This is the "master" branch, which is under development. If you are looking for docs on older (v3) versions of git-sync, you probably want to use the v3.x branch.
git-sync is a simple command that pulls a git repository into a local directory, waits for a while, then repeats. As the remote repository changes, those changes will be synced locally. It is a perfect "sidecar" container in Kubernetes - it can pull files down from a repository so that an application can consume them.
git-sync can pull one time, or on a regular interval. It can pull from the HEAD of a branch, from a git tag, or from a specific git hash. It will only re-pull if the referenced target has changed in the upstream repository (e.g. a new commit on a branch). It "publishes" each sync through a worktree and a named symlink. This ensures an atomic update - consumers will not see a partially constructed view of the local repository.
git-sync can pull over HTTP(S) (with authentication or not) or SSH.
git-sync can also be configured to make a webhook call or exec a command upon successful git repo synchronization. The call is made after the symlink is updated.
git-sync has two required flags: --repo
, which specifies which remote git
repo to sync, and --root
which specifies a working directory for git-sync,
which presents an "API" of sorts.
The --root
directory is not the synced data.
Inside the --root
directory git-sync stores the synced git state and other
things. That directory may or may not respond to git commands - it's an
implementation detail.
One of the things in that directory is a symlink (see the --link
flag) to the
most recently synced data. This is how the data is expected to be consumed,
and is considered to be the "contract" between git-sync and consumers. The
exact target of that symlink is an implementation detail, but the leaf
component of the target (i.e. basename "$(readlink <link>)"
) is the git hash
of the synced revision. This is also part of the contract.
git-sync looks for changes in the remote repo periodically (see the --period
flag) and will attempt to transfer as little data as possible and use as little
disk space as possible (see the --depth
and --git-gc
flags), but this is
not part of the contract.
git checkouts are not "atomic" operations. If you look at the repository while a checkout is happening, you might see data that is neither exactly the old revision nor the new. git-sync "publishes" updates via the symlink to present an atomic interface to consumers. When the remote repo has changed, git-sync will fetch the data without checking it out, then create a new worktree, then change the symlink to point to that new worktree.
git-sync does not currently have a no-symlink mode.
git-sync has undergone many significant changes between v3.x and v4.x. See here for more details.
We use docker buildx to build images.
# build the container
make container REGISTRY=registry VERSION=tag
# build the container behind a proxy
make container REGISTRY=registry VERSION=tag \
HTTP_PROXY=http://<proxy_address>:<proxy_port> \
HTTPS_PROXY=https://<proxy_address>:<proxy_port>
# build the container for an OS/arch other than the current (e.g. you are on
# MacOS and want to run on Linux)
make container REGISTRY=registry VERSION=tag \
GOOS=linux GOARCH=amd64
# make a directory (owned by you) for the volume
export DIR="/tmp/git-data"
mkdir -p $DIR
# run the container (as your own UID)
docker run -d \
-v $DIR:/tmp/git \
-u$(id -u):$(id -g) \
registry/git-sync:tag \
--repo=https://github.com/kubernetes/git-sync \
--root=/tmp/git/root \
--period=30s
# run an nginx container to serve the content
docker run -d \
-p 8080:80 \
-v $DIR:/usr/share/nginx/html \
nginx
git-sync has many flags and optional features (see the manual below). Most of those flags can be configured through environment variables, but in most cases (with the obvious exception of passwords) flags are preferred, because the program can abort if an invalid flag is specified, but a misspelled environment variable will just be ignored. We've tried to stay backwards-compatible across major versions (by accepting deprecated flags and environment variables), but some things have evolved, and users are encouraged to use the most recent flags for their major version.
The --root
flag must indicate either a directory that either a) does not
exist (it will be created); or b) exists and is empty; or c) can be emptied by
removing all of the contents.
Why? Git really wants an empty directory, to avoid any confusion. If the
directory exists and is not empty, git-sync will try to empty it by removing
everything in it (we can't just rm -rf
the dir because it might be a mounted
volume). If that fails, git-sync will abort.
