Maintaining a Subversion repository can be daunting, mostly due to the complexities inherent in systems that have a database backend. Doing the task well is all about knowing the tools—what they are, when to use them, and how. This section will introduce you to the repository administration tools provided by Subversion and discuss how to wield them to accomplish tasks such as repository data migration, upgrades, backups, and cleanups.
Subversion provides a handful of utilities useful for creating, inspecting, modifying, and repairing your repository. Let's look more closely at each of those tools. Afterward, we'll briefly examine some of the utilities included in the Berkeley DB distribution that provide functionality specific to your repository's database backend not otherwise provided by Subversion's own tools.
The svnadmin program is the repository administrator's best friend. Besides providing the ability to create Subversion repositories, this program allows you to perform several maintenance operations on those repositories. The syntax of svnadmin is similar to that of other Subversion command-line programs:
$ svnadmin help general usage: svnadmin SUBCOMMAND REPOS_PATH [ARGS & OPTIONS ...] Type 'svnadmin help <subcommand>' for help on a specific subcommand. Type 'svnadmin --version' to see the program version and FS modules. Available subcommands: crashtest create deltify …
Previously in this chapter (in the section called “Creating the Repository”), we were introduced to the svnadmin create subcommand. Most of the other svnadmin subcommands we will cover later in this chapter. And you can consult the section called “svnadmin” for a full rundown of subcommands and what each of them offers.
svnlook is a tool provided by Subversion for examining the various revisions and transactions (which are revisions in the making) in a repository. No part of this program attempts to change the repository. svnlook is typically used by the repository hooks for reporting the changes that are about to be committed (in the case of the pre-commit hook) or that were just committed (in the case of the post-commit hook) to the repository. A repository administrator may use this tool for diagnostic purposes.
svnlook has a straightforward syntax:
$ svnlook help general usage: svnlook SUBCOMMAND REPOS_PATH [ARGS & OPTIONS ...] Note: any subcommand which takes the '--revision' and '--transaction' options will, if invoked without one of those options, act on the repository's youngest revision. Type 'svnlook help <subcommand>' for help on a specific subcommand. Type 'svnlook --version' to see the program version and FS modules. …
Most of svnlook's
subcommands can operate on either a revision or a
transaction tree, printing information about the tree
itself, or how it differs from the previous revision of the
repository. You use the --revision
(-r
) and --transaction
(-t
) options to specify which revision or
transaction, respectively, to examine. In the absence of
both the --revision
(-r
)
and --transaction
(-t
)
options, svnlook will examine the
youngest (or HEAD
) revision in the
repository. So the following two commands do exactly the
same thing when 19 is the youngest revision in the
repository located at
/var/svn/repos
:
$ svnlook info /var/svn/repos $ svnlook info /var/svn/repos -r 19
One exception to these rules about subcommands is the svnlook youngest subcommand, which takes no options and simply prints out the repository's youngest revision number:
$ svnlook youngest /var/svn/repos 19 $
Keep in mind that the only transactions you can browse
are uncommitted ones. Most repositories will have no such
transactions because transactions are usually either
committed (in which case, you should access them as
revision with the --revision
(-r
) option) or aborted and
removed.
Output from svnlook is designed to be both human- and machine-parsable. Take, as an example, the output of the svnlook info subcommand:
$ svnlook info /var/svn/repos sally 2002-11-04 09:29:13 -0600 (Mon, 04 Nov 2002) 27 Added the usual Greek tree. $
The output of svnlook info consists of the following, in the order given:
The author, followed by a newline
The date, followed by a newline
The number of characters in the log message, followed by a newline
The log message itself, followed by a newline
This output is human-readable, meaning items such as the datestamp are displayed using a textual representation instead of something more obscure (such as the number of nanoseconds since the Tastee Freez guy drove by). But the output is also machine-parsable—because the log message can contain multiple lines and be unbounded in length, svnlook provides the length of that message before the message itself. This allows scripts and other wrappers around this command to make intelligent decisions about the log message, such as how much memory to allocate for the message, or at least how many bytes to skip in the event that this output is not the last bit of data in the stream.
svnlook can perform a variety of other queries: displaying subsets of bits of information we've mentioned previously, recursively listing versioned directory trees, reporting which paths were modified in a given revision or transaction, showing textual and property differences made to files and directories, and so on. See the section called “svnlook” for a full reference of svnlook's features.
While it won't be the most commonly used tool at the administrator's disposal, svndumpfilter provides a very particular brand of useful functionality—the ability to quickly and easily modify streams of Subversion repository history data by acting as a path-based filter.
The syntax of svndumpfilter is as follows:
$ svndumpfilter help general usage: svndumpfilter SUBCOMMAND [ARGS & OPTIONS ...] Type "svndumpfilter help <subcommand>" for help on a specific subcommand. Type 'svndumpfilter --version' to see the program version. Available subcommands: exclude include help (?, h)
There are only two interesting subcommands: svndumpfilter exclude and svndumpfilter include. They allow you to make the choice between implicit or explicit inclusion of paths in the stream. You can learn more about these subcommands and svndumpfilter's unique purpose later in this chapter, in the section called “Filtering Repository History”.
The svnsync program, which is new to the 1.4 release of Subversion, provides all the functionality required for maintaining a read-only mirror of a Subversion repository. The program really has one job—to transfer one repository's versioned history into another repository. And while there are few ways to do that, its primary strength is that it can operate remotely—the “source” and “sink” [32] repositories may be on different computers from each other and from svnsync itself.
As you might expect, svnsync has a syntax that looks very much like every other program we've mentioned in this chapter:
$ svnsync help general usage: svnsync SUBCOMMAND DEST_URL [ARGS & OPTIONS ...] Type 'svnsync help <subcommand>' for help on a specific subcommand. Type 'svnsync --version' to see the program version and RA modules. Available subcommands: initialize (init) synchronize (sync) copy-revprops help (?, h) $
We talk more about replicating repositories with svnsync later in this chapter (see the section called “Repository Replication”).
While not an official member of the Subversion
toolchain, the fsfs-reshard.py script
(found in the tools/server-side
directory of the Subversion source distribution) is a useful
performance tuning tool for administrators of FSFS-backed
Subversion repositories. FSFS repositories contain files
that describe the changes made in a single revision, and
files that contain the revision properties associated with
a single revision. Repositories created in versions of
Subversion prior to 1.5 keep these files in two
directories—one for each type of file. As new
revisions are committed to the repository, Subversion drops
more files into these two directories—over time, the
number of these files in each directory can grow to be quite
large. This has been observed to cause performance problems
on certain network-based filesystems.
Subversion 1.5 creates FSFS-backed repositories using a slightly modified layout in which the contents of these two directories are sharded, or scattered across several subdirectories. This can greatly reduce the time it takes the system to locate any one of these files, and therefore increases the overall performance of Subversion when reading from the repository. The number of subdirectories used to house these files is configurable, though, and that's where fsfs-reshard.py comes in. This script reshuffles the repository's file structure into a new arrangement that reflects the requested number of sharding subdirectories. This is especially useful for converting an older Subversion repository into the new Subversion 1.5 sharded layout (which Subversion will not automatically do for you) or for fine-tuning an already sharded repository.
