clonebundles: rewrite documentation
There are a lot of considerations server operators need to know before
deploying clone bundles. They should be documented. So I rewrote the
extension docs to contain this information.
--- a/hgext/clonebundles.py Sat Oct 17 11:37:08 2015 -0700
+++ b/hgext/clonebundles.py Sat Oct 17 11:23:54 2015 -0700
@@ -1,42 +1,108 @@
# This software may be used and distributed according to the terms of the
# GNU General Public License version 2 or any later version.
-"""server side extension to advertise pre-generated bundles to seed clones.
+"""advertise pre-generated bundles to seed clones (experimental)
+
+"clonebundles" is a server-side extension used to advertise the existence
+of pre-generated, externally hosted bundle files to clients that are
+cloning so that cloning can be faster, more reliable, and require less
+resources on the server.
+
+Cloning can be a CPU and I/O intensive operation on servers. Traditionally,
+the server, in response to a client's request to clone, dynamically generates
+a bundle containing the entire repository content and sends it to the client.
+There is no caching on the server and the server will have to redundantly
+generate the same outgoing bundle in response to each clone request. For
+servers with large repositories or with high clone volume, the load from
+clones can make scaling the server challenging and costly.
-The extension essentially serves the content of a .hg/clonebundles.manifest
-file to clients that request it.
+This extension provides server operators the ability to offload potentially
+expensive clone load to an external service. Here's how it works.
+
+1. A server operator establishes a mechanism for making bundle files available
+ on a hosting service where Mercurial clients can fetch them.
+2. A manifest file listing available bundle URLs and some optional metadata
+ is added to the Mercurial repository on the server.
+3. A client initiates a clone against a clone bundles aware server.
+4. The client sees the server is advertising clone bundles and fetches the
+ manifest listing available bundles.
+5. The client filters and sorts the available bundles based on what it
+ supports and prefers.
+6. The client downloads and applies an available bundle from the
+ server-specified URL.
+7. The client reconnects to the original server and performs the equivalent
+ of :hg:`pull` to retrieve all repository data not in the bundle. (The
+ repository could have been updated between when the bundle was created
+ and when the client started the clone.)
-The clonebundles.manifest file contains a list of URLs and attributes. URLs
-hold pre-generated bundles that a client fetches and applies. After applying
-the pre-generated bundle, the client will connect back to the original server
-and pull data not in the pre-generated bundle.
+Instead of the server generating full repository bundles for every clone
+request, it generates full bundles once and they are subsequently reused to
+bootstrap new clones. The server may still transfer data at clone time.
+However, this is only data that has been added/changed since the bundle was
+created. For large, established repositories, this can reduce server load for
+clones to less than 1% of original.
+
+To work, this extension requires the following of server operators:
+
+* Generating bundle files of repository content (typically periodically,
+ such as once per day).
+* A file server that clients have network access to and that Python knows
+ how to talk to through its normal URL handling facility (typically a
+ HTTP server).
+* A process for keeping the bundles manifest in sync with available bundle
+ files.
+
+Strictly speaking, using a static file hosting server isn't required: a server
+operator could use a dynamic service for retrieving bundle data. However,
+static file hosting services are simple and scalable and should be sufficient
+for most needs.
-Manifest File Format:
+Bundle files can be generated with the :hg:`bundle` comand. Typically
+:hg:`bundle --all` is used to produce a bundle of the entire repository.
+
+:hg:`debugcreatestreamclonebundle` can be used to produce a special
+*streaming clone bundle*. These are bundle files that are extremely efficient
+to produce and consume (read: fast). However, they are larger than
+traditional bundle formats and require that clients support the exact set
+of repository data store formats in use by the repository that created them.
+Typically, a newer server can serve data that is compatible with older clients.
+However, *streaming clone bundles* don't have this guarantee. **Server
+operators need to be aware that newer versions of Mercurial may produce
+streaming clone bundles incompatible with older Mercurial versions.**
+
+The list of requirements printed by :hg:`debugcreatestreamclonebundle` should
+be specified in the ``requirements`` parameter of the *bundle specification
+string* for the ``BUNDLESPEC`` manifest property described below. e.g.
+``BUNDLESPEC=none-packed1;requirements%3Drevlogv1``.
+
+A server operator is responsible for creating a ``.hg/clonebundles.manifest``
+file containing the list of available bundle files suitable for seeding
+clones. If this file does not exist, the repository will not advertise the
+existence of clone bundles when clients connect.
The manifest file contains a newline (\n) delimited list of entries.
Each line in this file defines an available bundle. Lines have the format:
- <URL> [<key>=<value]
+ <URL> [<key>=<value>[ <key>=<value>]]
-That is, a URL followed by extra metadata describing it. Metadata keys and
-values should be URL encoded.
+That is, a URL followed by an optional, space-delimited list of key=value
+pairs describing additional properties of this bundle. Both keys and values
+are URI encoded.
-This metadata is optional. It is up to server operators to populate this
-metadata.
