Commit Graph

10 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Christian Schwarz
efe7b17d21 Update to protobuf v1.25 and grpc 1.35; bump CI to go1.12
From:
github.com/golang/protobuf v1.3.2
google.golang.org/grpc v1.17.0

To:
github.com/golang/protobuf v1.4.3
google.golang.org/grpc v1.35.0
google.golang.org/protobuf v1.25.0

About the two protobuf packages:
https://developers.google.com/protocol-buffers/docs/reference/go/faq
> Version v1.4.0 and higher of github.com/golang/protobuf wrap the new
implementation and permit programs to adopt the new API incrementally. For
example, the well-known types defined in github.com/golang/protobuf/ptypes are
simply aliases of those defined in the newer module. Thus,
google.golang.org/protobuf/types/known/emptypb and
github.com/golang/protobuf/ptypes/empty may be used interchangeably.

Notable Code Changes in zrepl:
- generate protobufs now contain a mutex so we can't copy them by value
  anymore
- grpc.WithDialer is deprecated => use grpc.WithContextDialer instead

Go1.12 is now actually required by some of the dependencies.
2021-01-25 00:39:01 +01:00
Christian Schwarz
30cdc1430e replication + endpoint: replication guarantees: guarantee_{resumability,incremental,nothing}
This commit

- adds a configuration in which no step holds, replication cursors, etc. are created
- removes the send.step_holds.disable_incremental setting
- creates a new config option `replication` for active-side jobs
- adds the replication.protection.{initial,incremental} settings, each
  of which can have values
    - `guarantee_resumability`
    - `guarantee_incremental`
    - `guarantee_nothing`
  (refer to docs/configuration/replication.rst for semantics)

The `replication` config from an active side is sent to both endpoint.Sender and endpoint.Receiver
for each replication step. Sender and Receiver then act accordingly.

For `guarantee_incremental`, we add the new `tentative-replication-cursor` abstraction.
The necessity for that abstraction is outlined in https://github.com/zrepl/zrepl/issues/340.

fixes https://github.com/zrepl/zrepl/issues/340
2020-07-26 20:32:35 +02:00
Christian Schwarz
292b85b5ef [#316] endpoint / replication protocol: more robust step-holds and replication cursor management
- drop HintMostRecentCommonAncestor rpc call
    - it is wrong to put faith into the active side of the replication to always make that call
      (we might not trust it, ref pull setup)
- clean up step holds + step bookmarks + replication cursor bookmarks on
  send RPC instead
    - this makes it symmetric with Receive RPC
- use a cache (endpoint.sendAbstractionsCache) to avoid the cost of
  listing the on-disk endpoint abstractions state on every step

The "create" methods for endpoint abstractions (CreateReplicationCursor, HoldStep) are now fully
idempotent and return an Abstraction.

Notes about endpoint.sendAbstractionsCache:
- fills lazily from disk state on first `Get` operation
- fill from disk is generally only attempted once
    - unless the `ListAbstractions` fails, in which case the fill from
      disk is retried on next `Get` (the current `Get` will observe a
      subset of the actual on-disk abstractions)
    - the `Invalidate` method is called
- it is a global (zrepl process-wide) cache

fixes #316
2020-06-14 15:21:36 +02:00
Christian Schwarz
e0b5bd75f8 endpoint: refactor, fix stale holds on initial replication failure, zfs-abstractions subcmd, more efficient ZFS queries
The motivation for this recatoring are based on two independent issues:

- @JMoVS found that the changes merged as part of #259 slowed his OS X
  based installation down significantly.
  Analysis of the zfs command logging introduced in #296 showed that
  `zfs holds` took most of the execution time, and they pointed out
  that not all of those `zfs holds` invocations were actually necessary.
  I.e.: zrepl was inefficient about retrieving information from ZFS.

- @InsanePrawn found that failures on initial replication would lead
  to step holds accumulating on the sending side, i.e. they would never
  be cleaned up in the HintMostRecentCommonAncestor RPC handler.
  That was because we only sent that RPC if there was a most recent
  common ancestor detected during replication planning.
  @InsanePrawn prototyped an implementation of a `zrepl zfs-abstractions release`
  command to mitigate the situation.
  As part of that development work and back-and-forth with @problame,
  it became evident that the abstractions that #259 built on top of
  zfs in package endpoint (step holds, replication cursor,
  last-received-hold), were not well-represented for re-use in the
  `zrepl zfs-abstractions release` subocommand prototype.

