#!/usr/bin/env bash
# file : bpkg-rep/publish.in
# copyright : Copyright (c) 2014-2018 Code Synthesis Ltd
# license : MIT; see accompanying LICENSE file
# Update (bpkg-rep-create(1)) and publish (rsync(1)) an archive-based
# repository.
#
# Pull a pre-cloned (read-only) git repository with the contents of an
# archive-based bpkg repository. Bail out if nothing changed from the the
# previous run. Otherwise, regenerate the repository meta-data by running
# bpkg-rep-create(1) on each section of the repository and, optionally,
# synchronize it to one or more destinations with rsync.
#
# The repository contents are expected to be in the
/1/ subdirectory. The
# script saves the last successfully published commit in the .publish
# file.
#
# --destination|-d :
#
# Remote host and directory to rsync the repository to. Note that the
# trailing 1/ will be added automatically. In other words, the rsync command
# will be in the form:
#
# rsync ... /1/ :/1/
#
# Repeat this option to specify multiple destinations. In this case, the
# destinations are synced in the order specified with the first failure
# terminating the process (so if you have a "primary" destination and a
# "mirror", you probably want to specify the former first).
#
# --timeout
#
# Git and rsync operation timeout. Specifically, the operation will be
# aborted if there is no network activity for the specified time. Default is
# 60 seconds. Note that currently the git timeout is only supported for the
# http(s) transport.
#
# --lock-timeout
#
# The repository lock timeout. Fail if another instance of the script does
# not release the repository in the specified time. The default is 0 (do
# not wait).
#
# Note that you will most likely want to specify a non-zero timeout for cron
# jobs that may potentially overlap.
#
# --log-dir
#
# Directory to create the temporary log files in. If unspecified, the stderr
# is not redirected and no log is created by default.
#
# The log is dumped to stderr in case of an error or at the end of execution
# unless in the quiet mode and is then deleted.
#
# --quiet
#
# Run quiet. Specifically, don't dump the log to stderr on exit with zero
# status.
#
# --config
#
# The configuration file containing a bash fragment. Repeat this option to
# specify multiple configurations that will be sourced in the order
# specified.
#
# --bpkg
#
# The package manager program to be used for the repository update. This
# should be the path to the bpkg executable.
#
usage="usage: $0 [] [] [-- ]"
trap "{ exit 1; }" ERR
set -o errtrace # Trap ERR in functions.
@import bpkg-rep/utility@
# The script own options.
#
repo_ver=1
destinations=()
timeout=60
lock_timeout=0
log_dir=
quiet=
configurations=()
bpkg=
while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
case $1 in
--destination|-d)
shift
destinations+=("$1")
shift || true
;;
--timeout)
shift
timeout="$1"
shift || true
;;
--lock-timeout)
shift
lock_timeout="$1"
shift || true
;;
--log-dir)
shift
log_dir="${1%/}"
shift || true
;;
--quiet)
shift
quiet=true
;;
--config)
shift
configurations+=("$1")
shift || true
;;
--bpkg)
shift
bpkg="$1"
shift || true
;;
--)
shift
break
;;
*)
break
;;
esac
done
# The repository directory.
#
repo_dir="${1%/}"
shift || true
# bpkg-rep-create options.
#
rep_create_options=()
while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
case $1 in
--)
shift
break
;;
*)
rep_create_options+=("$1")
shift
;;
esac
done
# rsync options.
#
rsync_options=()
while [ $# -gt 0 ]; do
rsync_options+=("$1")
shift
done
# Validate options and arguments.
#
if [ -z "$repo_dir" ]; then
error "$usage"
fi
if [ ! -d "$repo_dir" ]; then
error "'$repo_dir' does not exist or is not a directory"
fi
# If the log directory is specified then redirect stderr to the log file and
# setup the trap that dumps it on exit, if required.
#
if [ -n "$log_dir" ]; then
if [ ! -d "$log_dir" ]; then
error "'$log_dir' does not exist or is not a directory"
fi
# Create the log file.
#
log="$(mktemp "$log_dir/$(basename "$repo_dir").XXXXXXXXXX")"
# Save the stderr file descriptor so we can dump the log into it on exit, if
# required. Then redirect it to the log file.
#
exec {stderr}>&2
exec 2>>"$log"
function exit_trap ()
{
local status="$?"
