Chapter 3
Administering Perforce:
Superuser Tasks
This chapter describes basic tasks associated with day-to-day Perforce administration and advanced Perforce configuration issues related to cross-platform development issues, migration of Perforce servers from one machine to another, and working with remote and local depots.
Most of the tasks described in this chapter requires that you have Perforce superuser (access level super) or administrator (access level admin) privileges as defined in the Perforce protections table. For more about controlling Perforce superuser access, and protections in general, see "Administering Perforce: Protections" on page 75.
Release 2004.2 of Perforce introduced a new authentication mechanism and a server-configurable security setting to govern password strength requirements and authentication method policy. For details, see "Authentication methods: passwords and tickets" on page 39 and "Server security levels" on page 41.
Basic Perforce Administration
Tasks commonly performed by Perforce administrators and superusers include:
- User maintenance tasks, including resetting passwords, creating users, disabling the automatic creation of users, and cleaning up files left open by former users
- Administrative operations, including setting the server security level, obliterating files to reclaim disk space, editing submitted changelists, verifying server integrity, defining file types to control Perforce's file type detection mechanism, and the use of the -f flag to force operations
Authentication methods: passwords and tickets
Perforce supports two methods of authentication: password-based and ticket-based.
Warning
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Although ticket-based authentication provides a more secure authentication mechanism than password-based authentication, it does not encrypt network traffic between client workstations and the Perforce server.
If you are accessing Perforce over an insecure network, use a third-party tunneling solution (for example, ssh or a VPN) regardless of the authentication method you choose.
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How password-based authentication works
Password-based authentication is stateless; once a password is correctly set, access is granted for indefinite time periods. Prior to Release 2004.2, the password-based authentication mechanism did not enforce password strength or existence requirements.
The concept of the server security level, introduced in Release 2004.2, enables administrators to enforce password strength and existence requirements. See "Server security levels" on page 41 for details.
Password based authentication is supported at security levels 0, 1, and 2.
How ticket-based authentication works
Ticket-based authentication is based on time-limited tickets that enable users to connect to Perforce servers. Tickets are stored in the file specified by the P4TICKETS environment variable. If this variable is not set, tickets are stored in %USERPROFILE%\p4tickets.txt on Windows, and in $HOME/.p4tickets on UNIX and other operating systems. Tickets are managed automatically by 2004.2 and later Perforce client programs.
Tickets have a finite lifespan, after which they cease to be valid. By default, tickets are valid for 12 hours (43200 seconds). To set different ticket lifespans for groups of users, edit the Timeout: field in the p4 group form for each group. The timeout value for a user in multiple groups is the largest timeout value for all groups of which a user is a member. To create a ticket that does not expire, set the Timeout: field to 0.
Although tickets are not passwords, Perforce servers accept valid tickets wherever users can specify Perforce passwords. This behavior provides the security advantages of ticket-based authentication with the ease of scripting afforded by password authentication. Ticket-based authentication is supported at all server security levels, and is required at security level 3.
Logging in to Perforce
To use ticket-based authentication, get a ticket by logging in with the p4 login command:
You are prompted for your password, and a ticket is created for you in your ticket file. You can extend your ticket's lifespan by calling p4 login while already logged in. If you run p4 login while logged in, your ticket's lifespan is extended by 1/3 of its initial timeout setting, subject to a maximum of your initial timeout setting.
By default, Perforce tickets are valid for your IP address only. If you have a shared home directory that is used on more than one machine, you can log in to Perforce from both machines by using the command:
to create a ticket in your home directory that is valid from all IP addresses.
Logging out of Perforce
To log out of Perforce from one machine by removing your ticket, use the command:
The entry in your ticket file is removed. If you have valid tickets for the same Perforce server, but those tickets exist on other machines, those tickets remain present (and you remain logged in) on those other machines.
If you are logged in to Perforce from more than one machine, you can log out of Perforce from all machines from which you were logged in by using the command:
All of your Perforce tickets are invalidated and you are logged out.
Determining ticket status
To see if your current ticket (that is, for your IP address, user name, and P4PORT setting) is still valid, use the command:
If your ticket is valid, the length of time for which it will remain valid is displayed.
To display all tickets you currently have, use the command:
The contents of your ticket file are displayed.
Server security levels
Perforce superusers can configure server-wide password usage requirements, password strength enforcement, and supported methods of user/server authentication by setting the security counter. To change the security counter, issue the command:
p4 counter -f security seclevel
where seclevel is 0, 1, 2, or 3. After setting the counter, stop and restart the server.
Choosing a server security level
The default security level is 0: passwords are not required, and password strength is not enforced.
To ensure that all users have passwords, use security level 1. Users of old client programs can still enter weak passwords.
To ensure that all users have strong passwords, use security level 2. Old Perforce software continues to work, but users of old Perforce client software must change their password to a strong password by using a Perforce client program at Release 2003.2 or above.
To require that all users have strong passwords, and to require the use of session-based authentication, use security level 3 and current Perforce client software.
Level 0 corresponds to pre-2003.2 server operation. Levels 1 and 2 were designed for support of legacy client software. Level 3 affords the highest degree of security.
The Perforce server security levels and their effects on the behavior of Perforce client programs are defined below.
