girror

0.2.11 • Public • Published

girror - Efficient mirroring of git remotes

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girror maintains mirrors of git repositories on the local system using a bare repository cache. This makes it especially useful to handle post-commit triggers and automatically pull changes from a remote.

$ sudo npm install -g girror
$ girror git@github.com/eladb/node-girror /tmp/node-girror-master
$ girror git@github.com/eladb/node-girror#branch1 /tmp/node-girror-branch1

Now, every time the remote changes, calling girror again will update the worktree.

girror uses a bare repository with a --mirror=fetch origin to maintain a cached mirror of the remote.

It essentially performs the following steps:

git init --bare # idempotent
git remote add --mirror=fetch <remote> # tolerate failures
git fetch origin
git --work-tree <worktree> checkout -f <branch>

The bare repository will be created in a directory under /tmp/girror-cache (or $TEMP/girror-cache in Windows). The name of the directory is based on the remote URL (mangled). If GIRROR_CACHE environment variable is defined, it will be used as the cache root.

girror can be used as a command line tool or as a node.js in-process module.

Since git supports concurrency both for fetch and checkout, girror is also safe. Multiple girror operations may run in parallel. However, this might not be very efficient since the initial fetch operation may take a long time and running multiple fetch operations against the same repository will be wasty. If you have multiple girror operations that you wish to run against the same repository (e.g. checkout different branches/tags to various working trees), you might want to do a single girror operation first that will perform the initial fetch and then run all the rest concurrently.

Command line

$ girror --help
 
  Usage: girror                             - resync current directory (read <remote-url> and <branch> from .girror.json)
         girror work-tree                   - resync <worktree> (read <remote-url> and <branch> from .girror.json)
         girror remote-url worktree         - sync/resync <remote-url> into <worktree> and checkout "master"
         girror remote-url#branch worktree  - sync/resync <remote-url> into <worktree> and checkout <branch>
 
  Options:
 
    -h, --help             output usage information
    -v, --verbose          verbose output
    --shallow              create a shallow clone (--depth=1)
    --no-girror-file       do not create .girror.json file in worktree
    --find-remote          output the remote URL of the specified <worktree>if a girror file can be found
 

API

girror(remote, worktree, options, callback)

  • remote - the URL of the git remote (postfix with '#branch' to checkout a specific branch). If remote is null, girror will look for a .girror.json file up the file system and will induce remote#branch from there.
  • worktree - path to local working directory (where you want files to be checked out into)
  • options.cachedir - where to store the bare repo cache that makes girror so awesome (default is $GIRROR_CACHE || ($TMP || $TEMP || /tmp)/girror-cache)
  • options.logger - optional alternative to console.
  • options.remote_type - A mapper for the remote URL (function(remote_url) => remote_url). You can either provide your own function, or use one of the built in ones:
    • girror.remote_types.no_auth() - passthru (the default)
    • girror.remote_types.auth(user, password) - add user:password@ to URL.
    • girror.remote_types.github_ssh() - convert a github (e.g. https://github.com/account/repo) URL to an SSH URL (e.g. git@github.com/account/repo.git)
  • options.girrorfile - The name of the girror file to create under the worktree (contains some metadata on the last girror operation). Set to false to disable. Default is .girror.json.
  • options.depth: defines the clone depth (-1 indicates infinite). Default is -1.
  • options.verbose: outputs git & girror verbose into logger. Default is false.

girror.git(args, options, callback)

Invokes git. Returns a ChildProcess object that can be used to grab stdio or whatever.

  • args array of arguments to pass to git.
  • options.env environment hash (default is process.env)
  • options.logger optional logger (default is console)
  • options.tolerate never fail (default false)
  • options.verbose verbose output (default true)
  • callback is function(err)

girror.find_meta(dir, options, callback)

This function will look for a girror file under dir and any of it's parents. It will parse the first one it finds and return it via the callback function (function(err, meta)). If the girror file could not be found, meta will be null. options.girrorfile may contain a different name for the girror file and options is optional.

Using girror for continuous deployment

girror was built to enable automatic deployment from source control:

  1. Set up a post-commit HTTP trigger on your favorite source control that will POST into some endpoint on your servers.
  2. Invoke girror to sync from the remote repository into the local filesystem. girror will do it as efficiently and painlessly as possible (no merges, no cleanups, only clean diffs).
  3. You can also use it to sync multiple branches into your production servers and use them as staging environments (yeah!).

I will create a "girror-middleware" for express so you can just plug it in and have all this automated.

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License

MIT

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npm i girror

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Version

0.2.11

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Collaborators

  • eladb
  • yosefd
  • avnerner