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We have the problem that there are legitimate use cases where a user does not want their machine to fill up with snapshots, even if it means unreplicated must be destroyed. This can be expressed by *not* configuring the keep rule `not_replicated` for the snapshot-creating side. This commit only addresses push mode because we don't support pruning in the source job. We adivse users in the docs to use push mode if they have above use case, so this is fine - at least for 0.1. Ideally, the replication.Replication would communicate to the pruner which snapshots are currently part of the replication plan, and then we'd need some conflict resolution to determine whether it's more important to destroy the snapshots or to replicate them (destroy should win?). However, we don't have the infrastructure for this yet (we could parse the replication report, but that's just ugly). And we want to get 0.1 out, so showtime for a dirty hack: We start replication, and ideally, replication and pruning is done before new snapshot have been taken. If so: great. However, what happens if snapshots have been taken and we are not done with replication and / or pruning? * If replicatoin is making progress according to its state, let it run. This covers the *important* situation of initial replication, where replication may easily take longer than a single snapshotting interval. * If replication is in an error state, cancel it through context cancellation. * As with the pruner below, the main problem here is that status output will only contain "context cancelled" after the cancellation, instead of showing the reason why it was cancelled. Not nice, but oh well, the logs provide enough detail for this niche situation... * If we are past replication, we're still pruning * Leave the local (send-side) pruning alone. Again, we only implement this hack for push, so we know sender is local, and it will only fail hard, not retry. * If the remote (receiver-side) pruner is in an error state, cancel it through context cancellation. * Otherwise, let it run. Note that every time we "let it run", we tolerate a temporary excess of snapshots, but given sufficiently aggressive timeouts and the assumption that the snapshot interval is much greater than the timeouts, this is not a significant problem in practice. |
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reset | ||
wakeup | ||
active.go | ||
build_jobs.go | ||
job.go | ||
passive.go |