Security level
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Server behavior
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0 (or unset)
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Legacy support: passwords are not required. If passwords are used, password strength is not enforced.
Users with passwords can use either their P4PASSWD setting or the p4 login command for ticket-based authentication.
Users of old Perforce client programs are unaffected.
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1
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Strong passwords are required for users of post-2003.2 Perforce client programs, but existing passwords are not reset.
Pre-2003.2 Perforce client programs can set passwords with p4 passwd or in the p4 user form, but password strength is not enforced.
Users with passwords can use either their P4PASSWD setting or the p4 login command for ticket-based authentication.
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2
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All unverified strength passwords must be changed.
Users of pre-2003.2 client programs cannot set passwords.
Users of client programs at release 2003.2 or higher must use p4 passwd and enter their passwords at the prompt. Setting passwords with the p4 user form or the p4 passwd -O oldpass -P newpass command is prohibited.
On Windows, passwords are no longer stored in (or read from) the registry. (Storing P4PASSWD as an environment variable is supported, but passwords set with p4 set P4PASSWD are ignored.)
Users who have set strong passwords with a 2003.2 or higher Perforce client program can use either their P4PASSWD setting for password-based authentication, or the p4 login command for ticket-based authentication.
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3
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All password-based authentication is rejected.
Users must use ticket-based authentication (p4 login).
If you have scripts that rely on passwords, use p4 login to create a ticket valid for the user running the script, or use p4 login -p to display the value of a ticket that can be passed to Perforce commands as though it were a password (that is, either from the command line, or by setting P4PASSWD to the value of the valid ticket).
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Password strength
Certain combinations of server security level and Perforce client software releases require users to set "strong" passwords. A password is considered strong if it is at least eight characters long, and at least two of the following are true:
- The password contains uppercase letters.
- The password contains lowercase letters.
- The password contains nonalphabetic characters.
For example, the passwords a1b2c3d4, A1B2C3D4, aBcDeFgH are considered strong.
Resetting user passwords
If you are a Perforce superuser, you can reset a Perforce user's password with:
- When prompted, enter a new password for user username.
- Enter the password in the Password: field of the user specification form.
Creating users
By default, Perforce creates a new user record in its database whenever a command is issued by a user that does not exist. Perforce superusers can also use the -f (force) flag to create a new user as follows:
Fill in the form fields with the information for the user you want to create.
The p4 user command also has an option (-i) to take its input from the standard input instead of the forms editor. To quickly create a large number of users, write a script that reads user data, generates output in the format used by the p4 user form, and then pipes each generated form to p4 user -i -f.
Preventing creation of users
By default, Perforce creates a new user record in its database whenever a command is issued by a user that does not exist.
To prevent Perforce from automatically creating users, all users must be defined in the protections table. The easiest way to do this is to include all users in a Perforce group, and to configure Perforce to grant access only to members of that group.
Example:
Setting up users in a group
A Perforce superuser wants to prevent the server from creating new users. He starts by
setting up a group called p4users for the three users currently at his site. He types:
and fills in the form as follows:
# A Perforce Group Specification. # Group: The name of the group. # MaxResults: Limits the rows (or 'unlimited') any one operation # can return to the client. See 'p4 help maxresults'. # MaxScanRows:Limits the rows (or 'unlimited') any one operation # can scan from any one database table... # MaxLockTime:Limits the time (in milliseconds, or 'unlimited') # any one operation can lock any database table when # scanning data... # Timeout: Time in seconds which determines how long a 'p4 login' # session ticket remains valid (default is 12 hours). # Subgroups: Other groups automatically included in this group. # Users: The users in the group. One per line. Group: p4users MaxResults: unlimited MaxScanRows: unlimited MaxLockTime: unlimited Timeout: 43200 Subgroups: Users: edk lisag
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He then uses p4 protect to edit the protections table. The relevant line of the default
protections table looks like this:
This grants write permission to any user matching * (that is, to all users) from any host
(the second *) in all areas of the depot (that is, to files in //...).
Finally, the superuser uses p4 protect to change this line in the protections table to read:
write group p4users * //...
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The replacement protection grants only write access to users whose group matches
p4users. Members of p4users can use Perforce from any host (*) and have write access to
all areas of the depot (//...).
As long as no other lines in the protections table grant (or deny!) permission to "all users", all
users are now defined within p4 protect, and the server no longer automatically creates
new user entries when new users attempt to access Perforce.
For a more in-depth description of Perforce protections, see "Administering Perforce: Protections" on page 75.
Deleting obsolete users
Each user on the system consumes one Perforce license. A Perforce administrator can free up licenses by deleting users with the following command:
Before you delete a user, you must first revert (or submit) any files a user has open in a changelist. If you attempt to delete a user with open files, Perforce displays an error message to that effect.
Deleting a user frees a Perforce license but does not automatically update the group and protections tables. Use p4 group and p4 protect to delete the user from these tables.
Adding new licensed users
Perforce licenses are controlled by a text file called license. This file resides in the server root directory.
To add or update a license file, stop the Perforce Server, copy the license file into the server root directory, and restart the Perforce Server.
As of Release 2006.2, you can update an existing license without shutting down the Perforce Server, use p4 license -i to read the new license file from the standard input.