If you're using a Berkeley DB repository, all of
your versioned filesystem's structure and data live in a set
of database tables within the db/
subdirectory of your repository. This subdirectory is a
regular Berkeley DB environment directory and can therefore
be used in conjunction with any of the Berkeley database
tools, typically provided as part of the Berkeley DB
distribution.
For day-to-day Subversion use, these tools are unnecessary. Most of the functionality typically needed for Subversion repositories has been duplicated in the svnadmin tool. For example, svnadmin list-unused-dblogs and svnadmin list-dblogs perform a subset of what is provided by the Berkeley db_archive utility, and svnadmin recover reflects the common use cases of the db_recover utility.
However, there are still a few Berkeley DB utilities that you might find useful. The db_dump and db_load programs write and read, respectively, a custom file format that describes the keys and values in a Berkeley DB database. Since Berkeley databases are not portable across machine architectures, this format is a useful way to transfer those databases from machine to machine, irrespective of architecture or operating system. As we describe later in this chapter, you can also use svnadmin dump and svnadmin load for similar purposes, but db_dump and db_load can do certain jobs just as well and much faster. They can also be useful if the experienced Berkeley DB hacker needs to do in-place tweaking of the data in a BDB-backed repository for some reason, which is something Subversion's utilities won't allow. Also, the db_stat utility can provide useful information about the status of your Berkeley DB environment, including detailed statistics about the locking and storage subsystems.
For more information on the Berkeley DB tool chain, visit the documentation section of the Berkeley DB section of Oracle's web site, located at http://www.oracle.com/technology/documentation/berkeley-db/db/.
Sometimes a user will have an error in her log message (a
misspelling or some misinformation, perhaps). If the
repository is configured (using the
pre-revprop-change
hook; see the section called “Implementing Repository Hooks”) to accept changes to
this log message after the commit is finished, the user
can “fix” her log message remotely using
svn propset (see svn propset). However, because of the
potential to lose information forever, Subversion repositories
are not, by default, configured to allow changes to
unversioned properties—except by an
administrator.
If a log message needs to be changed by an administrator,
this can be done using svnadmin setlog.
This command changes the log message (the
svn:log
property) on a given revision of a
repository, reading the new value from a provided file.
$ echo "Here is the new, correct log message" > newlog.txt $ svnadmin setlog myrepos newlog.txt -r 388
The svnadmin setlog command, by
default, is
still bound by the same protections against modifying
unversioned properties as a remote client is—the
pre-
and
post-revprop-change
hooks are still
triggered, and therefore must be set up to accept changes of
this nature. But an administrator can get around these
protections by passing the --bypass-hooks
option to the svnadmin setlog command.
Remember, though, that by bypassing the hooks, you are likely avoiding such things as email notifications of property changes, backup systems that track unversioned property changes, and so on. In other words, be very careful about what you are changing, and how you change it.
While the cost of storage has dropped incredibly in the past few years, disk usage is still a valid concern for administrators seeking to version large amounts of data. Every bit of version history information stored in the live repository needs to be backed up elsewhere, perhaps multiple times as part of rotating backup schedules. It is useful to know what pieces of Subversion's repository data need to remain on the live site, which need to be backed up, and which can be safely removed.
To keep the repository small, Subversion uses deltification (or deltified storage) within the repository itself. Deltification involves encoding the representation of a chunk of data as a collection of differences against some other chunk of data. If the two pieces of data are very similar, this deltification results in storage savings for the deltified chunk—rather than taking up space equal to the size of the original data, it takes up only enough space to say, “I look just like this other piece of data over here, except for the following couple of changes.” The result is that most of the repository data that tends to be bulky—namely, the contents of versioned files—is stored at a much smaller size than the original full-text representation of that data. And for repositories created with Subversion 1.4 or later, the space savings are even better—now those full-text representations of file contents are themselves compressed.
Because all of the data that is subject to deltification in a BDB-backed repository is stored in a single Berkeley DB database file, reducing the size of the stored values will not immediately reduce the size of the database file itself. Berkeley DB will, however, keep internal records of unused areas of the database file and consume those areas first before growing the size of the database file. So while deltification doesn't produce immediate space savings, it can drastically slow future growth of the database.
Though they are uncommon, there are circumstances in which a Subversion commit process might fail, leaving behind in the repository the remnants of the revision-to-be that wasn't—an uncommitted transaction and all the file and directory changes associated with it. This could happen for several reasons: perhaps the client operation was inelegantly terminated by the user, or a network failure occurred in the middle of an operation. Regardless of the reason, dead transactions can happen. They don't do any real harm, other than consuming disk space. A fastidious administrator may nonetheless wish to remove them.
You can use the svnadmin lstxns command to list the names of the currently outstanding transactions:
$ svnadmin lstxns myrepos 19 3a1 a45 $
Each item in the resultant output can then be used with
svnlook (and its
--transaction
(-t
) option)
to determine who created the transaction, when it was
created, what types of changes were made in the
transaction—information that is helpful in determining
whether the transaction is a safe candidate for
removal! If you do indeed want to remove a transaction, its
name can be passed to svnadmin rmtxns,
which will perform the cleanup of the transaction. In fact,
svnadmin rmtxns can take its input
directly from the output of
svnadmin lstxns!
$ svnadmin rmtxns myrepos `svnadmin lstxns myrepos` $
If you use these two subcommands like this, you should consider making your repository temporarily inaccessible to clients. That way, no one can begin a legitimate transaction before you start your cleanup. Example 5.1, “txn-info.sh (reporting outstanding transactions)” contains a bit of shell-scripting that can quickly generate information about each outstanding transaction in your repository.
Example 5.1. txn-info.sh (reporting outstanding transactions)
#!/bin/sh ### Generate informational output for all outstanding transactions in ### a Subversion repository. REPOS="${1}" if [ "x$REPOS" = x ] ; then echo "usage: $0 REPOS_PATH" exit fi for TXN in `svnadmin lstxns ${REPOS}`; do echo "---[ Transaction ${TXN} ]-------------------------------------------" svnlook info "${REPOS}" -t "${TXN}" done
The output of the script is basically a concatenation of several chunks of svnlook info output (see the section called “svnlook”) and will look something like this:
$ txn-info.sh myrepos ---[ Transaction 19 ]------------------------------------------- sally 2001-09-04 11:57:19 -0500 (Tue, 04 Sep 2001) 0 ---[ Transaction 3a1 ]------------------------------------------- harry 2001-09-10 16:50:30 -0500 (Mon, 10 Sep 2001) 39 Trying to commit over a faulty network. ---[ Transaction a45 ]------------------------------------------- sally 2001-09-12 11:09:28 -0500 (Wed, 12 Sep 2001) 0 $
A long-abandoned transaction usually represents some sort of failed or interrupted commit. A transaction's datestamp can provide interesting information—for example, how likely is it that an operation begun nine months ago is still active?
