file live sync daemon based on inotify/kqueue/bsm (Linux, FreeBSD), written in GNU C http://ut.mephi.ru/oss/clsync
Dmitrii Okunev 7effc3eac5 doc: update Motivation section | 3 anos atrás | |
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doc | 4 anos atrás | |
examples | 4 anos atrás | |
freebsd | 4 anos atrás | |
m4 | 3 anos atrás | |
man | 4 anos atrás | |
pkgconfig | 10 anos atrás | |
rpm | 4 anos atrás | |
.doxygen | 4 anos atrás | |
.gitignore | 4 anos atrás | |
.travis.sh | 4 anos atrás | |
.travis.yml | 8 anos atrás | |
CONTRIB | 9 anos atrás | |
DEVELOPING | 11 anos atrás | |
GPL-3 | 4 anos atrás | |
LICENSE | 11 anos atrás | |
Makefile.am | 4 anos atrás | |
NOTES | 11 anos atrás | |
PROTOCOL | 10 anos atrás | |
README.md | 3 anos atrás | |
SHORTHANDS | 10 anos atrás | |
TODO | 9 anos atrás | |
calc.c | 4 anos atrás | |
calc.h | 8 anos atrás | |
cgroup.c | 8 anos atrás | |
cgroup.h | 8 anos atrás | |
clsync.h | 8 anos atrás | |
cluster.c | 5 anos atrás | |
cluster.h | 8 anos atrás | |
common.h | 8 anos atrás | |
configuration.h | 4 anos atrás | |
configure.ac | 3 anos atrás | |
control.c | 8 anos atrás | |
control.h | 8 anos atrás | |
ctx.h | 4 anos atrás | |
error.c | 4 anos atrás | |
error.h | 4 anos atrás | |
fileutils.c | 4 anos atrás | |
fileutils.h | 8 anos atrás | |
gencompilerflags.c | 8 anos atrás | |
glibex.c | 8 anos atrás | |
glibex.h | 8 anos atrás | |
indexes.c | 8 anos atrás | |
indexes.h | 4 anos atrás | |
libclsync.c | 4 anos atrás | |
libclsync.h | 8 anos atrás | |
macros.h | 4 anos atrás | |
main.c | 4 anos atrás | |
main.h | 4 anos atrás | |
malloc.c | 4 anos atrás | |
malloc.h | 4 anos atrás | |
mon_bsm.c | 4 anos atrás | |
mon_bsm.h | 8 anos atrás | |
mon_dtracepipe.c | 8 anos atrás | |
mon_dtracepipe.h | 8 anos atrás | |
mon_fanotify.c | 8 anos atrás | |
mon_fanotify.h | 8 anos atrás | |
mon_gio.c | 4 anos atrás | |
mon_gio.h | 8 anos atrás | |
mon_inotify.c | 4 anos atrás | |
mon_inotify.h | 8 anos atrás | |
mon_kqueue.c | 4 anos atrás | |
mon_kqueue.h | 8 anos atrás | |
port-hacks.h | 8 anos atrás | |
posix-hacks.c | 8 anos atrás | |
posix-hacks.h | 8 anos atrás | |
privileged.c | 4 anos atrás | |
privileged.h | 8 anos atrás | |
program.h.in | 4 anos atrás | |
pthreadex.c | 8 anos atrás | |
pthreadex.h | 8 anos atrás | |
rules.c | 4 anos atrás | |
rules.h | 8 anos atrás | |
socket.c | 4 anos atrás | |
socket.h | 8 anos atrás | |
stringex.c | 8 anos atrás | |
stringex.h | 8 anos atrás | |
sync.c | 4 anos atrás | |
sync.h | 4 anos atrás | |
syscalls.c | 8 anos atrás | |
syscalls.h | 8 anos atrás |
Why clsync
? The first name of the utility was insync
(due to inotify
) but
then I was suggested to use fanotify
instead of inotify
and utility has been
renamed to fasync
. Then I started to intensively write the program and
I faced with some problems in fanotify
(see "inotify vs fanotify"). So I was
have to temporary fallback to inotify
, so I decided that the best name is
"Runtime Sync" or "Live Sync" but rtsync
is a name of some corporation and
lsync
is busy by "lsyncd". So I called it
clsync
that should be interpreted as "lsync but on c" due to "lsyncd" that
written on "LUA" and may be used for similar purposes.