Most new license files obtained from Perforce can be installed with p4 license, except for when the server IP address has changed. If the server IP address has changed, or if no license file currently exists, you must still stop the Perforce Server, manually copy the license file into place, and restart the Server.
Reverting files left open by obsolete users
If files have been left open by a nonexistent or obsolete user (for instance, a departing employee), a Perforce administrator can revert the files by deleting the client workspace specification in which the files were opened.
As an example, if the output of p4 opened includes:
//depot/main/code/file.c#8 - edit default change (txt) by jim@stlouis
you can delete the stlouis client workspace specification with:
Deleting a client workspace specification automatically reverts all files opened in that workspace, deletes pending changelists associated with the workspace, and any fix records associated with the workspace. Deleting a client workspace specification does not affect any files in the workspace actually used by the workspace's owner; the files can still be accessed by other employees.
Reclaiming disk space by obliterating files
Warning!
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Use p4 obliterate with caution. This is the only command in Perforce that actually removes file data.
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The depot is always growing, which is not always desirable: a user might have created hundreds of unneeded files by means of an inadvertent branch or submit, or perhaps there are directories of old files that are no longer in use. Because p4 delete merely marks files as deleted in their head revisions, it cannot be used to free up disk space on the server. This is where p4 obliterate can be useful.
Perforce administrators can use p4 obliterate filename to remove all traces of a file from a depot, making the file indistinguishable from one that never existed in the first place.
Note
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The purpose of a software configuration management system is to enable your site to maintain a history of what operations were performed on which files. The p4 obliterate command defeats this purpose; as such, it is intended only to be used to remove files that never belonged in the depot in the first place, and not as part of a normal software development process.
Note also that p4 obliterate is computationally expensive; obliterating files requires that the entire body of metadata be scanned per file argument. Avoid using p4 obliterate during peak usage periods.
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By default, p4 obliterate filename does nothing; it merely reports on what it would do. To actually destroy the files, use p4 obliterate -y filename.
To destroy only one revision of a file, specify only the desired revision number on the command line. For instance, to destroy revision 5 of a file, use:
Revision ranges are also acceptable. To destroy revisions 5 through 7 of a file, use:
p4 obliterate -y file#5,7
Warning!
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If you intend to obliterate a revision range, be certain you've specified it properly. If you fail to specify a revision range, all revisions of the file are obliterated.
The safest way to use p4 obliterate is to use it without the -y flag until you are certain the files and revisions are correctly specified.
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Deleting changelists and editing changelist descriptions
Perforce administrators can use the -f (force) flag with p4 change to change the description, date, or user name of a submitted changelist. The syntax is p4 change -f changenumber. This command presents the standard changelist form, but also enables superusers to edit the changelist's time, description, date, and associated user name.
You can also use the -f flag to delete any submitted changelists that have been emptied of files with p4 obliterate. The full syntax is p4 change -d -f changenumber.
Example:
Updating changelist 123 and deleting changelist 124
Use p4 change with the -f (force) flag:
p4 change -f 123
p4 change -d -f 124
The User: and Description: fields for change 123 are edited, and change 124 is deleted.
Verifying files by signature
Perforce administrators can use the p4 verify filenames command to validate stored MD5 digests of each revision of the named files. The signatures created when users store files in the depot can later be used to confirm proper recovery in case of a crash: if the signatures of the recovered files match the previously saved signatures, the files were recovered accurately. If a new signature does not match the signature in the Perforce database for that file revision, Perforce displays the characters BAD! after the signature.
It is good practice to run p4 verify before performing your nightly system backups, and to proceed with the backup only if p4 verify reports no corruption.
For large installations, p4 verify can take some time to run. Furthermore, the database is locked when p4 verify is running, which prevents most other Perforce commands from being used. Administrators of large sites might want to perform p4 verify on a weekly basis, rather than a nightly basis.
If you ever see a BAD! signature during a p4 verify command, your database or versioned files might be corrupt, and you should contact Perforce Technical Support.
Verifying files during server upgrades
It is good practice to use p4 verify as follows before and after server upgrades:
- Before the upgrade, run:
to verify the integrity of your server before the upgrade.
- Take a checkpoint and copy the checkpoint and your versioned files to a safe place.
- Perform the server upgrade.
- After the upgrade, run:
to verify the integrity of your new system.
Defining filetypes with p4 typemap
By default, Perforce automatically determines if a file is of type text or binary based on an analysis of the first 8192 bytes of a file. If the high bit is clear in each of the first 8192 bytes, Perforce assumes it to be text; otherwise, it is assumed to be binary.
Although this default behavior can be overridden by the use of the -t filetype flag, it's easy for users to overlook this consideration, particularly in cases where files' types are usually (but not always) detected correctly. Certain file formats, such as RTF (Rich Text Format) and Adobe PDF (Portable Document Format), can start with a series of comment fields or other textual data. If these comments are sufficiently long, such files can be erroneously detected by Perforce as being of type text.
The p4 typemap command solves this problem by enabling system administrators to set up a table that links Perforce file types with filename specifications. If an entry in the typemap table matches a file being added, it overrides the file type that would otherwise be assigned by the Perforce client program. For example, to treat all PDF and RTF files as binary, use p4 typemap to modify the typemap table as follows:
Typemap: binary //....pdf binary //....rtf
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The first three periods ("...") in the specification are a Perforce wildcard specifying that all files beneath the root directory are to be included in the mapping. The fourth period and the file extension specify that the specification applies to files ending in .pdf (or .rtf).