In short, transaction cleanup decisions need not be made unwisely. Various sources of information—including Apache's error and access logs, Subversion's operational logs, Subversion revision history, and so on—can be employed in the decision-making process. And of course, an administrator can often simply communicate with a seemingly dead transaction's owner (via email, e.g.) to verify that the transaction is, in fact, in a zombie state.
Until recently, the largest offender of disk space usage with respect to BDB-backed Subversion repositories were the logfiles in which Berkeley DB performs its prewrites before modifying the actual database files. These files capture all the actions taken along the route of changing the database from one state to another—while the database files, at any given time, reflect a particular state, the logfiles contain all of the many changes along the way between states. Thus, they can grow and accumulate quite rapidly.
Fortunately, beginning with the 4.2 release of Berkeley
DB, the database environment has the ability to remove its
own unused logfiles automatically. Any
repositories created using svnadmin
when compiled against Berkeley DB version 4.2 or later
will be configured for this automatic logfile removal. If
you don't want this feature enabled, simply pass the
--bdb-log-keep
option to the
svnadmin create command. If you forget
to do this or change your mind at a later time, simply edit
the DB_CONFIG
file found in your
repository's db
directory, comment out
the line that contains the set_flags
DB_LOG_AUTOREMOVE
directive, and then run
svnadmin recover on your repository to
force the configuration changes to take effect. See the section called “Berkeley DB Configuration” for more information about
database configuration.
Without some sort of automatic logfile removal in place, logfiles will accumulate as you use your repository. This is actually somewhat of a feature of the database system—you should be able to recreate your entire database using nothing but the logfiles, so these files can be useful for catastrophic database recovery. But typically, you'll want to archive the logfiles that are no longer in use by Berkeley DB, and then remove them from disk to conserve space. Use the svnadmin list-unused-dblogs command to list the unused logfiles:
$ svnadmin list-unused-dblogs /var/svn/repos /var/svn/repos/log.0000000031 /var/svn/repos/log.0000000032 /var/svn/repos/log.0000000033 … $ rm `svnadmin list-unused-dblogs /var/svn/repos` ## disk space reclaimed!
BDB-backed repositories whose logfiles are used as part of a backup or disaster recovery plan should not make use of the logfile autoremoval feature. Reconstruction of a repository's data from logfiles can only be accomplished only when all the logfiles are available. If some of the logfiles are removed from disk before the backup system has a chance to copy them elsewhere, the incomplete set of backed-up logfiles is essentially useless.
As mentioned in the section called “Berkeley DB”, a Berkeley DB repository can sometimes be left in a frozen state if not closed properly. When this happens, an administrator needs to rewind the database back into a consistent state. This is unique to BDB-backed repositories, though—if you are using FSFS-backed ones instead, this won't apply to you. And for those of you using Subversion 1.4 with Berkeley DB 4.4 or later, you should find that Subversion has become much more resilient in these types of situations. Still, wedged Berkeley DB repositories do occur, and an administrator needs to know how to safely deal with this circumstance.
To protect the data in your repository, Berkeley DB uses a locking mechanism. This mechanism ensures that portions of the database are not simultaneously modified by multiple database accessors, and that each process sees the data in the correct state when that data is being read from the database. When a process needs to change something in the database, it first checks for the existence of a lock on the target data. If the data is not locked, the process locks the data, makes the change it wants to make, and then unlocks the data. Other processes are forced to wait until that lock is removed before they are permitted to continue accessing that section of the database. (This has nothing to do with the locks that you, as a user, can apply to versioned files within the repository; we try to clear up the confusion caused by this terminology collision in the sidebar The Three Meanings of “Lock”.)
In the course of using your Subversion repository, fatal errors or interruptions can prevent a process from having the chance to remove the locks it has placed in the database. The result is that the backend database system gets “wedged.” When this happens, any attempts to access the repository hang indefinitely (since each new accessor is waiting for a lock to go away—which isn't going to happen).
If this happens to your repository, don't panic. The Berkeley DB filesystem takes advantage of database transactions, checkpoints, and prewrite journaling to ensure that only the most catastrophic of events [33] can permanently destroy a database environment. A sufficiently paranoid repository administrator will have made off-site backups of the repository data in some fashion, but don't head off to the tape backup storage closet just yet.
Instead, use the following recipe to attempt to “unwedge” your repository:
Make sure no processes are accessing (or attempting to access) the repository. For networked repositories, this also means shutting down the Apache HTTP Server or svnserve daemon.
Become the user who owns and manages the repository. This is important, as recovering a repository while running as the wrong user can tweak the permissions of the repository's files in such a way that your repository will still be inaccessible even after it is “unwedged.”
Run the command svnadmin recover
/var/svn/repos
. You should see output such as
this:
Repository lock acquired. Please wait; recovering the repository may take some time... Recovery completed. The latest repos revision is 19.
This command may take many minutes to complete.
Restart the server process.
This procedure fixes almost every case of repository
wedging. Make sure that you run this command as the user that
owns and manages the database, not just as
root
. Part of the recovery process might
involve re-creating from scratch various database files (shared
memory regions, e.g.). Recovering as
root
will create those files such that they
are owned by root
, which means that even
after you restore connectivity to your repository, regular
users will be unable to access it.
If the previous procedure, for some reason, does not
successfully unwedge your repository, you should do two
things. First, move your broken repository directory aside
(perhaps by renaming it to something like
repos.BROKEN
) and then restore your
latest backup of it. Then, send an email to the Subversion
users mailing list (at <[email protected]>
)
describing your problem in detail. Data integrity is an
extremely high priority to the Subversion developers.
A Subversion filesystem has its data spread throughout files in the repository, in a fashion generally understood by (and of interest to) only the Subversion developers themselves. However, circumstances may arise that call for all, or some subset, of that data to be copied or moved into another repository.
Subversion provides such functionality by way of repository dump streams. A repository dump stream (often referred to as a “dump file” when stored as a file on disk) is a portable, flat file format that describes the various revisions in your repository—what was changed, by whom, when, and so on. This dump stream is the primary mechanism used to marshal versioned history—in whole or in part, with or without modification—between repositories. And Subversion provides the tools necessary for creating and loading these dump streams: the svnadmin dump and svnadmin load subcommands, respectively.
While the Subversion repository dump format contains human-readable portions and a familiar structure (it resembles an RFC 822 format, the same type of format used for most email), it is not a plain-text file format. It is a binary file format, highly sensitive to meddling. For example, many text editors will corrupt the file by automatically converting line endings.
There are many reasons for dumping and loading Subversion repository data. Early in Subversion's life, the most common reason was due to the evolution of Subversion itself. As Subversion matured, there were times when changes made to the backend database schema caused compatibility issues with previous versions of the repository, so users had to dump their repository data using the previous version of Subversion and load it into a freshly created repository with the new version of Subversion. Now, these types of schema changes haven't occurred since Subversion's 1.0 release, and the Subversion developers promise not to force users to dump and load their repositories when upgrading between minor versions (such as from 1.3 to 1.4) of Subversion. But there are still other reasons for dumping and loading, including re-deploying a Berkeley DB repository on a new OS or CPU architecture, switching between the Berkeley DB and FSFS backends, or (as we'll cover later in this chapter in the section called “Filtering Repository History”) purging versioned data from repository history.
