gsycnd, the Gluster Syncdaemon ============================== REQUIREMENTS ------------ _gsyncd_ is a program which can operate either in _master_ or in _slave_ mode. Requirements are categorized according to this. * supported OS is GNU/Linux * Python >= 2.5, or 2.4 with Ctypes (see below) (both) * OpenSSH >= 4.0 (master) / SSH2 compliant sshd (eg. openssh) (slave) * rsync (both) * glusterfs: with marker and changelog support (master & slave); * FUSE: glusterfs fuse module with auxiliary gfid based access support INSTALLATION ------------ As of now, the supported way of operation is running from the source directory or using the RPMs given. CONFIGURATION ------------- gsyncd tunables are a subset of the long command-line options; for listing them, type gsyncd.py --help and see the long options up to "--config-file". (The leading double dash should be omitted; interim underscores and dashes are interchangeable.) The set of options bear some resemblance to those of glusterfs and rsync. The config file format matches the following syntax: : : # comment By default (unless specified by the option `-c`), gsyncd looks for config file at _conf/gsyncd_template.conf_ in the source tree. USAGE ----- gsyncd is a utilitly for continuous mirroring, ie. it mirrors master to slave incrementally. Assume we have a gluster volume _pop_ at localhost. We try to set up the mirroring for volume _pop_ using gsyncd for gluster volume _moz_ on remote machine/cluster @ example.com. The respective gsyncd invocations are (demoing some syntax sugaring): `gsyncd.py :pop example.com::moz` gsyncd has to be available on both sides; it's location on the remote side has to be specified via the "--remote-gsyncd" option (or "remote-gsyncd" config file parameter). (This option can also be used for setting options on the remote side, although the suggested mode of operation is to set parameters like log file / pid file in the configuration file.)