transfer-logs/all-repos-$(date +%s).txt'
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```
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Now we can start the transfer. The command below is idempotent, and
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the number of jobs done by GNU Parallel should converge to zero. If it
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does not some repositories listed in all-repos-1234.txt may have been
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deleted/renamed before they could be copied.
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```
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# Omnibus
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sudo -u git sh -c '
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cat /var/opt/gitlab/transfer-logs/* | sort | uniq -u |\
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/usr/bin/env JOBS=10 \
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/opt/gitlab/embedded/service/gitlab-rails/bin/parallel-rsync-repos \
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/var/opt/gitlab/transfer-logs/succes-$(date +%s).log \
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/var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories \
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/mnt/gitlab/repositories
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'
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# Source
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cd /home/git/gitlab
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sudo -u git -H sh -c '
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cat /home/git/transfer-logs/* | sort | uniq -u |\
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/usr/bin/env JOBS=10 \
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bin/parallel-rsync-repos \
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/home/git/transfer-logs/succes-$(date +%s).log \
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/home/git/repositories \
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/mnt/gitlab/repositories
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`
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```
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### Parallel rsync only for repositories with recent activity
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Suppose you have already done one sync that started after 2015-10-1 12:00 UTC.
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Then you might only want to sync repositories that were changed via GitLab
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_after_ that time. You can use the 'SINCE' variable to tell 'rake
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gitlab:list_repos' to only print repositories with recent activity.
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```
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# Omnibus
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sudo gitlab-rake gitlab:list_repos SINCE='2015-10-1 12:00 UTC' |\
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sudo -u git \
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/usr/bin/env JOBS=10 \
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/opt/gitlab/embedded/service/gitlab-rails/bin/parallel-rsync-repos \
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succes-$(date +%s).log \
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/var/opt/gitlab/git-data/repositories \
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/mnt/gitlab/repositories
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# Source
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cd /home/git/gitlab
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sudo -u git -H bundle exec rake gitlab:list_repos SINCE='2015-10-1 12:00 UTC' |\
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sudo -u git -H \
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/usr/bin/env JOBS=10 \
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bin/parallel-rsync-repos \
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succes-$(date +%s).log \
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/home/git/repositories \
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/mnt/gitlab/repositories
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```
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