The Subversion repository dump format describes versioned repository changes only. It will not carry any information about uncommitted transactions, user locks on filesystem paths, repository or server configuration customizations (including hook scripts), and so on.
Whatever your reason for migrating repository history, using the svnadmin dump and svnadmin load subcommands is straightforward. svnadmin dump will output a range of repository revisions that are formatted using Subversion's custom filesystem dump format. The dump format is printed to the standard output stream, while informative messages are printed to the standard error stream. This allows you to redirect the output stream to a file while watching the status output in your terminal window. For example:
$ svnlook youngest myrepos 26 $ svnadmin dump myrepos > dumpfile * Dumped revision 0. * Dumped revision 1. * Dumped revision 2. … * Dumped revision 25. * Dumped revision 26.
At the end of the process, you will have a single file
(dumpfile
in the previous example) that
contains all the data stored in your repository in the
requested range of revisions. Note that svnadmin
dump is reading revision trees from the repository
just like any other “reader” process would
(e.g., svn checkout), so it's safe
to run this command at any time.
The other subcommand in the pair, svnadmin load, parses the standard input stream as a Subversion repository dump file and effectively replays those dumped revisions into the target repository for that operation. It also gives informative feedback, this time using the standard output stream:
$ svnadmin load newrepos < dumpfile <<< Started new txn, based on original revision 1 * adding path : A ... done. * adding path : A/B ... done. … ------- Committed new rev 1 (loaded from original rev 1) >>> <<< Started new txn, based on original revision 2 * editing path : A/mu ... done. * editing path : A/D/G/rho ... done. ------- Committed new rev 2 (loaded from original rev 2) >>> … <<< Started new txn, based on original revision 25 * editing path : A/D/gamma ... done. ------- Committed new rev 25 (loaded from original rev 25) >>> <<< Started new txn, based on original revision 26 * adding path : A/Z/zeta ... done. * editing path : A/mu ... done. ------- Committed new rev 26 (loaded from original rev 26) >>>
The result of a load is new revisions added to a
repository—the same thing you get by making commits
against that repository from a regular Subversion client.
Just as in a commit, you can use hook programs to perform
actions before and after each of the commits made during a
load process. By passing the
--use-pre-commit-hook
and
--use-post-commit-hook
options to
svnadmin load, you can instruct Subversion
to execute the pre-commit and post-commit hook programs,
respectively, for each loaded revision. You might use these,
for example, to ensure that loaded revisions pass through the
same validation steps that regular commits pass through. Of
course, you should use these options with care—if your
post-commit hook sends emails to a mailing list for each new
commit, you might not want to spew hundreds or thousands of
commit emails in rapid succession at that list! You can read more about the use of hook
scripts in the section called “Implementing Repository Hooks”.
Note that because svnadmin uses standard input and output streams for the repository dump and load processes, people who are feeling especially saucy can try things such as this (perhaps even using different versions of svnadmin on each side of the pipe):
$ svnadmin create newrepos $ svnadmin dump oldrepos | svnadmin load newrepos
By default, the dump file will be quite large—much
larger than the repository itself. That's because by default
every version of every file is expressed as a full text in the
dump file. This is the fastest and simplest behavior, and
it's nice if you're piping the dump data directly into some other
process (such as a compression program, filtering program, or
loading process). But if you're creating a dump file
for longer-term storage, you'll likely want to save disk space
by using the --deltas
option. With this
option, successive revisions of files will be output as
compressed, binary differences—just as file revisions
are stored in a repository. This option is slower, but it
results in a dump file much closer in size to the original
repository.
We mentioned previously that svnadmin
dump outputs a range of revisions. Use the
--revision
(-r
) option to
specify a single revision, or a range of revisions, to dump.
If you omit this option, all the existing repository revisions
will be dumped.
$ svnadmin dump myrepos -r 23 > rev-23.dumpfile $ svnadmin dump myrepos -r 100:200 > revs-100-200.dumpfile
As Subversion dumps each new revision, it outputs only enough information to allow a future loader to re-create that revision based on the previous one. In other words, for any given revision in the dump file, only the items that were changed in that revision will appear in the dump. The only exception to this rule is the first revision that is dumped with the current svnadmin dump command.
By default, Subversion will not express the first dumped revision as merely differences to be applied to the previous revision. For one thing, there is no previous revision in the dump file! And second, Subversion cannot know the state of the repository into which the dump data will be loaded (if it ever is). To ensure that the output of each execution of svnadmin dump is self-sufficient, the first dumped revision is, by default, a full representation of every directory, file, and property in that revision of the repository.
However, you can change this default behavior. If you add
the --incremental
option when you dump your
repository, svnadmin will compare the first
dumped revision against the previous revision in the
repository—the same way it treats every other revision that
gets dumped. It will then output the first revision exactly
as it does the rest of the revisions in the dump
range—mentioning only the changes that occurred in that
revision. The benefit of this is that you can create several
small dump files that can be loaded in succession, instead of
one large one, like so:
$ svnadmin dump myrepos -r 0:1000 > dumpfile1 $ svnadmin dump myrepos -r 1001:2000 --incremental > dumpfile2 $ svnadmin dump myrepos -r 2001:3000 --incremental > dumpfile3
These dump files could be loaded into a new repository with the following command sequence:
$ svnadmin load newrepos < dumpfile1 $ svnadmin load newrepos < dumpfile2 $ svnadmin load newrepos < dumpfile3
Another neat trick you can perform with this
--incremental
option involves appending to an
existing dump file a new range of dumped revisions. For
example, you might have a post-commit
hook
that simply appends the repository dump of the single revision
that triggered the hook. Or you might have a script that runs
nightly to append dump file data for all the revisions that
were added to the repository since the last time the script
ran. Used like this, svnadmin dump can be
one way to back up changes to your repository over time in case
of a system crash or some other catastrophic event.
The dump format can also be used to merge the contents of
several different repositories into a single repository. By
using the --parent-dir
option of
svnadmin load, you can specify a new
virtual root directory for the load process. That means if
you have dump files for three repositories—say
calc-dumpfile
,
cal-dumpfile
, and
ss-dumpfile
—you can first create a new
repository to hold them all:
$ svnadmin create /var/svn/projects $
Then, make new directories in the repository that will encapsulate the contents of each of the three previous repositories:
$ svn mkdir -m "Initial project roots" \ file:///var/svn/projects/calc \ file:///var/svn/projects/calendar \ file:///var/svn/projects/spreadsheet Committed revision 1. $
Lastly, load the individual dump files into their respective locations in the new repository:
$ svnadmin load /var/svn/projects --parent-dir calc < calc-dumpfile … $ svnadmin load /var/svn/projects --parent-dir calendar < cal-dumpfile … $ svnadmin load /var/svn/projects --parent-dir spreadsheet < ss-dumpfile … $
We'll mention one final way to use the Subversion repository dump format—conversion from a different storage mechanism or version control system altogether. Because the dump file format is, for the most part, human-readable, it should be relatively easy to describe generic sets of changes—each of which should be treated as a new revision—using this file format. In fact, the cvs2svn utility (see the section called “Converting a Repository from CVS to Subversion”) uses the dump format to represent the contents of a CVS repository so that those contents can be copied into a Subversion repository.