With the above example or with a Kubernetes emptyDir
, there is usually no
problem. The problematic case is when the volume is the root of a filesystem,
which sometimes contains metadata (e.g. ext{2,3,4} have a lost+found
dir).
The only real solution is to use a sub-directory of the volume as the --root
.
More documentation on specific topics can be found here.
GIT-SYNC
NAME
git-sync - sync a remote git repository
SYNOPSIS
git-sync --repo=<repo> --root=<path> [OPTIONS]...
DESCRIPTION
Fetch a remote git repository to a local directory, poll the remote for
changes, and update the local copy.
This is a perfect "sidecar" container in Kubernetes. For example, it can
periodically pull files down from a repository so that an application can
consume them.
git-sync can pull one time, or on a regular interval. It can read from the
HEAD of a branch, from a git tag, or from a specific git hash. It will only
re-pull if the target has changed in the remote repository. When it
re-pulls, it updates the destination directory atomically. In order to do
this, it uses a git worktree in a subdirectory of the --root and flips a
symlink.
git-sync can pull over HTTP(S) (with authentication or not) or SSH.
git-sync can also be configured to make a webhook call upon successful git
repo synchronization. The call is made after the symlink is updated.
CONTRACT
git-sync has two required flags:
--repo: specifies which remote git repo to sync
--root: specifies a working directory for git-sync
The root directory is not the synced data.
Inside the root directory, git-sync stores the synced git state and other
things. That directory may or may not respond to git commands - it's an
implementation detail.
One of the things in that directory is a symlink (see the --link flag) to
the most recently synced data. This is how the data is expected to be
consumed, and is considered to be the "contract" between git-sync and
consumers. The exact target of that symlink is an implementation detail,
but the leaf component of the target (i.e. basename "$(readlink <link>)")
is the git hash of the synced revision. This is also part of the contract.
Why the symlink? git checkouts are not "atomic" operations. If you look
at the repository while a checkout is happening, you might see data that is
neither exactly the old revision nor the new. git-sync "publishes" updates
via the symlink to present an atomic interface to consumers. When the
remote repo has changed, git-sync will fetch the data _without_ checking it
out, then create a new worktree, then change the symlink to point to that
new worktree.
git-sync looks for changes in the remote repo periodically (see the
--period flag) and will attempt to transfer as little data as possible and
use as little disk space as possible (see the --depth and --git-gc flags),
but this is not part of the contract.
OPTIONS
Many options can be specified as either a commandline flag or an environment
variable, but flags are preferred because a misspelled flag is a fatal
error while a misspelled environment variable is silently ignored. Some
options can only be specified as an environment variable.
--add-user, $GITSYNC_ADD_USER
Add a record to /etc/passwd for the current UID/GID. This is
needed to use SSH with an arbitrary UID. This assumes that
/etc/passwd is writable by the current UID.
--askpass-url <string>, $GITSYNC_ASKPASS_URL
A URL to query for git credentials. The query must return success
(200) and produce a series of key=value lines, including
"username=<value>" and "password=<value>".
--cookie-file <string>, $GITSYNC_COOKIE_FILE
Use a git cookiefile (/etc/git-secret/cookie_file) for
authentication.
--credential <string>, $GITSYNC_CREDENTIAL
Make one or more credentials available for authentication (see git
help credential). This is similar to --username and
$GITSYNC_PASSWORD or --password-file, but for specific URLs, for
example when using submodules. The value for this flag is either a
JSON-encoded object (see the schema below) or a JSON-encoded list
of that same object type. This flag may be specified more than
once.
Object schema:
- url: string, required
- username: string, required
- password: string, optional
- password-file: string, optional
One of password or password-file must be specified. Users should
prefer password-file for better security.
Example:
--credential='{"url":"https://github.com", "username":"myname", "password-file":"/creds/mypass"}'
--depth <int>, $GITSYNC_DEPTH
Create a shallow clone with history truncated to the specified
number of commits. If not specified, this defaults to syncing a
single commit. Setting this to 0 will sync the full history of the
repo.
