Replication basics
Commands and configurables
Replication of Helix Servers depends upon certain commands, environment variables, and configurables:
Command or Feature | Typical use case | ||||||||||
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A command that can replicate both metadata and versioned files, and report diagnostic information about pending content transfers. A replica server can run multiple |
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A configuration mechanism that supports multiple servers. Because |
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A configuration mechanism that defines a server in terms of its
offered services. To be effective, the
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A command to set or display the unique identifier for a
Helix Core Server. On
startup, a server takes its ID from the contents of a
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Causes the replica to schedule a transfer of the contents of any damaged or missing revisions. The command reports For the transfer to work on a replica with
Note
You can also run the p4 verify -S -t command on a replica to request re-transfer of a shelved archive that is missing or bad. Re-transferring a shelved archive from the master only works if the shelved archive is on the master:
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Server names |
Helix Servers can be identified and configured by name. When you use p4 configure on your master server, you can specify different sets of configurables for each named server. Each named server, upon startup, refers to its own set of configurables, and ignores configurables set for other servers. |
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Service users |
A type of user intended for authentication of server-to-server communications. Service users have extremely limited access to the depot and do not consume Helix Server licenses. To make logs easier to read, create one service user on your master server for each replica or proxy in your network of Helix Servers . |
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Metadata access |
Replica servers can be configured to automatically reject user
commands that attempt to modify metadata ( In |
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Metadata filtering |
Replica servers can be configured to filter in (or out) data on client workspaces and file revisions.
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Depot file access |
Replica servers can be configured to automatically reject user commands that attempt to modify archived depot files.
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Target server |
As with the Helix Proxy, you can use P4TARGET to specify the master server or another replica server to which a replica server points when retrieving its data. You can set A replica server with Alternatively, use the equivalent configurables:
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Startup commands
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Use the |
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State file |
Replica servers track the most recent journal position in a small text file that holds a byte offset. When you stop either the master server or a replica server, the most recent journal position is recorded on the replica in the state file. Upon restart, the replica reads the state file and picks up where it left off. Do not alter this file or its contents. (When the state file is written, a temporary file is used and moved into place, which should preserve the existing state file if something goes wrong when updating it. If the state file is empty or missing, the replica server will re-fetch from the start of its last used journal position.) By default, the state file is named |
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P4Broker |
The Helix Broker can be used for load balancing, command redirection, and more. See Helix Broker for details. |
Replication requires uncompressed journals. Starting the master using
the p4d -jc -z
command breaks replication. Instead, use the
-Z
flag instead to prevent journals from being
compressed.