This utility has been written for two purposes:
To do a HA cluster I've tried a lot of different solutions, like "simple rsync by cron", "glusterfs", "ocfs2 over drbd", "shared replicated external storage", "incron + perl + rsync", "inosync", "lsyncd" and so on. When I started to write the utility we were using "lsyncd", "ceph" and "ocfs2 over drbd". However all of this solutions doesn't satisfy me, so I was have to write own utility for this purpose.
To do backups we also tried a lot of different solution, and again I was have to write own utility for this purpose.
The best known (for me) replacement for this utility is "lsyncd", however:
>½
on LUA. There a lot of problems connected with it,
for example:
Long story short: "lsyncd" - is a good and useful utility, just did not fit to our needs well enough. And we spent enough much time on tuning "lsyncd" to realize that we could've already write a new tool specialized to our tasks. So there it is :)
Also clsync
had been used for some other tiny tasks, like to replace
incron/csync2/etc in our HPC-clusters for syncing /etc/{passwd,shadow,group,shells}
files and running post-scripts.
It's said that fanotify is much better than inotify. So I started to write this program with using of fanotify. However I encountered the problem, that fanotify was unable to catch some important events at the moment of writing the program, like "directory creation" or "file deletion". So I switched to "inotify", leaving the code for "fanotify" in the safety... So, don't use "fanotify" in this utility ;).
UPD: Starting with kernels 5.1 we will be able to use fanotify for all events ;)
Linux Distributions
Some distributions already have clsync supported in the main repo:
Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install clsync
An optional clsync socket monitoring and control library is available in the libclsync0 package and its devel files are in the libclsync-dev
Gentoo:
emerge clsync
You may customize all clsync features via a multitude of USE flags.
Alt Linux:
apt-get install clsync
An optional clsync socket monitoring and control library is available in the libclsync package and its devel files are in the libclsync-devel. Examples are located in the clsync-examples package and doxygen API documentation is in clsync-apidocs.
From the Source Code
If it's required to install clsync from the source, first of all, you should install dependencies to compile it. Names may vary in various distributions, but you'll get the idea:
Only the following packages are mandatory:
glib2-devel autoreconf gcc
Dependencies for optional features:
Next step is generating Makefile. To do that usually it's enough to execute:
autoreconf -i && ./configure
You may be interested in various configuration options, so see for details:
./configure --help
Next step is compiling. To compile usually it's enough to execute:
make -j$(nproc)
Next step is installing. To install usually it's enough to execute:
su -c 'make install'
It is also possible to build a portable static binary:
./configure --without-libcgroup --without-gio --disable-shared
make clean all -j$(nproc) LDFLAGS='-all-static'
ldd ./clsync
How to use is described in "man" ;). What is not described, you can ask me personally (see "Support").
See also section 7 of this document.
Example of usage, that works on my PC is in directory "examples". Just run "clsync-start-rsyncdirect.sh" and try to create/modify/delete files/dirs in "example/testdir/from". All modifications should appear (with some delay) in directory "example/testdir/to" ;)
For dummies:
pushd /tmp
git clone https://github.com/clsync/clsync
cd clsync
autoreconf -fi
./configure
make
export PATH_OLD="$PATH"
export PATH="$(pwd):$PATH"
cd examples
./clsync-start-rsyncdirect.sh
export PATH="$PATH_OLD"
Now you can try to make changes in directory "/tmp/clsync/examples/testdir/from" (in another terminal). Wait about 7 seconds after the changes and check directory "/tmp/clsync/examples/testdir/to". To finish the experiment press ^C (control+c) in clsync's terminal.
cd ../..
rm -rf clsync
popd
Note: There's no need to change PATH's value if clsync is installed system-wide, e.g. with
make install
For dummies, again (with "make install"):
pushd /tmp
git clone https://github.com/clsync/clsync
cd clsync
autoreconf -fi
./configure
make
sudo make install
cd examples
./clsync-start-rsyncdirect.sh
Directory "/tmp/clsync/examples/testdir/from" is now synced to "/tmp/clsync/examples/testdir/to" with 7 seconds delay. To terminate the clsync press ^C (control+c) in clsync's terminal.