Since Subversion stores your versioned history using, at the very least, binary differencing algorithms and data compression (optionally in a completely opaque database system), attempting manual tweaks is unwise if not quite difficult, and at any rate strongly discouraged. And once data has been stored in your repository, Subversion generally doesn't provide an easy way to remove that data. [34] But inevitably, there will be times when you would like to manipulate the history of your repository. You might need to strip out all instances of a file that was accidentally added to the repository (and shouldn't be there for whatever reason). [35] Or, perhaps you have multiple projects sharing a single repository, and you decide to split them up into their own repositories. To accomplish tasks such as these, administrators need a more manageable and malleable representation of the data in their repositories—the Subversion repository dump format.
As we described earlier in the section called “Migrating Repository Data Elsewhere”, the Subversion repository dump format is a human-readable representation of the changes that you've made to your versioned data over time. Use the svnadmin dump command to generate the dump data, and svnadmin load to populate a new repository with it. The great thing about the human-readability aspect of the dump format is that, if you aren't careless about it, you can manually inspect and modify it. Of course, the downside is that if you have three years' worth of repository activity encapsulated in what is likely to be a very large dump file, it could take you a long, long time to manually inspect and modify it.
That's where svndumpfilter becomes useful. This program acts as a path-based filter for repository dump streams. Simply give it either a list of paths you wish to keep or a list of paths you wish to not keep, and then pipe your repository dump data through this filter. The result will be a modified stream of dump data that contains only the versioned paths you (explicitly or implicitly) requested.
Let's look at a realistic example of how you might use this program. Earlier in this chapter (see the section called “Planning Your Repository Organization”), we discussed the process of deciding how to choose a layout for the data in your repositories—using one repository per project or combining them, arranging stuff within your repository, and so on. But sometimes after new revisions start flying in, you rethink your layout and would like to make some changes. A common change is the decision to move multiple projects that are sharing a single repository into separate repositories for each project.
Our imaginary repository contains three projects:
calc
, calendar
, and
spreadsheet
. They have been living
side-by-side in a layout like this:
/ calc/ trunk/ branches/ tags/ calendar/ trunk/ branches/ tags/ spreadsheet/ trunk/ branches/ tags/
To get these three projects into their own repositories, we first dump the whole repository:
$ svnadmin dump /var/svn/repos > repos-dumpfile * Dumped revision 0. * Dumped revision 1. * Dumped revision 2. * Dumped revision 3. … $
Next, run that dump file through the filter, each time including only one of our top-level directories. This results in three new dump files:
$ svndumpfilter include calc < repos-dumpfile > calc-dumpfile … $ svndumpfilter include calendar < repos-dumpfile > cal-dumpfile … $ svndumpfilter include spreadsheet < repos-dumpfile > ss-dumpfile … $
At this point, you have to make a decision. Each of your
dump files will create a valid repository, but will preserve
the paths exactly as they were in the original repository.
This means that even though you would have a repository solely
for your calc
project, that repository
would still have a top-level directory named
calc
. If you want your
trunk
, tags
, and
branches
directories to live in the root
of your repository, you might wish to edit your dump files,
tweaking the Node-path
and
Node-copyfrom-path
headers so that they no
longer have that first calc/
path
component. Also, you'll want to remove the section of dump
data that creates the calc
directory. It
will look something like the following:
Node-path: calc Node-action: add Node-kind: dir Content-length: 0
If you do plan on manually editing the dump file to
remove a top-level directory, make sure your editor is
not set to automatically convert end-of-line characters to
the native format (e.g., \r\n
to
\n
), as the content will then not agree
with the metadata. This will render the dump file
useless.
All that remains now is to create your three new repositories, and load each dump file into the right repository, ignoring the UUID found in the dump stream:
$ svnadmin create calc $ svnadmin load --ignore-uuid calc < calc-dumpfile <<< Started new transaction, based on original revision 1 * adding path : Makefile ... done. * adding path : button.c ... done. … $ svnadmin create calendar $ svnadmin load --ignore-uuid calendar < cal-dumpfile <<< Started new transaction, based on original revision 1 * adding path : Makefile ... done. * adding path : cal.c ... done. … $ svnadmin create spreadsheet $ svnadmin load --ignore-uuid spreadsheet < ss-dumpfile <<< Started new transaction, based on original revision 1 * adding path : Makefile ... done. * adding path : ss.c ... done. … $
Both of svndumpfilter's subcommands accept options for deciding how to deal with “empty” revisions. If a given revision contains only changes to paths that were filtered out, that now-empty revision could be considered uninteresting or even unwanted. So to give the user control over what to do with those revisions, svndumpfilter provides the following command-line options:
--drop-empty-revs
Do not generate empty revisions at all—just omit them.
--renumber-revs
If empty revisions are dropped (using the
--drop-empty-revs
option), change the
revision numbers of the remaining revisions so that
there are no gaps in the numeric sequence.
--preserve-revprops
If empty revisions are not dropped, preserve the revision properties (log message, author, date, custom properties, etc.) for those empty revisions. Otherwise, empty revisions will contain only the original datestamp, and a generated log message that indicates that this revision was emptied by svndumpfilter.
While svndumpfilter can be very
useful and a huge timesaver, there are unfortunately a
couple of gotchas. First, this utility is overly sensitive
to path semantics. Pay attention to whether paths in your
dump file are specified with or without leading slashes.
You'll want to look at the Node-path
and
Node-copyfrom-path
headers.
… Node-path: spreadsheet/Makefile …
If the paths have leading slashes, you should include leading slashes in the paths you pass to svndumpfilter include and svndumpfilter exclude (and if they don't, you shouldn't). Further, if your dump file has an inconsistent usage of leading slashes for some reason, [36] you should probably normalize those paths so that they all have, or all lack, leading slashes.
Also, copied paths can give you some trouble. Subversion supports copy operations in the repository, where a new path is created by copying some already existing path. It is possible that at some point in the lifetime of your repository, you might have copied a file or directory from some location that svndumpfilter is excluding, to a location that it is including. To make the dump data self-sufficient, svndumpfilter needs to still show the addition of the new path—including the contents of any files created by the copy—and not represent that addition as a copy from a source that won't exist in your filtered dump data stream. But because the Subversion repository dump format shows only what was changed in each revision, the contents of the copy source might not be readily available. If you suspect that you have any copies of this sort in your repository, you might want to rethink your set of included/excluded paths, perhaps including the paths that served as sources of your troublesome copy operations, too.
Finally, svndumpfilter takes path
filtering quite literally. If you are trying to copy the
history of a project rooted at
trunk/my-project
and move it into a
repository of its own, you would, of course, use the
svndumpfilter include command to keep all
the changes in and under
trunk/my-project
. But the resultant
dump file makes no assumptions about the repository into
which you plan to load this data. Specifically, the dump
data might begin with the revision that added the
trunk/my-project
directory, but it will
not contain directives that would
create the trunk
directory itself
(because trunk
doesn't match the
include filter). You'll need to make sure that any
directories that the new dump stream expects to exist
actually do exist in the target repository before trying to
load the stream into that repository.