This commit refactors package endpoint to address both of these issues:

- endpoint abstractions now share an interface `Abstraction` that, among
  other things, provides a uniform `Destroy()` method.
  However, that method should not be destroyed directly but instead
  the package-level `BatchDestroy` function should be used in order
  to allow for a migration to zfs channel programs in the future.

- endpoint now has a query facitilty (`ListAbstractions`) which is
  used to find on-disk
    - step holds and bookmarks
    - replication cursors (v1, v2)
    - last-received-holds
  By describing the query in a struct, we can centralized the retrieval
  of information via the ZFS CLI and only have to be clever once.
  We are "clever" in the following ways:
  - When asking for hold-based abstractions, we only run `zfs holds` on
    snapshot that have `userrefs` > 0
    - To support this functionality, add field `UserRefs` to zfs.FilesystemVersion
      and retrieve it anywhere we retrieve zfs.FilesystemVersion from ZFS.
  - When asking only for bookmark-based abstractions, we only run
    `zfs list -t bookmark`, not with snapshots.
  - Currently unused (except for CLI) per-filesystem concurrent lookup
  - Option to only include abstractions with CreateTXG in a specified range

- refactor `endpoint`'s various ZFS info  retrieval methods to use
  `ListAbstractions`

- rename the `zrepl holds list` command to `zrepl zfs-abstractions list`
- make `zrepl zfs-abstractions list` consume endpoint.ListAbstractions

- Add a `ListStale` method which, given a query template,
  lists stale holds and bookmarks.
  - it uses replication cursor has different modes
- the new `zrepl zfs-abstractions release-{all,stale}` commands can be used
  to remove abstractions of package endpoint

- Adjust HintMostRecentCommonAncestor RPC for stale-holds cleanup:
    - send it also if no most recent common ancestor exists between sender and receiver
    - have the sender clean up its abstractions when it receives the RPC
      with no most recent common ancestor, using `ListStale`
    - Due to changed semantics, bump the protocol version.

- Adjust HintMostRecentCommonAncestor RPC for performance problems
  encountered by @JMoVS
    - by default, per (job,fs)-combination, only consider cleaning
      step holds in the createtxg range
      `[last replication cursor,conservatively-estimated-receive-side-version)`
    - this behavior ensures resumability at cost proportional to the
      time that replication was donw
    - however, as explained in a comment, we might leak holds if
      the zrepl daemon stops running
    - that  trade-off is acceptable because in the presumably rare
      this might happen the user has two tools at their hand:
    - Tool 1: run `zrepl zfs-abstractions release-stale`
    - Tool 2: use env var `ZREPL_ENDPOINT_SENDER_HINT_MOST_RECENT_STEP_HOLD_CLEANUP_MODE`
      to adjust the lower bound of the createtxg range (search for it in the code).
      The env var can also be used to disable hold-cleanup on the
      send-side entirely.

supersedes closes #293
supersedes closes #282
fixes #280
fixes #278

Additionaly, we fixed a couple of bugs:

- zfs: fix half-nil error reporting of dataset-does-not-exist for ZFSListChan and ZFSBookmark

- endpoint: Sender's `HintMostRecentCommonAncestor` handler would not
  check whether access to the specified filesystem was allowed.
2020-04-18 12:26:03 +02:00
InsanePrawn
44bd354eae Spellcheck all files
Signed-off-by: InsanePrawn <insane.prawny@gmail.com>
2020-02-24 16:06:09 +01:00
Christian Schwarz
58c08c855f new features: {resumable,encrypted,hold-protected} send-recv, last-received-hold
- **Resumable Send & Recv Support**
  No knobs required, automatically used where supported.
- **Hold-Protected Send & Recv**
  Automatic ZFS holds to ensure that we can always resume a replication step.
- **Encrypted Send & Recv Support** for OpenZFS native encryption.
  Configurable at the job level, i.e., for all filesystems a job is responsible for.
- **Receive-side hold on last received dataset**
  The counterpart to the replication cursor bookmark on the send-side.
  Ensures that incremental replication will always be possible between a sender and receiver.