The following table lists recommended Perforce file types and modifiers for common file extensions.
File type
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Perforce file type
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Description
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.asp
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text
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Active server page file
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.avi
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binary+F
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Video for Windows file
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.bmp
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binary
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Windows bitmap file
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.btr
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binary
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Btrieve database file
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.cnf
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text
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Conference link file
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.css
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text
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Cascading style sheet file
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.doc
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binary
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Microsoft Word document
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.dot
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binary
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Microsoft Word template
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.exp
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binary+w
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Export file (Microsoft Visual C++)
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.gif
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binary+F
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GIF graphic file
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.htm
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text
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HTML file
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.html
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text
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HTML file
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.ico
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binary
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Icon file
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.inc
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text
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Active Server include file
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.ini
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text+w
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Initial application settings file
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.jpg
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binary
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JPEG graphic file
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.js
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text
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JavaScript language source code file
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.lib
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binary+w
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Library file (several programming languages)
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.log
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text+w
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Log file
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.mpg
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binary+F
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MPEG video file
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.pdf
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binary
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Adobe PDF file
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.pdm
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text+w
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Sybase Power Designer file
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.ppt
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binary
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Microsoft PowerPoint file
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.xls
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binary
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Microsoft Excel file
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.zip
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binary+F
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ZIP archive file
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Use the following p4 typemap table to map all of the file extensions to the Perforce file types recommended in the preceding table.
# Perforce File Type Mapping Specifications. # # TypeMap: a list of filetype mappings; one per line. # Each line has two elements: # Filetype: The filetype to use on 'p4 add'. # Path: File pattern which will use this filetype. # See 'p4 help typemap' for more information.
TypeMap:
text //....asp binary+F //....avi binary //....bmp binary //....btr text //....cnf text //....css binary //....doc binary //....dot binary+w //....exp binary+F //....gif text //....htm text //....html binary //....ico text //....inc text+w //....ini binary //....jpg text //....js binary+w //....lib text+w //....log binary+F //....mpg binary //....pdf text+w //....pdm binary //....ppt binary //....xls binary+F //....zip
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For more information, see the p4 typemap page in the Perforce Command Reference.
Implementing sitewide pessimistic locking with p4 typemap
By default, Perforce supports concurrent development, but environments in which only one person is expected to have a file for edit at a time can implement pessimistic locking by using the +l (exclusive open) modifier as a partial filetype. If you use the following typemap, the +l modifier is automatically applied to all newly added files in the depot:
If you use this typemap, any files your users add to the depot after you update your typemap automatically have the +l modifier applied, and may only be opened for edit by one user at a time. The typemap table applies only to new additions to the depot; after you update the typemap table for sitewide exclusive open, files previously submitted without +l must be opened for edit with p4 edit -t+l filename and resubmitted. Similarly, users with files already open for edit must update their filetypes with p4 reopen -t+l filename.
Forcing operations with the -f flag
Certain commands support the -f flag, which enables Perforce administrators and superusers to force certain operations unavailable to ordinary users. Perforce administrators can use this flag with p4 branch, p4 change, p4 client, p4 job, p4 label, and p4 unlock. Perforce superusers can also use it to override the p4 user command. The usages and meanings of this flag are as follows.
Command
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Syntax
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Function
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p4 branch
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p4 branch -f branchname
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Allows the modification date to be changed while editing the branch specification
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p4 branch -f -d branchname
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Deletes the branch, ignoring ownership
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p4 change
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p4 change -f [changelist#]
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Allows the modification date to be changed while editing the changelist specification
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p4 change -f changelist#
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Allows the description field and username in a committed changelist to be edited
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p4 change -f -d changelist#
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Deletes empty, committed changelists
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p4 client
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p4 client -f clientname
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Allows the modification date to be changed while editing the client specification
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p4 client -f -d clientname
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Deletes the client, ignoring ownership, even if the client has opened files
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p4 job
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p4 job -f [jobname]
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Allows the manual update of read-only fields
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p4 label
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p4 label -f labelname
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Allows the modification date to be changed while editing the label specification
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p4 label -f -d labelname
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Deletes the label, ignoring ownership
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p4 unlock
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p4 unlock -c changelist -f file
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Releases a lock (set with p4 lock) on an open file in a pending numbered changelist, ignoring ownership
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p4 user
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p4 user -f username
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Allows the update of all fields, ignoring ownership
This command requires super access.
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p4 user -f -d username
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Deletes the user, ignoring ownership
This command requires super access.
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Advanced Perforce administration
Running Perforce through a firewall
Perforce clients communicate with a Perforce server using TCP/IP. The server listens for connections at a specified port on the machine on which it's running, and clients make connections to that port.
The port on which the server listens is specified when the server is started. The number is arbitrary, so long as it does not conflict with any other networking services and is greater than 1024. The port number on the client machine is dynamically allocated.
A firewall is a network element that prevents any packets from outside a local (trusted) network from reaching that local network. This is done at a low level in the network protocol; any packets not coming from a trusted IP address are simply ignored.