There are several scenarios in which it is quite handy to have a Subversion repository whose version history is exactly the same as some other repository's. Perhaps the most obvious one is the maintenance of a simple backup repository, used when the primary repository has become inaccessible due to a hardware failure, network outage, or other such annoyance. Other scenarios include deploying mirror repositories to distribute heavy Subversion load across multiple servers, use as a soft-upgrade mechanism, and so on.
As of version 1.4, Subversion provides a program for managing scenarios such as these—svnsync. This works by essentially asking the Subversion server to “replay” revisions, one at a time. It then uses that revision information to mimic a commit of the same to another repository. Neither repository needs to be locally accessible to the machine on which svnsync is running—its parameters are repository URLs, and it does all its work through Subversion's Repository Access (RA) interfaces. All it requires is read access to the source repository and read/write access to the destination repository.
When using svnsync against a remote source repository, the Subversion server for that repository must be running Subversion version 1.4 or later.
Assuming you already have a source repository that you'd like to mirror, the next thing you need is an empty target repository that will actually serve as that mirror. This target repository can use either of the available filesystem data-store backends (see the section called “Choosing a Data Store”), but it must not yet have any version history in it. The protocol that svnsync uses to communicate revision information is highly sensitive to mismatches between the versioned histories contained in the source and target repositories. For this reason, while svnsync cannot demand that the target repository be read-only, [37] allowing the revision history in the target repository to change by any mechanism other than the mirroring process is a recipe for disaster.
Do not modify a mirror repository in such a way as to cause its version history to deviate from that of the repository it mirrors. The only commits and revision property modifications that ever occur on that mirror repository should be those performed by the svnsync tool.
Another requirement of the target repository is that the svnsync process be allowed to modify revision properties. Because svnsync works within the framework of that repository's hook system, the default state of the repository (which is to disallow revision property changes; see pre-revprop-change) is insufficient. You'll need to explicitly implement the pre-revprop-change hook, and your script must allow svnsync to set and change revision properties. With those provisions in place, you are ready to start mirroring repository revisions.
It's a good idea to implement authorization measures that allow your repository replication process to perform its tasks while preventing other users from modifying the contents of your mirror repository at all.
Let's walk through the use of svnsync in a somewhat typical mirroring scenario. We'll pepper this discourse with practical recommendations, which you are free to disregard if they aren't required by or suitable for your environment.
As a service to the fine developers of our favorite version control system, we will be mirroring the public Subversion source code repository and exposing that mirror publicly on the Internet, hosted on a different machine than the one on which the original Subversion source code repository lives. This remote host has a global configuration that permits anonymous users to read the contents of repositories on the host, but requires users to authenticate to modify those repositories. (Please forgive us for glossing over the details of Subversion server configuration for the moment—those are covered thoroughly in Chapter 6, Server Configuration.) And for no other reason than that it makes for a more interesting example, we'll be driving the replication process from a third machine—the one that we currently find ourselves using.
First, we'll create the repository which will be our mirror. This and the next couple of steps do require shell access to the machine on which the mirror repository will live. Once the repository is all configured, though, we shouldn't need to touch it directly again.
$ ssh [email protected] \ "svnadmin create /var/svn/svn-mirror" [email protected]'s password: ******** $
At this point, we have our repository, and due to our
server's configuration, that repository is now
“live” on the Internet. Now, because we don't
want anything modifying the repository except our replication
process, we need a way to distinguish that process from other
would-be committers. To do so, we use a dedicated username
for our process. Only commits and revision property
modifications performed by the special username
syncuser
will be allowed.
We'll use the repository's hook system both to allow the
replication process to do what it needs to do and to enforce
that only it is doing those things. We accomplish this by
implementing two of the repository event
hooks—pre-revprop-change and start-commit. Our
pre-revprop-change
hook script is found
in Example 5.2, “Mirror repository's pre-revprop-change hook script”, and basically verifies that the user attempting the
property changes is our syncuser
user. If
so, the change is allowed; otherwise, it is denied.
Example 5.2. Mirror repository's pre-revprop-change hook script
#!/bin/sh USER="$3" if [ "$USER" = "syncuser" ]; then exit 0; fi echo "Only the syncuser user may change revision properties" >&2 exit 1
That covers revision property changes. Now we need to
ensure that only the syncuser
user is
permitted to commit new revisions to the repository. We do
this using a start-commit
hook scripts
such as the one in Example 5.3, “Mirror repository's start-commit hook script”.
Example 5.3. Mirror repository's start-commit hook script
#!/bin/sh USER="$2" if [ "$USER" = "syncuser" ]; then exit 0; fi echo "Only the syncuser user may commit new revisions" >&2 exit 1
After installing our hook scripts and ensuring that they are executable by the Subversion server, we're finished with the setup of the mirror repository. Now, we get to actually do the mirroring.
The first thing we need to do with svnsync is to register in our target repository the fact that it will be a mirror of the source repository. We do this using the svnsync initialize subcommand. The URLs we provide point to the root directories of the target and source repositories, respectively. In Subversion 1.4, this is required—only full mirroring of repositories is permitted. In Subversion 1.5, though, you can use svnsync to mirror only some subtree of the repository, too.
$ svnsync help init initialize (init): usage: svnsync initialize DEST_URL SOURCE_URL Initialize a destination repository for synchronization from another repository. … $ svnsync initialize http://svn.example.com/svn-mirror \ http://svn.collab.net/repos/svn \ --sync-username syncuser --sync-password syncpass Copied properties for revision 0. $
Our target repository will now remember that it is a mirror of the public Subversion source code repository. Notice that we provided a username and password as arguments to svnsync—that was required by the pre-revprop-change hook on our mirror repository.
In Subversion 1.4, the values given to
svnsync's --username
and
--password
command-line options were used
for authentication against both the source and destination
repositories. This caused problems when a user's
credentials weren't exactly the same for both repositories,
especially when running in noninteractive mode (with the
--non-interactive
option).
This has been fixed in Subversion 1.5 with the
introduction of two new pairs of options. Use
--source-username
and
--source-password
to provide authentication
credentials for the source repository; use
--sync-username
and
--sync-password
to provide credentials for
the destination repository. (The old
--username
and --password
options still exist for compatibility, but we advise against
using them.)
And now comes the fun part. With a single subcommand, we can tell svnsync to copy all the as-yet-unmirrored revisions from the source repository to the target. [38] The svnsync synchronize subcommand will peek into the special revision properties previously stored on the target repository, and determine both what repository it is mirroring as well as that the most recently mirrored revision was revision 0. Then it will query the source repository and determine what the latest revision in that repository is. Finally, it asks the source repository's server to start replaying all the revisions between 0 and that latest revision. As svnsync get the resultant response from the source repository's server, it begins forwarding those revisions to the target repository's server as new commits.