--error-file <string>, $GITSYNC_ERROR_FILE
The path to an optional file into which errors will be written.
This may be an absolute path or a relative path, in which case it
is relative to --root.
--exechook-backoff <duration>, $GITSYNC_EXECHOOK_BACKOFF
The time to wait before retrying a failed --exechook-command. If
not specified, this defaults to 3 seconds ("3s").
--exechook-command <string>, $GITSYNC_EXECHOOK_COMMAND
An optional command to be executed after syncing a new hash of the
remote repository. This command does not take any arguments and
executes with the synced repo as its working directory. The
$GITSYNC_HASH environment variable will be set to the git hash that
was synced. If, at startup, git-sync finds that the --root already
has the correct hash, this hook will still be invoked. This means
that hooks can be invoked more than one time per hash, so they
must be idempotent. This flag obsoletes --sync-hook-command, but
if sync-hook-command is specified, it will take precedence.
--exechook-timeout <duration>, $GITSYNC_EXECHOOK_TIMEOUT
The timeout for the --exechook-command. If not specifid, this
defaults to 30 seconds ("30s").
--git <string>, $GITSYNC_GIT
The git command to run (subject to PATH search, mostly for
testing). This defaults to "git".
--git-config <string>, $GITSYNC_GIT_CONFIG
Additional git config options in a comma-separated 'key:val'
format. The parsed keys and values are passed to 'git config' and
must be valid syntax for that command.
Both keys and values can be either quoted or unquoted strings.
Within quoted keys and all values (quoted or not), the following
escape sequences are supported:
'\n' => [newline]
'\t' => [tab]
'\"' => '"'
'\,' => ','
'\\' => '\'
To include a colon within a key (e.g. a URL) the key must be
quoted. Within unquoted values commas must be escaped. Within
quoted values commas may be escaped, but are not required to be.
Any other escape sequence is an error.
--git-gc <string>, $GITSYNC_GIT_GC
The git garbage collection behavior: one of "auto", "always",
"aggressive", or "off". If not specified, this defaults to
"auto".
- auto: Run "git gc --auto" once per successful sync. This mode
respects git's gc.* config params.
- always: Run "git gc" once per successful sync.
- aggressive: Run "git gc --aggressive" once per successful sync.
This mode can be slow and may require a longer --sync-timeout value.
- off: Disable explicit git garbage collection, which may be a good
fit when also using --one-time.
--group-write, $GITSYNC_GROUP_WRITE
Ensure that data written to disk (including the git repo metadata,
checked out files, worktrees, and symlink) are all group writable.
This corresponds to git's notion of a "shared repository". This is
useful in cases where data produced by git-sync is used by a
different UID. This replaces the older --change-permissions flag.
-?, -h, --help
Print help text and exit.
--http-bind <string>, $GITSYNC_HTTP_BIND
The bind address (including port) for git-sync's HTTP endpoint.
The '/' URL of this endpoint is suitable for Kubernetes startup and
liveness probes, returning a 5xx error until the first sync is
complete, and a 200 status thereafter. If not specified, the HTTP
endpoint is not enabled.
Examples:
":1234": listen on any IP, port 1234
"127.0.0.1:1234": listen on localhost, port 1234
--http-metrics, $GITSYNC_HTTP_METRICS
Enable metrics on git-sync's HTTP endpoint at /metrics. Requires
--http-bind to be specified.
--http-pprof, $GITSYNC_HTTP_PPROF
Enable the pprof debug endpoints on git-sync's HTTP endpoint at
/debug/pprof. Requires --http-bind to be specified.
--link <string>, $GITSYNC_LINK
The path to at which to create a symlink which points to the
current git directory, at the currently synced hash. This may be
an absolute path or a relative path, in which case it is relative
to --root. Consumers of the synced files should always use this
link - it is updated atomically and should always be valid. The
basename of the target of the link is the current hash. If not
specified, this defaults to the leaf dir of --repo.