In the following diagram, the Perforce client is on an untrusted part of the network. None of its connection requests reach the machine with the Perforce server. Consequently, the user running the client through the firewall is unable to use Perforce.
Secure shell
To solve this problem, you have to make the connection to the Perforce server from within the trusted network. This can be done securely using a package called secure shell (ssh).
Secure shell (ssh) is meant to be a replacement for the UNIX rsh (remote shell) command, which allows you to log into a remote system and execute commands on it. The "secure" part of "secure shell" comes from the fact that the connection is encrypted, so none of the data is visible while it passes through the untrusted network. With simple utilities like rsh, all traffic, even passwords, is unencrypted and visible to all intermediate hosts, creating an unacceptable security hazard.
Secure shell is available for free in source form for a multitude of UNIX platforms from http://www.openssh.com. This page also links to ports of ssh for OS/2 and Amiga, as well as commercial implementations for Windows and Macintosh from Data Fellows (http://www.datafellows.com) and SSH (http://www.ssh.com).
The OpenSSH FAQ can also be found online at the main site (http://www.openssh.com/faq.html).
Solving the problem
Once you have ssh up and running, the simplest thing to do is to use it to log into the firewall machine and run the Perforce client from the firewall. While it has the advantage of simplicity, it's a poor solution: you typically want your client files accessible on your local machine, and of course, there's no guarantee that your firewall machine will match your development platform.
A good solution takes advantage of ssh's ability to forward arbitrary TCP/IP connections. By using ssh, you can make your Perforce client appear as though it's connecting from the firewall machine over the local (trusted) network. In reality, your client remains on your local machine, but all packets from your local machine are first sent to the firewall through the secure channel set up by ssh.
Suppose the Perforce server is on p4dbox.bigcorp.com, and the firewall machine is called firewall.bigcorp.com. In our example, we'll arbitrarily choose local port 4242, and assume that the Perforce server is listening on port 3710.
Packets ultimately destined for your client's port 4242 are first sent to the firewall, and ssh forwards them securely to your client. Likewise, connections made to port 4242 of the firewall machine will end up being routed to port 3710 of the Perforce server.
On UNIX, the ssh command on your own machine to set up and forward the TCP/IP connection would be:
ssh -L 4242:p4dbox.bigcorp.com:3710 firewall.bigcorp.com
At this point, it might be necessary to provide a password to log into firewall.bigcorp.com. Once the connection is established, ssh listens at port 4242 on the local machine, and forwards packets over its encrypted connection to firewall.bigcorp.com; the firewall then forwards them by normal channels to port 3710 on p4dbox.bigcorp.com.
All that remains is to tell the Perforce client to use port 4242 by setting the environment variable P4PORT to 4242.
Normally, setting P4PORT=4242 would normally indicate that we are trying to connect to a Perforce server on the local machine listening at port 4242. In this case, ssh takes the role of the Perforce server. Anything a client sends to port 4242 of the local machine is forwarded by ssh to the firewall, which passes it to the real Perforce server at p4dbox.bigcorp.com. Since all of this is transparent to the Perforce client, it doesn't matter whether the client is talking to an instance of ssh that's forwarding traffic from port 4242 of the local machine, or if it's talking to a real Perforce server residing on the local machine.
The only glitch is that there's a login session you don't normally want on the firewall machine.
This can be solved by running the following command:
ssh -L 4242:p4dbox.bigcorp.com:3710 firewall.bigcorp.com -f sleep 9999999 -f
on the remote system.
This tells ssh on firewall.bigcorp.com to fork a long-running sleep command in the background after the password prompt. Effectively, this sets up the ssh link and keeps it up; there is no login session to terminate.
Finally, ssh can be configured to "do the right thing" so that it is unnecessary to type such a long command with each session. The Windows version of ssh, for instance, has a GUI to configure this.
One final concern: with port 4242 on the local machine now forwarded to a supposedly secure server, your local machine is part of the trusted network; it is prudent to make sure the local machine really is secure. The Windows version of ssh has an option to only permit local connections to the forwarded port, which is a wise precaution; your machine will be able to use port 4242, but a third party's machine will be ignored.
Specifying IP addresses in P4PORT
Under most circumstances, your Perforce server's P4PORT setting consists solely of a port number. If you specify both an IP address and a port number in P4PORT when starting p4d, the Perforce server ignores requests from any IP addresses other than the one specified in P4PORT.
Although this isn't the default behavior, it can be useful. For instance, if you want to configure p4d to listen only to a specific network interface or IP address, you can force your Perforce server to ignore all nonlocal connection requests by setting P4PORT=localhost:port.
Running from inetd on UNIX
Under a normal installation, the Perforce server is run on UNIX as a background process that waits for connections from clients. To have p4d start up only when connections are made to it, using inetd and p4d -i, add the following line to /etc/inetd.conf:
p4dservice stream tcp nowait username /usr/local/bin/p4d p4d -i -rp4droot
and then add the following line to /etc/services:
where:
- p4dservice is the service name you choose for this Perforce server
- /usr/local/bin is the directory holding your p4d binary
- p4droot is the root directory (P4DROOT) to use for this Perforce server (for example, /usr/local/p4d)
- username is the UNIX user name to use for running this Perforce server
- nnnn is the port number for this Perforce server to use
The "extra" p4d on the /etc/inetd.conf line must be present; inetd passes this to the OS as argv[0]. The first argument, then, is the -i flag, which causes p4d not to run in the background as a daemon, but rather to serve the single client connected to it on stdin/stdout. (This is the convention used for services started by inetd.)