$ svnsync help synchronize synchronize (sync): usage: svnsync synchronize DEST_URL Transfer all pending revisions to the destination from the source with which it was initialized. … $ svnsync synchronize http://svn.example.com/svn-mirror Transmitting file data ........................................ Committed revision 1. Copied properties for revision 1. Transmitting file data .. Committed revision 2. Copied properties for revision 2. Transmitting file data ..... Committed revision 3. Copied properties for revision 3. … Transmitting file data .. Committed revision 23406. Copied properties for revision 23406. Transmitting file data . Committed revision 23407. Copied properties for revision 23407. Transmitting file data .... Committed revision 23408. Copied properties for revision 23408. $
Of particular interest here is that for each mirrored
revision, there is first a commit of that revision to the
target repository, and then property changes follow. This is
because the initial commit is performed by (and attributed to)
the user syncuser
, and it is datestamped
with the time as of that revision's creation. Also,
Subversion's underlying repository access interfaces don't
provide a mechanism for setting arbitrary revision properties
as part of a commit. So svnsync follows up
with an immediate series of property modifications that copy
into the target repository all the revision properties found
for that revision in the source repository. This also has the
effect of fixing the author and datestamp of the revision to
match that of the source repository.
Also noteworthy is that svnsync performs careful bookkeeping that allows it to be safely interrupted and restarted without ruining the integrity of the mirrored data. If a network glitch occurs while mirroring a repository, simply repeat the svnsync synchronize command, and it will happily pick up right where it left off. In fact, as new revisions appear in the source repository, this is exactly what you to do to keep your mirror up to date.
There is, however, one bit of inelegance in the process. Because Subversion revision properties can be changed at any time throughout the lifetime of the repository, and because they don't leave an audit trail that indicates when they were changed, replication processes have to pay special attention to them. If you've already mirrored the first 15 revisions of a repository and someone then changes a revision property on revision 12, svnsync won't know to go back and patch up its copy of revision 12. You'll need to tell it to do so manually by using (or with some additional tooling around) the svnsync copy-revprops subcommand, which simply rereplicates all the revision properties for a particular revision or range thereof.
$ svnsync help copy-revprops copy-revprops: usage: svnsync copy-revprops DEST_URL [REV[:REV2]] Copy the revision properties in a given range of revisions to the destination from the source with which it was initialized. … $ svnsync copy-revprops http://svn.example.com/svn-mirror 12 Copied properties for revision 12. $
That's repository replication in a nutshell. You'll likely want some automation around such a process. For example, while our example was a pull-and-push setup, you might wish to have your primary repository push changes to one or more blessed mirrors as part of its post-commit and post-revprop-change hook implementations. This would enable the mirror to be up to date in as near to real time as is likely possible.
Also, while it isn't very commonplace to do so, svnsync does gracefully mirror repositories in which the user as whom it authenticates has only partial read access. It simply copies only the bits of the repository that it is permitted to see. Obviously, such a mirror is not useful as a backup solution.
In Subversion 1.5, svnsync grew the ability to also mirror a subset of a repository rather than the whole thing. The process of setting up and maintaining such a mirror is exactly the same as when mirroring a whole repository, except that instead of specifying the source repository's root URL when running svnsync init, you specify the URL of some subdirectory within that repository. Synchronization to that mirror will now copy only the bits that changed under that source repository subdirectory. There are some limitations to this support, though. First, you can't mirror multiple disjoint subdirectories of the source repository into a single mirror repository—you'd need to instead mirror some parent directory that is common to both. Second, the filtering logic is entirely path-based, so if the subdirectory you are mirroring was renamed at some point in the past, your mirror would contain only the revisions since the directory appeared at the URL you specified. And likewise, if the source subdirectory is renamed in the future, your synchronization processes will stop mirroring data at the point that the source URL you specified is no longer valid.
As far as user interaction with repositories and mirrors goes, it is possible to have a single working copy that interacts with both, but you'll have to jump through some hoops to make it happen. First, you need to ensure that both the primary and mirror repositories have the same repository UUID (which is not the case by default). See the section called “Managing Repository UUIDs” later in this chapter for more about this.
Once the two repositories have the same UUID, you can use
svn switch with the --relocate
option to point your working
copy to whichever of the repositories you wish to operate
against, a process that is described in svn switch. There is a possible danger
here, though, in that if the primary and mirror repositories
aren't in close synchronization, a working copy up to date
with, and pointing to, the primary repository will, if
relocated to point to an out-of-date mirror, become confused
about the apparent sudden loss of revisions it fully expects
to be present, and it will throw errors to that effect. If
this occurs, you can relocate your working copy back to the
primary repository and then either wait until the mirror
repository is up to date, or backdate your working copy to a
revision you know is present in the sync repository, and then
retry the relocation.
Finally, be aware that the revision-based replication provided by svnsync is only that—replication of revisions. Only information carried by the Subversion repository dump file format is available for replication. As such, svnsync has the same sorts of limitations that the repository dump stream has, and does not include such things as the hook implementations, repository or server configuration data, uncommitted transactions, or information about user locks on repository paths.
Despite numerous advances in technology since the birth of the modern computer, one thing unfortunately rings true with crystalline clarity—sometimes things go very, very awry. Power outages, network connectivity dropouts, corrupt RAM, and crashed hard drives are but a taste of the evil that Fate is poised to unleash on even the most conscientious administrator. And so we arrive at a very important topic—how to make backup copies of your repository data.
There are two types of backup methods available for Subversion repository administrators—full and incremental. A full backup of the repository involves squirreling away in one sweeping action all the information required to fully reconstruct that repository in the event of a catastrophe. Usually, it means, quite literally, the duplication of the entire repository directory (which includes either a Berkeley DB or FSFS environment). Incremental backups are lesser things: backups of only the portion of the repository data that has changed since the previous backup.
As far as full backups go, the naïve approach might seem like a sane one, but unless you temporarily disable all other access to your repository, simply doing a recursive directory copy runs the risk of generating a faulty backup. In the case of Berkeley DB, the documentation describes a certain order in which database files can be copied that will guarantee a valid backup copy. A similar ordering exists for FSFS data. But you don't have to implement these algorithms yourself, because the Subversion development team has already done so. The svnadmin hotcopy command takes care of the minutia involved in making a hot backup of your repository. And its invocation is as trivial as the Unix cp or Windows copy operations:
$ svnadmin hotcopy /var/svn/repos /var/svn/repos-backup
The resultant backup is a fully functional Subversion repository, able to be dropped in as a replacement for your live repository should something go horribly wrong.
When making copies of a Berkeley DB repository, you can
even instruct svnadmin hotcopy to purge any
unused Berkeley DB logfiles (see the section called “Purging unused Berkeley DB logfiles”) from the
original repository upon completion of the copy. Simply
provide the --clean-logs
option on the
command line.
$ svnadmin hotcopy --clean-logs /var/svn/bdb-repos /var/svn/bdb-repos-backup
Additional tooling around this command is available, too.