# Dump the log to stderr if exiting with non-zero status or verbose.
#
if [ $status -ne 0 -o ! "$quiet" ]; then
# Keep the log if failed to dump for any reason.
#
if ! cat "$log" >&$stderr; then
return
fi
fi
rm -f "$log"
}
trap exit_trap EXIT
fi
# Source the configurations.
#
for c in "${configurations[@]}"; do
source "$c" >&2
done
# Make sure the commit file is present.
#
published_commit="$repo_dir.publish"
touch "$published_commit"
# Open the reading file descriptor and lock the repository. Fail if unable to
# lock before timeout.
#
exec {cfd}<"$published_commit"
if ! flock -w "$lock_timeout" "$cfd"; then
info "another instance is already running"
exit 2
fi
# Pull the repository.
#
# Git doesn't support the connection timeout option. The options we use are
# just an approximation of the former, that, in particular, don't cover the
# connection establishing. To work around this problem, before running a git
# command that assumes the remote repository communication we manually check
# connectivity with the remote repository.
#
if ! remote_url="$(git -C "$repo_dir" config --get remote.origin.url)"; then
error "'$repo_dir' is not a git repository"
fi
run check_git_connectivity "$remote_url" "$timeout"
# Fail if no network activity happens during the time specified.
#
run git -c http.lowSpeedLimit=1 -c "http.lowSpeedTime=$timeout" \
-C "$repo_dir" pull -v >&2
# Match the HEAD commit id to the one stored in the file. If it matches, then
# nothing changed in the repository from the previous run and we can silently
# bail out.
#
commit="$(git -C "$repo_dir" rev-parse HEAD)"
pc="$(cat <&"$cfd")"
if [ "$commit" == "$pc" ]; then
quiet=true
exit 0
fi
# If bpkg path is not specified, then use the bpkg program from the script
# directory, if present. Otherwise, use the 'bpkg' path.
#
if [ -z "$bpkg" ]; then
bpkg="$(dirname "$(realpath "${BASH_SOURCE[0]}")")/bpkg"
if [ ! -x "$bpkg" ]; then
bpkg=bpkg
fi
fi
# Find repository sections.
#
manifests="$(find "$repo_dir/$repo_ver" -type f -name repositories.manifest)"
# Update the repository sections.
#
while read f; do
run "$bpkg" rep-create "${rep_create_options[@]}" "$(dirname "$f")"
done <<<"$manifests"
# rsync (over ssh) the repository to the destinations.
#
# Approximate the data transfer timeout via the ServerAlive* ssh options,
# rounding the timeout up to the nearest multiple of ten.
#
# Note: must not contain spaces/use quoting (see rsync -e option).
#
n=$(($timeout > 0 ? ($timeout + 9) / 10 : 1))
ssh_options=(-o ConnectTimeout=$timeout \
-o ServerAliveInterval=10 \
-o ServerAliveCountMax=$n)
for d in "${destinations[@]}"; do
# -r (recursive)
# -l (copy symlinks and symlinks)
# -p (preserve perms)
# -t (preserve timestamps)
# -O (omit dir timestamps)
#
# -c (use checksum)
# -e (remote shell command)
#
# --safe-links (ignore symlinks pointing outside the tree)
# --delay-updates (first upload all files on the side then move)
# --prune-empty-dirs (remove empty dirs)
# --delete-after (delete entries after the transfer)
#
# We also exclude hiddent files (start with dot).
#
run rsync -v -rlptO -c --safe-links --delay-updates --exclude '.*' \
--prune-empty-dirs --delete-after -e "ssh ${ssh_options[*]}" \
"${rsync_options[@]}" "$repo_dir/$repo_ver/" "$d/$repo_ver/" >&2
done
echo "$commit" >"$published_commit"