This method is an alternative to running p4d from a startup script. It can also be useful for providing special services; for example, at Perforce, we have a number of test servers running on UNIX, each defined as an inetd service with its own port number.
There are caveats with this method:
- inetd may disallow excessive connections, so a script that invokes several thousand p4 commands, each of which spawns an instance of p4d via inetd can cause inetd to temporarily disable the service. Depending on your system, you might need to configure inetd to ignore or raise this limit.
- There is no easy way to disable the server, since the p4d executable is run each time; disabling the server requires modifying /etc/inetd.conf and restarting inetd.
Case sensitivity and multiplatform development
Early (pre-97.2) releases of the Perforce server treated all filenames, pathnames, and database entity names with case significance, whether the server was running on UNIX or Windows.
For example, //depot/main/file.c and //depot/MAIN/FILE.C were treated as two completely different files. This caused problems where users on UNIX were connecting to a Perforce server running on Windows because the filesystem underlying the server could not store files with the case-variant names submitted by UNIX users.
In release 97.3, the behavior was changed, and only the UNIX server supports case-sensitive names. However, there are still some case-sensitivity problems that users can encounter when sharing development projects across UNIX and Windows.
If you are running a pre-97.2 server on Windows, please contact [email protected] to discuss upgrading your server and database.
For current releases of the server:
- The Perforce server on UNIX supports case-sensitive names.
- The Perforce server on Windows ignores case differences.
- Case is always ignored in keyword-based job searches, regardless of platform.
The following table summarizes these rules.
Case-sensitive
|
UNIX server
|
Windows server
|
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Pathnames and filenames
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Yes
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No
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Database entities (workspaces, labels, and so on.)
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Yes
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No
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Job search keywords
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No
|
No
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To find out what platform your Perforce server runs on, use p4 info.
Perforce server on UNIX
If your Perforce server is on UNIX, and you have users on both UNIX and Windows, your UNIX users must be very careful not to submit files whose names differ only by case. Although the UNIX server can support these files, when Windows users sync their workspaces, they'll find files overwriting each other.
Conversely, Windows users will have to be careful to use case consistently in filenames and pathnames when adding new files. They might not realize that files added as //depot/main/one.c and //depot/MAIN/two.c will appear in two different directories when synced to a UNIX user's workspace.
The UNIX Perforce server always respects case in client names, label names, branch view names, and so on. Windows users connecting to a UNIX server should be aware that the lowercased workstation names are used as the default names for new client workspaces. For example, if a new user creates a client spec on a Windows machine named ROCKET, his client workspace is named rocket by default. If he later sets P4CLIENT to ROCKET (or Rocket), Perforce will tell him his client is undefined. He must set P4CLIENT to rocket (or unset it) to use the client workspace he defined.
Perforce server on Windows
If your Perforce server is running on Windows, your UNIX users must be aware that their Perforce server will store case-variant files in the same namespace.
For example, users who try something like this:
p4 add dir/file1
p4 add dir/file2
p4 add DIR/file3
should be aware that all three files will be stored in the same depot directory. The depot pathnames and filenames assigned to the Windows server will be those first referenced. (In this case, the depot pathname would be dir, and not DIR.)
Monitoring server activity
Use the p4 monitor command to obtain information about Perforce-related processes running on your Perforce server machine.
Enabling process monitoring
Server process monitoring requires minimal system resources, but you must enable process monitoring for p4 monitor to work. To enable process monitoring, set the monitor counter as follows:
After you set or change the monitor counter, you must stop and restart the Perforce server for your change to take effect.
Enabling idle processes monitoring
By default, IDLE processes (often associated with custom applications based on the Perforce API) are not included in the output of p4 monitor. To include idle processes in the output of p4 monitor, use monitoring level 2.
You must stop and restart the Perforce server for your change to take effect.
Listing running processes
To list the processes running on the Perforce server, use the command:
By default, each line of p4 monitor output looks like this:
pid status owner hh:mm:ss command [args]
where pid is the UNIX process ID (or Windows thread ID), status is R or T depending on whether the process is running or marked for termination, owner is the Perforce user name of the user who invoked the command, hh:mm:ss is the time elapsed since the command was called, and command and args are the command and arguments as received by the Perforce server. For example:
$ p4 monitor show 74612 R qatool 00:00:47 job 78143 R edk 00:00:01 filelog 78207 R p4admin 00:00:00 monitor
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To show the arguments with which the command was called, use the -a (arguments) flag:
$ p4 monitor show -a 74612 R qatool 00:00:48 job job004836 78143 R edk 00:00:02 filelog //depot/main/src/proj/file1.c //dep 78208 R p4admin 00:00:00 monitor show -a
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To obtain more information about user environment, use the -e flag. The -e flag produces output of the form:
pid client IP-address status owner workspace hh:mm:ss command [args]
where client is the Perforce client program (and version string or API protocol level), IP-address is the IP address of the user's Perforce client program, and workspace is the name of the calling user's current client workspace setting. For example:
$ p4 monitor show -e 74612 p4/2005.2 192.168.10.2 R qatool buildenvir 00:00:47 job 78143 192.168.10.4 R edk eds_elm 00:00:01 filelog 78207 p4/2005.2 192.168.10.10 R p4admin p4server 00:00:00 monitor
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By default, all user names and (if applicable) client workspace names are truncated at 10 characters, and lines are truncated at 80 characters. To disable truncation, use the -l (long-form) option:
$ p4 monitor show -a -l 74612 R qatool 00:00:50 job job004836 78143 R edk 00:00:04 filelog //depot/main/src/proj/file1.c //dep ot/main/src/proj/file1.mpg 78209 R p4admin 00:00:00 monitor show -a -l
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Only Perforce administrators and superusers can use the -a, -l, and -e options.