The tools/backup/
directory of the
Subversion source distribution holds the
hot-backup.py script. This script adds a
bit of backup management atop svnadmin
hotcopy, allowing you to keep only the most recent
configured number of backups of each repository. It will
automatically manage the names of the backed-up repository
directories to avoid collisions with previous backups and
will “rotate off” older backups, deleting them so
that only the most recent ones remain. Even if you also have an
incremental backup, you might want to run this program on a
regular basis. For example, you might consider using
hot-backup.py from a program scheduler
(such as cron on Unix systems), which can
cause it to run nightly (or at whatever granularity of time
you deem safe).
Some administrators use a different backup mechanism built
around generating and storing repository dump data. We
described in the section called “Migrating Repository Data Elsewhere”
how to use svnadmin dump with the --incremental
option to
perform an incremental backup of a given revision or range of
revisions. And of course, you can achieve a full backup variation of
this by omitting the --incremental
option to that command. There is some value in these methods,
in that the format of your backed-up information is
flexible—it's not tied to a particular platform,
versioned filesystem type, or release of Subversion or
Berkeley DB. But that flexibility comes at a cost, namely
that restoring that data can take a long time—longer
with each new revision committed to your repository. Also, as
is the case with so many of the various backup methods,
revision property changes that are made to already backed-up
revisions won't get picked up by a nonoverlapping,
incremental dump generation. For these reasons, we recommend
against relying solely on dump-based backup approaches.
As you can see, each of the various backup types and methods has its advantages and disadvantages. The easiest is by far the full hot backup, which will always result in a perfect working replica of your repository. Should something bad happen to your live repository, you can restore from the backup with a simple recursive directory copy. Unfortunately, if you are maintaining multiple backups of your repository, these full copies will each eat up just as much disk space as your live repository. Incremental backups, by contrast, tend to be quicker to generate and smaller to store. But the restoration process can be a pain, often involving applying multiple incremental backups. And other methods have their own peculiarities. Administrators need to find the balance between the cost of making the backup and the cost of restoring it.
The svnsync program (see the section called “Repository Replication”) actually provides a rather handy middle-ground approach. If you are regularly synchronizing a read-only mirror with your main repository, in a pinch your read-only mirror is probably a good candidate for replacing that main repository if it falls over. The primary disadvantage of this method is that only the versioned repository data gets synchronized—repository configuration files, user-specified repository path locks, and other items that might live in the physical repository directory but not inside the repository's virtual versioned filesystem are not handled by svnsync.
In any backup scenario, repository administrators need to be aware of how modifications to unversioned revision properties affect their backups. Since these changes do not themselves generate new revisions, they will not trigger post-commit hooks, and may not even trigger the pre-revprop-change and post-revprop-change hooks. [39] And since you can change revision properties without respect to chronological order—you can change any revision's properties at any time—an incremental backup of the latest few revisions might not catch a property modification to a revision that was included as part of a previous backup.
Generally speaking, only the truly paranoid would need to back up their entire repository, say, every time a commit occurred. However, assuming that a given repository has some other redundancy mechanism in place with relatively fine granularity (such as per-commit emails or incremental dumps), a hot backup of the database might be something that a repository administrator would want to include as part of a system-wide nightly backup. It's your data—protect it as much as you'd like.
Often, the best approach to repository backups is a diversified one that leverages combinations of the methods described here. The Subversion developers, for example, back up the Subversion source code repository nightly using hot-backup.py and an off-site rsync of those full backups; keep multiple archives of all the commit and property change notification emails; and have repository mirrors maintained by various volunteers using svnsync. Your solution might be similar, but should be catered to your needs and that delicate balance of convenience with paranoia. And whatever you do, validate your backups from time to time—what good is a spare tire that has a hole in it? While all of this might not save your hardware from the iron fist of Fate, [40] it should certainly help you recover from those trying times.
Subversion repositories have a universally unique identifier (UUID) associated with them. This is used by Subversion clients to verify the identity of a repository when other forms of verification aren't good enough (such as checking the repository URL, which can change over time). Most Subversion repository administrators rarely, if ever, need to think about repository UUIDs as anything more than a trivial implementation detail of Subversion. Sometimes, however, there is cause for attention to this detail.
As a general rule, you want the UUIDs of your live repositories to be unique. That is, after all, the point of having UUIDs. But there are times when you want the repository UUIDs of two repositories to be exactly the same. For example, if you make a copy of a repository for backup purposes, you want the backup to be a perfect replica of the original so that, in the event that you have to restore that backup and replace the live repository, users don't suddenly see what looks like a different repository. When dumping and loading repository history (as described earlier in the section called “Migrating Repository Data Elsewhere”), you get to decide whether to apply the UUID encapsulated in the data dump stream to the repository in which you are loading the data. The particular circumstance will dictate the correct behavior.
There are a couple of ways to set (or reset) a repository's UUID, should you need to. As of Subversion 1.5, this is as simple as using the svnadmin setuuid command. If you provide this subcommand with an explicit UUID, it will validate that the UUID is well-formed and then set the repository UUID to that value. If you omit the UUID, a brand-new UUID will be generated for your repository.
$ svnlook uuid /var/svn/repos cf2b9d22-acb5-11dc-bc8c-05e83ce5dbec $ svnadmin setuuid /var/svn/repos # generate a new UUID $ svnlook uuid /var/svn/repos 3c3c38fe-acc0-11dc-acbc-1b37ff1c8e7c $ svnadmin setuuid /var/svn/repos \ cf2b9d22-acb5-11dc-bc8c-05e83ce5dbec # restore the old UUID $ svnlook uuid /var/svn/repos cf2b9d22-acb5-11dc-bc8c-05e83ce5dbec $
For folks using versions of Subversion earlier than 1.5,
these tasks are a little more complicated. You can explicitly
set a repository's UUID by piping a repository dump file stub
that carries the new UUID specification through
svnadmin load --force-uuid
.REPOS-PATH
$ svnadmin load --force-uuid /var/svn/repos <<EOF SVN-fs-dump-format-version: 2 UUID: cf2b9d22-acb5-11dc-bc8c-05e83ce5dbec EOF $ svnlook uuid /var/svn/repos cf2b9d22-acb5-11dc-bc8c-05e83ce5dbec $
Having older versions of Subversion generate a brand-new UUID is not quite as simple to do, though. Your best bet here is to find some other way to generate a UUID, and then explicitly set the repository's UUID to that value.
[32] Or is that, the “sync”?
[33] For example, hard drive + huge electromagnet = disaster.
[34] That's rather the reason you use version control at all, right?
[35] Conscious, cautious removal of certain bits of versioned data is actually supported by real use cases. That's why an “obliterate” feature has been one of the most highly requested Subversion features, and one which the Subversion developers hope to soon provide.
[36] While svnadmin dump has a consistent leading slash policy (to not include them), other programs that generate dump data might not be so consistent.
[37] In fact, it can't truly be read-only, or svnsync itself would have a tough time copying revision history into it.
[38] Be forewarned that while it will take only a few seconds for the average reader to parse this paragraph and the sample output that follows it, the actual time required to complete such a mirroring operation is, shall we say, quite a bit longer.
[39] svnadmin setlog can be called in a way that bypasses the hook interface altogether.
[40] You know—the collective term for all of her “fickle fingers.”