+Keys in UPPERCASE are reserved for use by Mercurial and are defined below.
+All non-uppercase keys can be used by site installations. An example use
+for custom properties is to use the *datacenter* attribute to define which
+data center a file is hosted in. Clients could then prefer a server in the
+data center closest to them.
-Keys in UPPERCASE are reserved for use by Mercurial. All non-uppercase keys
-can be used by site installations.
-
-The server operator is responsible for generating the bundle manifest file.
-
-Metadata Attributes:
+The following reserved keys are currently defined:
BUNDLESPEC
A "bundle specification" string that describes the type of the bundle.
These are string values that are accepted by the "--type" argument of
- `hg bundle`.
+ :hg:`bundle`.
The values are parsed in strict mode, which means they must be of the
"<compression>-<type>" form. See
@@ -50,18 +116,78 @@
clients will still sniff the bundle type from the header of downloaded
files.
+ **Use of this key is highly recommended**, as it allows clients to
+ easily skip unsupported bundles.
+
REQUIRESNI
Whether Server Name Indication (SNI) is required to connect to the URL.
SNI allows servers to use multiple certificates on the same IP. It is
somewhat common in CDNs and other hosting providers. Older Python
versions do not support SNI. Defining this attribute enables clients
- with older Python versions to filter this entry.
+ with older Python versions to filter this entry without experiencing
+ an opaque SSL failure at connection time.
If this is defined, it is important to advertise a non-SNI fallback
URL or clients running old Python releases may not be able to clone
with the clonebundles facility.
Value should be "true".
+
+Manifests can contain multiple entries. Assuming metadata is defined, clients
+will filter entries from the manifest that they don't support. The remaining
+entries are optionally sorted by client preferences
+(``experimental.clonebundleprefers`` config option). The client then attempts
+to fetch the bundle at the first URL in the remaining list.
+
+**Errors when downloading a bundle will fail the entire clone operation:
+clients do not automatically fall back to a traditional clone.** The reason
+for this is that if a server is using clone bundles, it is probably doing so
+because the feature is necessary to help it scale. In other words, there
+is an assumption that clone load will be offloaded to another service and
+that the Mercurial server isn't responsible for serving this clone load.
+If that other service experiences issues and clients start mass falling back to
+the original Mercurial server, the added clone load could overwhelm the server
+due to unexpected load and effectively take it offline. Not having clients
+automatically fall back to cloning from the original server mitigates this
+scenario.
+
+Because there is no automatic Mercurial server fallback on failure of the
+bundle hosting service, it is important for server operators to view the bundle
+hosting service as an extension of the Mercurial server in terms of
+availability and service level agreements: if the bundle hosting service goes
+down, so does the ability for clients to clone. Note: clients will see a
+message informing them how to bypass the clone bundles facility when a failure
+occurs. So server operators should prepare for some people to follow these
+instructions when a failure occurs, thus driving more load to the original
+Mercurial server when the bundle hosting service fails.
+
+The following config options influence the behavior of the clone bundles
+feature:
+
+ui.clonebundleadvertise
+ Whether the server advertises the existence of the clone bundles feature
+ to compatible clients that aren't using it.
+
+ When this is enabled (the default), a server will send a message to
+ compatible clients performing a traditional clone informing them of the
+ available clone bundles feature. Compatible clients are those that support
+ bundle2 and are advertising support for the clone bundles feature.
+
+ui.clonebundlefallback
+ Whether to automatically fall back to a traditional clone in case of
+ clone bundles failure. Defaults to false for reasons described above.
+
+experimental.clonebundles
+ Whether the clone bundles feature is enabled on clients. Defaults to true.
+
+experimental.clonebundleprefers
+ List of "key=value" properties the client prefers in bundles. Downloaded
+ bundle manifests will be sorted by the preferences in this list. e.g.
+ the value "BUNDLESPEC=gzip-v1, BUNDLESPEC=bzip2=v1" will prefer a gzipped
+ version 1 bundle type then bzip2 version 1 bundle type.
+
+ If not defined, the order in the manifest will be used and the first
+ available bundle will be downloaded.
"""
from mercurial.i18n import _
--- a/tests/test-help.t Sat Oct 17 11:37:08 2015 -0700
+++ b/tests/test-help.t Sat Oct 17 11:23:54 2015 -0700
@@ -249,8 +249,8 @@
bugzilla hooks for integrating with the Bugzilla bug tracker
censor erase file content at a given revision
churn command to display statistics about repository history
- clonebundles server side extension to advertise pre-generated bundles to
- seed clones.
+ clonebundles advertise pre-generated bundles to seed clones
+ (experimental)
color colorize output from some commands
convert import revisions from foreign VCS repositories into
Mercurial
@@ -1077,8 +1077,7 @@
Extensions:
- clonebundles server side extension to advertise pre-generated bundles to seed
- clones.
+ clonebundles advertise pre-generated bundles to seed clones (experimental)
prefixedname matched against word "clone"
relink recreates hardlinks between repository clones