Marking processes for termination
If a process on a Perforce Server is consuming excessive resources, administrators and superusers can mark it for termination with p4 monitor terminate.
Once marked for termination, the process is terminated by the Perforce server within 50000 scan rows or lines of output. Only processes that have been running for at least ten seconds can be marked for termination.
Users of terminated processes are notified with the following message:
Command has been canceled, terminating request
Processes that involve the use of interactive forms (such as p4 job or p4 user) can also be marked for termination, but data entered by the user into the form is preserved. Some commands, such as p4 obliterate, cannot be terminated.
Clearing entries in the process table
Under some circumstances (for example, a Windows machine is rebooted while certain Perforce commands are running), entries may remain in the process table even after the process has terminated.
Perforce administrators and superusers can remove these erroneous entries from the process table altogether with p4 monitor clear pid, where pid is the erroneous process ID. To clear all processes from the table (running or not), use p4 monitor clear all.
Running processes removed from the process table with p4 monitor clear continue to run to completion.
Perforce server trace and tracking flags
To turn on command tracing or performance tracking, specify the appropriate -v var=value flag to the p4d startup command. Use P4LOG or the -L logfile flag to specify the log file. For instance:
p4d -r /usr/perforce -v server=1 -p 1666 -L /usr/perforce/logfile
Before you activate logging, make sure that you have adequate disk space.
Windows
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When running Perforce as a Windows service, use the p4 set command to set P4DEBUG as a registry variable. You can also set these trace flags when running p4d.exe as a server process from the command line.
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Setting server debug levels on a Perforce server (p4d) has no effect on the debug level of a Perforce Proxy (p4p) process, and vice versa.
In most cases, the Perforce server command tracing and tracking flags are useful only to system administrators working with Perforce Technical Support to diagnose or investigate a problem.
Command tracing
The server command trace flags and their meanings are as follows.
Trace flag
|
Meaning
|
---|
server=1
|
Logs server commands to the server log file.
(Requires server at release 98.1 or higher)
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server=2
|
In addition to data logged at level 1, logs server command completion and basic information on CPU time used. Time elapsed is reported in seconds. On UNIX, CPU usage (system and user time) is reported in milliseconds, as per getrusage().
(Requires server at release 2001.1 or higher)
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server=3
|
In addition to data logged at level 2, adds usage information for compute phases of p4 sync and p4 flush (p4 sync -k) commands.
(Requires server at release 2001.2 or higher)
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For command tracing, output appears in the specified log file, showing the date, time, username, IP address, and command for each request processed by the server.
Performance tracking
The Perforce Server produces diagnostic output in the server log whenever user commands exceed certain predetermined thresholds of resource usage. Performance tracking is enabled by default, and if P4DEBUG is unset (or the tracking flag is not specified on the command line), the tracking level is computed based on the number of users in the license file.
Tracking flag
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Meaning
|
---|
track=0
|
Turn off tracking.
|
track=1
|
Track all commands.
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track=2
|
Track excess usage for a server with less than 10 users.
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track=3
|
Track excess usage for a server with less than 100 users.
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track=4
|
Track excess usage for a server with less than 1000 users.
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track=5
|
Track excess usage for a server with more than 1000 users.
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The precise format of the tracking output is undocumented and subject to change.
Auditing user file access
As of Release 2006.1, the Perforce Server can log individual file accesses to an audit logfile.
Auditing is disabled by default, and is only enabled if P4AUDIT is set to point to the location of the audit log file, or if the server is started with the -A auditlog flag.
When auditing is enabled, the server adds a line to the audit log file every time file content is transferred from the server to the client. On an active server, the audit log file will grow very quickly.
Lines in the audit log appear in the form:
date time user@client clientIP command file#rev
For example:
$ tail -2 auditlog
2006/05/09 09:52:45 karl@nail 192.168.0.12 diff //depot/src/x.c#1 2006/05/09 09:54:13 jim@stone 127.0.0.1 sync //depot/inc/file.h#1
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If a command is run on the machine that runs the Perforce Server, the clientIP is shown as 127.0.0.1.
Moving a Perforce server to a new machine
The procedure for moving an existing Perforce server from one machine to another depends on whether or not you're moving between machines
- of identical architectures,
- of different architectures using the same text file (CR/LF) format, or
- of different architecture and different text file format.
Additional considerations apply if the new machine has a different IP address/hostname.