--man
Print this manual and exit.
--max-failures <int>, $GITSYNC_MAX_FAILURES
The number of consecutive failures allowed before aborting.
Setting this to a negative value will retry forever. If not
specified, this defaults to 0, meaning any sync failure will
terminate git-sync.
--one-time, $GITSYNC_ONE_TIME
Exit after one sync.
$GITSYNC_PASSWORD
The password or personal access token (see github docs) to use for
git authentication (see --username). See also --password-file.
--password-file <string>, $GITSYNC_PASSWORD_FILE
The file from which the password or personal access token (see
github docs) to use for git authentication (see --username) will be
read. See also $GITSYNC_PASSWORD.
--period <duration>, $GITSYNC_PERIOD
How long to wait between sync attempts. This must be at least
10ms. This flag obsoletes --wait, but if --wait is specified, it
will take precedence. If not specified, this defaults to 10
seconds ("10s").
--ref <string>, $GITSYNC_REF
The git revision (branch, tag, or hash) to check out. If not
specified, this defaults to "HEAD" (of the upstream repo's default
branch).
--repo <string>, $GITSYNC_REPO
The git repository to sync. This flag is required.
--root <string>, $GITSYNC_ROOT
The root directory for git-sync operations, under which --link will
be created. This must be a path that either a) does not exist (it
will be created); b) is an empty directory; or c) is a directory
which can be emptied by removing all of the contents. This flag is
required.
--sparse-checkout-file <string>, $GITSYNC_SPARSE_CHECKOUT_FILE
The path to a git sparse-checkout file (see git documentation for
details) which controls which files and directories will be checked
out. If not specified, the default is to check out the entire repo.
--ssh-key-file <string>, $GITSYNC_SSH_KEY_FILE
The SSH key(s) to use when using git over SSH. This flag may be
specified more than once and the environment variable will be
parsed like PATH - using a colon (':') to separate elements. If
not specified, this defaults to "/etc/git-secret/ssh".
--ssh-known-hosts, $GITSYNC_SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS
Enable SSH known_hosts verification when using git over SSH. If
not specified, this defaults to true.
--ssh-known-hosts-file <string>, $GITSYNC_SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS_FILE
The known_hosts file to use when --ssh-known-hosts is specified.
If not specified, this defaults to "/etc/git-secret/known_hosts".
--stale-worktree-timeout <duration>, $GITSYNC_STALE_WORKTREE_TIMEOUT
The length of time to retain stale (not the current link target)
worktrees before being removed. Once this duration has elapsed,
a stale worktree will be removed during the next sync attempt
(as determined by --sync-timeout). If not specified, this defaults
to 0, meaning that stale worktrees will be removed immediately.
--submodules <string>, $GITSYNC_SUBMODULES
The git submodule behavior: one of "recursive", "shallow", or
"off". If not specified, this defaults to "recursive".
--sync-on-signal <string>, $GITSYNC_SYNC_ON_SIGNAL
Indicates that a sync attempt should occur upon receipt of the
specified signal name (e.g. SIGHUP) or number (e.g. 1). If a sync
is already in progress, another sync will be triggered as soon as
the current one completes. If not specified, signals will not
trigger syncs.
--sync-timeout <duration>, $GITSYNC_SYNC_TIMEOUT
The total time allowed for one complete sync. This must be at least
10ms. This flag obsoletes --timeout, but if --timeout is specified,
it will take precedence. If not specified, this defaults to 120
seconds ("120s").
--touch-file <string>, $GITSYNC_TOUCH_FILE
The path to an optional file which will be touched whenever a sync
completes. This may be an absolute path or a relative path, in
which case it is relative to --root.
--username <string>, $GITSYNC_USERNAME
The username to use for git authentication (see --password-file or
$GITSYNC_PASSWORD). If more than one username and password is
required (e.g. with submodules), use --credential.
