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302 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
302 lines
11 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. include:: ../global.rst.inc
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.. |serve-transport| replace:: :ref:`serve specification<transport>`
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.. |connect-transport| replace:: :ref:`connect specification<transport>`
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.. |snapshotting-spec| replace:: :ref:`snapshotting specification <job-snapshotting-spec>`
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.. |pruning-spec| replace:: :ref:`pruning specification <prune>`
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.. |filter-spec| replace:: :ref:`filter specification<pattern-filter>`
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.. _job:
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Job Types & Replication
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=======================
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Overview & Terminology
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----------------------
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A *job* is the unit of activity tracked by the zrepl daemon and configured in the |mainconfig|.
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Every job has a unique ``name``, a ``type`` and type-dependent fields which are documented on this page.
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Replication always happens between a pair of jobs: one is the **active side**, and one the **passive side**.
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The active side executes the replication logic whereas the passive side responds to requests after checking the active side's permissions.
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For communication, the active side connects to the passive side using a :ref:`transport <transport>` and starts issuing remote procedure calls (RPCs).
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The following table shows how different job types can be combined to achieve both push and pull mode setups:
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+-----------------------+--------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
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| Setup name | active side | passive side | use case |
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+=======================+==============+==================================+===============================================+
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| Push mode | ``push`` | ``sink`` | * Laptop backup |
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| | | | * NAS behind NAT to offsite |
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+-----------------------+--------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
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| Pull mode | ``pull`` | ``source`` | * Central backup-server for many nodes |
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| | | | * Remote server to NAS behind NAT |
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+-----------------------+--------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
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| Local replication | | ``push`` + ``sink`` in one config | * Backup FreeBSD boot pool |
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| | | with :ref:`local transport <transport-local>` | |
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+-----------------------+--------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
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| SnapJob | ``snap`` | N/A | * Data requires versioning but no backups |
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| | | | * Combined with a ``push`` or ``pull`` job: |
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| | | | |
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| | | | * High frequency local snapshotting |
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| | | | * Low frequency replication |
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+-----------------------+--------------+----------------------------------+-----------------------------------------------+
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How the Active Side Works
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The active side (:ref:`push <job-push>` and :ref:`pull <job-pull>` job) executes the replication and pruning logic:
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* Wakeup because of finished snapshotting (``push`` job) or pull interval ticker (``pull`` job).
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* Connect to the corresponding passive side using a :ref:`transport <transport>` and instantiate an RPC client.
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* Replicate data from the sending to the receiving side.
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* Prune on sender & receiver.
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.. TIP::
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The progress of the active side can be watched live using the ``zrepl status`` subcommand.
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How the Passive Side Works
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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The passive side (:ref:`sink <job-sink>` and :ref:`source <job-source>`) waits for connections from the corresponding active side,
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using the transport listener type specified in the ``serve`` field of the job configuration.
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Each transport listener provides a client's identity to the passive side job.
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It uses the client identity for access control:
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* The ``sink`` job maps requests from different client identities to their respective sub-filesystem tree ``root_fs/${client_identity}``.
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* The ``source`` job has a whitelist of client identities that are allowed pull access.
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.. TIP::
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The implementation of the ``sink`` job requires that the connecting client identities be a valid ZFS filesystem name components.
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How Replication Works
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~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
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One of the major design goals of the replication module is to avoid any duplication of the nontrivial logic.
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As such, the code works on abstract senders and receiver **endpoints**, where typically one will be implemented by a local program object and the other is an RPC client instance.
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Regardless of push- or pull-style setup, the logic executes on the active side, i.e. in the ``push`` or ``pull`` job.
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The following steps take place during replication and can be monitored using the ``zrepl status`` subcommand:
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* Plan the replication:
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* Compare sender and receiver filesystem snapshots
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* Build the **replication plan**
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* Per filesystem, compute a diff between sender and receiver snapshots
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* Build a list of replication steps
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* If possible, use incremental sends (``zfs send -i``)
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* Otherwise, use full send of most recent snapshot on sender
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* Give up on filesystems that cannot be replicated without data loss
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* Retry on errors that are likely temporary (i.e. network failures).
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* Give up on filesystems where a permanent error was received over RPC.
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* Execute the plan
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* Perform replication steps in the following order:
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Among all filesystems with pending replication steps, pick the filesystem whose next replication step's snapshot is the oldest.
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* After a successful replication step, update the replication cursor bookmark (see below)
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The idea behind the execution order of replication steps is that if the sender snapshots all filesystems simultaneously at fixed intervals, the receiver will have all filesystems snapshotted at time ``T1`` before the first snapshot at ``T2 = T1 + $interval`` is replicated.
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.. _replication-cursor-bookmark:
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The **replication cursor bookmark** ``#zrepl_replication_cursor`` is kept per filesystem on the sending side of a replication setup:
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It is a bookmark of the most recent successfully replicated snapshot to the receiving side.