cd ..
sudo make uninstall
cd ..
rm -rf clsync
popd
For really dummies or/and lazy users, there's a video demonstration: http://ut.mephi.ru/oss/clsync
Mirroring a directory:
clsync -Mrsyncdirect -W/path/to/source_dir -D/path/to/destination_dir
Syncing authorized_keys
files:
mkdir -p /etc/clsync/rules
printf "+w^$\n+w^[^/]+$\n+W^[^/]+/.ssh$\n+f^[^/]+/.ssh/authorized_keys$\n-*" > /etc/clsync/rules/authorized_files_only
clsync -Mdirect -Scp -W/mnt/master/home/ -D/home -R/etc/clsync/rules/authorized_files_only -- -Pfp --parents %INCLUDE-LIST% %destination-dir%
Mirroring a directory, but faster:
clsync -w5 -t5 -T5 -Mrsyncdirect -W/path/to/source_dir -D/path/to/destination_dir
Instant mirroring of a directory:
clsync -w0 -t0 -T0 -Mrsyncdirect -W/path/to/source_dir -D/path/to/destination_dir
Making two directories synchronous:
clsync -Mrsyncdirect --background -z /var/run/clsync0.pid --output syslog -Mrsyncdirect -W/path/to/dir1 -D/path/to/dir2 --modification-signature '*'
clsync -Mrsyncdirect --background -z /var/run/clsync1.pid --output syslog -Mrsyncdirect -W/path/to/dir2 -D/path/to/dir1 --modification-signature '*'
Fixing privileges of a web-site:
clsync -w3 -t3 -T3 -x1 -W/var/www/site.example.org/root -Mdirect -Schown --uid 0 --gid 0 -Ysyslog -b1 --modification-signature uid,gid -- --from=root www-data:www-data %INCLUDE-LIST%
'Atomic' sync:
clsync --exit-on-no-events --max-iterations=20 --mode=rsyncdirect -W/var/www_new -Srsync -- %RSYNC-ARGS% /var/www_new/ /var/www/
Moving a web-server:
clsync --exit-on-no-events --max-iterations=20 --pre-exit-hook=/root/stop-here.sh --exit-hook=/root/start-there.sh --mode=rsyncdirect --ignore-exitcode=23,24 --retries=3 -W /var/www -S rsync -- %RSYNC-ARGS% /var/www/ rsync://clsync@another-host/var/www/
Copying files to slave-nodes using pdcp(1):
clsync -Msimple -S pdcp -W /opt/global -b -Y syslog -- -a %INCLUDE-LIST% %INCLUDE-LIST%
Copying files to slave-nodes using uftp(1):
clsync -Mdirect -S uftp -W/opt/global --background=1 --output=syslog -- -M 248.225.233.1 %INCLUDE-LIST%
A dry running to see rsync(1) arguments that clsync will use:
clsync -Mrsyncdirect -S echo -W/path/to/source_dir -D/path/to/destination_dir
An another dry running to look how clsync will call pdcp(1):
clsync -Msimple -S echo -W /opt/global -b0 -- pdcp -a %INCLUDE-LIST% %INCLUDE-LIST%
Automatically run make build
if any *.c
file changed
printf "%s\n" "+f.c$" "-f" | clsync --have-recursive-sync -W . -R /dev/stdin -Mdirect -r1 --ignore-failures -t1 -w1 -Smake -- build
I've started to implement support of bi-directional syncing with using multicast notifing of other nodes. However it became a long task, so it was suspended for next releases.
However let's solve next hypothetical problem. For example, you're using LXC and trying to replicate containers between two servers (to make failover and load balancing).
In this case you have to sync containers in both directions. However, if you just run clsync to sync containers to neighboring node on both of them, you'll get sync-loop [file-update on A causes file-update on B causes file-update on A causes ...].