-v, --verbose <int>, $GITSYNC_VERBOSE
Set the log verbosity level. Logs at this level and lower will be
printed. Logs follow these guidelines:
- 0: Minimal, just log updates
- 1: More details about updates
- 2: Log the sync loop
- 3: More details about the sync loop
- 4: More details
- 5: Log all executed commands
- 6: Log stdout/stderr of all executed commands
- 9: Tracing and debug messages
--version
Print the version and exit.
--webhook-backoff <duration>, $GITSYNC_WEBHOOK_BACKOFF
The time to wait before retrying a failed --webhook-url. If not
specified, this defaults to 3 seconds ("3s").
--webhook-method <string>, $GITSYNC_WEBHOOK_METHOD
The HTTP method for the --webhook-url. If not specified, this defaults to "POST".
--webhook-success-status <int>, $GITSYNC_WEBHOOK_SUCCESS_STATUS
The HTTP status code indicating a successful --webhook-url. Setting
this to 0 disables success checks, which makes webhooks
"fire-and-forget". If not specified, this defaults to 200.
--webhook-timeout <duration>, $GITSYNC_WEBHOOK_TIMEOUT
The timeout for the --webhook-url. If not specified, this defaults
to 1 second ("1s").
--webhook-url <string>, $GITSYNC_WEBHOOK_URL
A URL for optional webhook notifications when syncs complete. The
header 'Gitsync-Hash' will be set to the git hash that was synced.
If, at startup, git-sync finds that the --root already has the
correct hash, this hook will still be invoked. This means that
hooks can be invoked more than one time per hash, so they must be
idempotent.
EXAMPLE USAGE
git-sync \
--repo=https://github.com/kubernetes/git-sync \
--ref=HEAD \
--period=10s \
--root=/mnt/git
AUTHENTICATION
Git-sync offers several authentication options to choose from. If none of
the following are specified, git-sync will try to access the repo in the
"natural" manner. For example, "https://repo" will try to use plain HTTPS
and "[email protected]:repo" will try to use SSH.
username/password
The --username ($GITSYNC_USERNAME) and $GITSYNC_PASSWORD or
--password-file ($GITSYNC_PASSWORD_FILE) flags will be used. To
prevent password leaks, the --password-file flag or
$GITSYNC_PASSWORD environment variable is almost always preferred
to the --password flag, which is deprecated.
A variant of this is --askpass-url ($GITSYNC_ASKPASS_URL), which
consults a URL (e.g. http://metadata) to get credentials on each
sync.
When using submodules it may be necessary to specify more than one
username and password, which can be done with --credential
($GITSYNC_CREDENTIAL). All of the username+password pairs, from
both --username/$GITSYNC_PASSWORD and --credential are fed into
'git credential approve'.
SSH
When an SSH transport is specified, the key(s) defined in
--ssh-key-file ($GITSYNC_SSH_KEY_FILE) will be used. Users are
strongly advised to also use --ssh-known-hosts
($GITSYNC_SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS) and --ssh-known-hosts-file
($GITSYNC_SSH_KNOWN_HOSTS_FILE) when using SSH.
cookies
When --cookie-file ($GITSYNC_COOKIE_FILE) is specified, the
associated cookies can contain authentication information.
HOOKS
Webhooks and exechooks are executed asynchronously from the main git-sync
process. If a --webhook-url or --exechook-command is configured, they will
be invoked whenever a new hash is synced, including when git-sync starts up
and find that the --root directory already has the correct hash. For
exechook, that means the command is exec()'ed, and for webhooks that means
an HTTP request is sent using the method defined in --webhook-method.
Git-sync will retry both forms of hooks until they succeed (exit code 0 for
exechooks, or --webhook-success-status for webhooks). If unsuccessful,
git-sync will wait --exechook-backoff or --webhook-backoff (as appropriate)
before re-trying the hook. Git-sync does not ensure that hooks are invoked
exactly once, so hooks must be idempotent.
Hooks are not guaranteed to succeed on every single hash change. For example,
if a hook fails and a new hash is synced during the backoff period, the
retried hook will fire for the newest hash.