Design Doc
----------

`replication/design.md` doc describes how we use ZFS holds and bookmarks to ensure that a single replication step is always resumable.

The replication algorithm described in the design doc introduces the notion of job IDs (please read the details on this design doc).
We reuse the job names for job IDs and use `JobID` type to ensure that a job name can be embedded into hold tags, bookmark names, etc.
This might BREAK CONFIG on upgrade.

Protocol Version Bump
---------------------

This commit makes backwards-incompatible changes to the replication/pdu protobufs.
Thus, bump the version number used in the protocol handshake.

Replication Cursor Format Change
--------------------------------

The new replication cursor bookmark format is: `#zrepl_CURSOR_G_${this.GUID}_J_${jobid}`
Including the GUID enables transaction-safe moving-forward of the cursor.
Including the job id enables that multiple sending jobs can send the same filesystem without interfering.
The `zrepl migrate replication-cursor:v1-v2` subcommand can be used to safely destroy old-format cursors once zrepl has created new-format cursors.

Changes in This Commit
----------------------

- package zfs
  - infrastructure for holds
  - infrastructure for resume token decoding
  - implement a variant of OpenZFS's `entity_namecheck` and use it for validation in new code
  - ZFSSendArgs to specify a ZFS send operation
    - validation code protects against malicious resume tokens by checking that the token encodes the same send parameters that the send-side would use if no resume token were available (i.e. same filesystem, `fromguid`, `toguid`)
  - RecvOptions support for `recv -s` flag
  - convert a bunch of ZFS operations to be idempotent
    - achieved through more differentiated error message scraping / additional pre-/post-checks

- package replication/pdu
  - add field for encryption to send request messages
  - add fields for resume handling to send & recv request messages
  - receive requests now contain `FilesystemVersion To` in addition to the filesystem into which the stream should be `recv`d into
    - can use `zfs recv $root_fs/$client_id/path/to/dataset@${To.Name}`, which enables additional validation after recv (i.e. whether `To.Guid` matched what we received in the stream)
    - used to set `last-received-hold`
- package replication/logic
  - introduce `PlannerPolicy` struct, currently only used to configure whether encrypted sends should be requested from the sender
  - integrate encryption and resume token support into `Step` struct

- package endpoint
  - move the concepts that endpoint builds on top of ZFS to a single file `endpoint/endpoint_zfs.go`
    - step-holds + step-bookmarks
    - last-received-hold
    - new replication cursor + old replication cursor compat code
  - adjust `endpoint/endpoint.go` handlers for
    - encryption
    - resumability
    - new replication cursor
    - last-received-hold

- client subcommand `zrepl holds list`: list all holds and hold-like bookmarks that zrepl thinks belong to it
- client subcommand `zrepl migrate replication-cursor:v1-v2`
2020-02-14 22:00:13 +01:00
Christian Schwarz
afed762774 format source tree using goimports 2019-03-22 19:41:12 +01:00
Christian Schwarz
d50e553ebb handle changes to placeholder state correctly
We assumed that `zfs recv -F FS` would basically replace FS inplace, leaving its children untouched.
That is in fact not the case, it only works if `zfs send -R` is set, which we don't do.

Thus, implement the required functionality manually.

This solves a `zfs recv` error that would occur when a filesystem previously created as placeholder on the receiving side becomes a non-placeholder filesystem (likely due to config change on the sending side):

  zfs send pool1/foo@1 | zfs recv -F pool1/bar
  cannot receive new filesystem stream:
  destination has snapshots (eg. pool1/bar)
  must destroy them to overwrite it
2019-03-13 18:46:04 +01:00
Christian Schwarz
c87759affe replication/driver: automatic retries on connectivity-related errors 2019-03-13 15:00:40 +01:00
Christian Schwarz
07b43bffa4 replication: refactor driving logic (no more explicit state machine) 2019-03-13 15:00:40 +01:00