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It is is used by the :ref:`not_replicated <prune-keep-not-replicated>` keep rule to identify all snapshots that have not yet been replicated to the receiving side.
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Regardless of whether that keep rule is used, the bookmark ensures that replication can always continue incrementally.
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.. ATTENTION::
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Currently, zrepl does not replicate filesystem properties.
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Whe receiving a filesystem, it is never mounted (`-u` flag) and `mountpoint=none` is set.
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This is temporary and being worked on :issue:`24`.
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.. _job-snapshotting-spec:
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Taking Snaphots
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---------------
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The ``push``, ``source`` and ``snap`` jobs can automatically take periodic snapshots of the filesystems matched by the ``filesystems`` filter field.
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The snapshot names are composed of a user-defined prefix followed by a UTC date formatted like ``20060102_150405_000``.
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We use UTC because it will avoid name conflicts when switching time zones or between summer and winter time.
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For ``push`` jobs, replication is automatically triggered after all filesystems have been snapshotted.
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::
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jobs:
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- type: push
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filesystems: {
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"<": true,
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"tmp": false
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}
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snapshotting:
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type: periodic
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prefix: zrepl_
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interval: 10m
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...
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There is also a ``manual`` snapshotting type, which covers the following use cases:
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* Existing infrastructure for automatic snapshots: you only want to use this zrepl job for replication.
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* Run scripts before and after taking snapshots (like locking database tables).
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We are working on better integration for this use case: see :issue:`74`.
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* Handling snapshotting through a separate ``snap`` job.
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Note that you will have to trigger replication manually using the ``zrepl signal wakeup JOB`` subcommand in that case.
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::
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jobs:
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- type: push
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filesystems: {
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"<": true,
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"tmp": false
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}
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snapshotting:
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type: manual
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...
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.. _job-push:
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Job Type ``push``
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-----------------
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.. list-table::
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:widths: 20 80
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:header-rows: 1
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* - Parameter
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- Comment
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* - ``type``
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- = ``push``
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* - ``name``
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- unique name of the job
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* - ``connect``
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- |connect-transport|
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* - ``filesystems``
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- |filter-spec| for filesystems to be snapshotted and pushed to the sink
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* - ``snapshotting``
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- |snapshotting-spec|
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* - ``pruning``
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- |pruning-spec|
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Example config: :sampleconf:`/push.yml`
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.. _job-sink:
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Job Type ``sink``
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-----------------
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.. list-table::
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:widths: 20 80
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:header-rows: 1
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* - Parameter
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- Comment
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* - ``type``
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- = ``sink``
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* - ``name``
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- unique name of the job
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* - ``serve``
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- |serve-transport|
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* - ``root_fs``
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- ZFS dataset path are received to
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``$root_fs/$client_identity``
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Example config: :sampleconf:`/sink.yml`
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.. _job-pull:
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Job Type ``pull``
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-----------------
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.. list-table::
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:widths: 20 80
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:header-rows: 1
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* - Parameter
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- Comment
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* - ``type``
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- = ``pull``
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* - ``name``
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- unique name of the job
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* - ``connect``
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- |connect-transport|
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* - ``root_fs``
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- ZFS dataset path are received to
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``$root_fs/$client_identity``
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* - ``interval``
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- | Interval at which to pull from the source job (e.g. ``10m``).
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| ``manual`` disables periodic pulling, replication then only happens on :ref:`wakeup <cli-signal-wakeup>`.
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* - ``pruning``
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- |pruning-spec|
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Example config: :sampleconf:`/pull.yml`
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.. _job-source:
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Job Type ``source``
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-------------------
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.. list-table::
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:widths: 20 80
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:header-rows: 1
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* - Parameter
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- Comment
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* - ``type``
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- = ``source``
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* - ``name``
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- unique name of the job
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* - ``serve``
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- |serve-transport|
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* - ``filesystems``
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- |filter-spec| for filesystems to be snapshotted and exposed to connecting clients
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* - ``snapshotting``
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- |snapshotting-spec|
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Example config: :sampleconf:`/source.yml`
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.. _replication-local:
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Local replication
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-----------------
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If you have the need for local replication (most likely between two local storage pools), you can use the :ref:`local transport type <transport-local>` to connect a local push job to a local sink job.
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Example config: :sampleconf:`/local.yml`.
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.. _job-snap:
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Job Type ``snap`` (snapshot & prune only)
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-----------------------------------------
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Job type that only takes snapshots and pruning on the local machine.
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.. list-table::
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:widths: 20 80
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:header-rows: 1
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* - Parameter
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- Comment
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* - ``type``
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- = ``snap``
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* - ``name``
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- unique name of the job
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* - ``filesystems``
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- |filter-spec| for filesystems to be snapshotted
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* - ``snapshotting``
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- |snapshotting-spec|
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* - ``pruning``
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- |pruning-spec|
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Example config: :sampleconf:`/snap.yml`
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