Well, in this case I with my colleagues were using separate directories for
every node of cluster (e.g. "/srv/nodes/<NODE NAME>/containers/<CONTAINERS>
")
and syncing every directory only in one direction. That was failover with
load-balancing, but very unconvenient. So I've started to write code for
bi-directional syncing, however it's no time to complete it :(. So
Andrew Savchenko proposed to run one clsync-instance per container. And this's
really good solution. It's just need to start clsync-process when container
starts and stop the process when containers stops. The only problem is
split-brain, that can be solved two ways:
Example of the script is just a script that calls "find" on both sides to determine which side has the latest changes :)
UPD: I've added option "--modification-signature" that helps to prevent syncing file, that is not changed. You can easily use it to prevent sync-loops for bi-directional syncing.
clsync has been ported to FreeBSD.
FreeBSD doesn't support inotify, so there're 3.5 ways to use clsync on it:
And any of this methods is bad (in it's own way), see the excerpt from the manpage:
Possible values:
inotify
inotify(7) [Linux, (FreeBSD via libinotify)]
Native, fast, reliable and well tested Linux FS monitor subsystem.
There's no essential performance profit to use "inotify" instead of
"kevent" on FreeBSD using "libinotify". It backends to "kevent" any‐
way.
FreeBSD users: The libinotify on FreeBSD is still not ready and unus‐
able for clsync to sync a lot of files and directories.
kqueue
kqueue(2) [FreeBSD, (Linux via libkqueue)]
A *BSD kernel event notification mechanism (inc. timer, sockets,
files etc).
This monitor subsystem cannot determine file creation event, but it
can determine a directory where something happened. So clsync is have
to rescan whole dir every time on any content change. Moreover,
kqueue requires an open() on every watched file/dir. But FreeBSD
doesn't allow to open() symlink itself (without following) and it's
highly invasively to open() pipes and devices. So clsync just won't
call open() on everything except regular files and directories. Con‐
sequently, clsync cannot determine if something changed in sym‐
link/pipe/socket and so on. However it still can determine if it
will be created or deleted by watching the parent directory and res‐
caning it on every appropriate event.
Also this API requires to open every monitored file and directory. So
it may produce a huge amount of file descriptors. Be sure that
kern.maxfiles is big enough (in FreeBSD).
CPU/HDD expensive way.
Not well tested. Use with caution!
Linux users: The libkqueue on Linux is not working. He-he :)
bsm
bsm(3) [FreeBSD]
Basic Security Module (BSM) Audit API.
This is not a FS monitor subsystem, actually. It's just an API to
access to audit information (inc. logs). clsync can setup audit to
watch FS events and report it into log. After that clsync will just
parse the log via auditpipe(4) [FreeBSD].
Reliable, but hacky way. It requires global audit reconfiguration
that may hopple audit analysis.
Warning! FreeBSD has a limit for queued events. In default FreeBSD
kernel it's only 1024 events. So choose one of:
- To patch the kernel to increase the limit.
- Don't use clsync on systems with too many file events.
- Use bsm_prefetch mode (but there's no guarantee in this case
anyway).
See also option --exit-on-sync-skip.
Not well tested. Use with caution! Also file /etc/secu‐
rity/audit_control will be overwritten with:
#clsync
dir:/var/audit
flags:fc,fd,fw,fm,cl
minfree:0
naflags:fc,fd,fw,fm,cl
policy:cnt
filesz:1M
unless it's already starts with "#clsync\n" ("\n" is a new line char‐
acter).
bsm_prefetch
The same as bsm but all BSM events will be prefetched by an addi‐
tional thread to prevent BSM queue overflow. This may utilize a lot
of memory on systems with a high FS events frequency.
However the thread may be not fast enough to unload the kernel BSM
queue. So it may overflow anyway.
The default value on Linux is "inotify". The default value on FreeBSD is "kqueue".
I hope you will send me bugreports to make me able to improve the FreeBSD support :)
To get support, you can contact with me this ways:
I started to write "DEVELOPING" and "PROTOCOL" files. You can look there if you wish. ;)
I'll be glad to receive code contribution :)
The astyle command:
astyle --style=linux --indent=tab --indent-cases --indent-switches --indent-preproc-define --break-blocks --pad-oper --pad-paren --delete-empty-lines
Russian:
LVEE (Russian):