The Perforce server stores two types of data under the Perforce root directory: versioned files and a database containing metadata describing those files. Your versioned files are the ones created and maintained by your users, and your database is a set of Perforce-maintained binary files holding the history and present state of the versioned files. In order to move a Perforce server to a new machine, both the versioned files and the database must be successfully migrated from the old machine to the new machine.
For more about the distinction between versioned files and database, as well as for an overview of backup and restore procedures in general, see "Backup and recovery concepts" on page 25.
For more about moving a Perforce server from one machine to another, see also the Perforce Tech Note at:
Moving between machines of the same architecture
If the architecture of the two machines is the same (for example, SPARC/SPARC, or x86/x86), the versioned files and database can be copied directly between the machines, and you only need to move the server root directory tree to the new machine. You can use tar, cp, xcopy.exe, or any other method. Copy everything in and under the P4ROOT directory - the db.* files (your database) as well as the depot subdirectories (your versioned files).
- Back up your server (including a p4 verify before the backup) and take a checkpoint.
- On the old machine, stop p4d.
- Copy the contents of your old server root (P4ROOT) and all its subdirectories on the old machine into the new server root directory on the new machine.
- Start p4d on the new machine with the desired flags.
- Run p4 verify on the new machine to ensure that the database and your versioned files were transferred correctly to the new machine.
(Although the backup, checkpoint, and subsequent p4 verify are not strictly necessary, it's always good practice to verify, checkpoint, and back up your system before any migration and to perform a subsequent verification after the migration.)
Moving between different architectures that use the same text format
If the internal data representation (big-endian vs. little-endian) convention differs between the two machines (for example, Linux-on-x86/SPARC, NT-on-Alpha/NT-on-x86), but their operating systems use the same CR/LF text file conventions, you can still simply move the server root directory tree to the new machine.
Although the versioned files are portable across architectures, the database, as stored in the db.* files, is not. To transfer the database, you will need to create a checkpoint of your Perforce server on the old machine and use that checkpoint to re-create the database on the new machine. The checkpoint is a text file that can be read by a Perforce server on any architecture. For more details, see "Creating a checkpoint" on page 26.
After you create the checkpoint, you can use tar, cp, xcopy.exe, or any other method to copy the checkpoint file and the depot directories to the new machine. (You don't need to copy the db.* files, because they will be re-created from the checkpoint you took.)
- On the old machine, use p4 verify to ensure that the database is in a consistent state.
- On the old machine, stop p4d.
- On the old machine, create a checkpoint:
- Copy the contents of your old server root (P4ROOT) and all its subdirectories on the old machine into the new server root directory on the new machine.
(To be precise, you don't need to copy the db.* files, just the checkpoint and the depot subdirectories. The db.* files will be re-created from the checkpoint. If it's more convenient to copy everything, then copy everything.)
- On the new machine, if you copied the db.* files, be sure to remove them from the new P4ROOT before continuing.
- Re-create a new set of db.* files suitable for your new machine's architecture from the checkpoint you created:
- Start p4d on the new machine with the desired flags.
- Run p4 verify on the new machine to ensure that the database and your versioned files were transferred correctly to the new machine.
Moving between Windows and UNIX
In this case, both the architecture of the system and the CR/LF text file convention are different. You still have to create a checkpoint, copy it, and re-create the database on the new platform, but when you move the depot subdirectories containing your versioned files, you also have to address the issue of the differing linefeed convention between the two platforms.
Depot subdirectories can contain both text and binary files. The text files (in RCS format, ending with ",v") and binary files (directories of individual binary files, each directory ending with ",d") need to be transferred in different ways in order to translate the line endings on the text files while leaving the binary files unchanged.
As with all other migrations, be sure to run p4 verify after your migration.
Warning
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Windows is a case-insensitive operating system. Files that differ by case only on a UNIX server will occupy the same namespace when transferred to a Windows machine. For instance, files Makefile and file makefile on a UNIX server will appear to be the same file on a Windows machine.
Due to the risk of data loss due to case collision, migrations from UNIX servers to Windows are not supported.
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Contact Perforce Technical Support for assistance when migrating a Perforce server from Windows to UNIX.
Changing the IP address of your server
If the IP address of the new machine is not the same as that of the old machine, you will need to update any IP-address-based protections in your protections table. See "Administering Perforce: Protections" on page 75 for information on setting protections for your Perforce server.
If you are a licensed Perforce customer, you will also need a new license file to reflect the server's new IP address. Contact Perforce Technical Support to obtain an updated license.
Changing the hostname of your server
If the hostname of the new machine serving Perforce is different from that of its predecessor, your users must change their P4PORT settings. If the old machine is being retired or renamed, consider setting an alias for the new machine to match that of the old machine, so that your users won't have to change their P4PORT settings.
Using multiple depots
New depots are defined with the command p4 depot depotname. Depots can be defined as local, remote, or spec depots.
Just as Perforce servers can host multiple depots, Perforce client programs can access files from multiple depots. These other depots can exist on the Perforce server normally accessed by the Perforce client, or they can reside within other, remote, Perforce servers.
Local depots reside on the Perforce server normally accessed by the user's Perforce client program. When using local depots, a Perforce client program communicates with the Perforce server specified by the user's P4PORT environment variable or equivalent setting.
When using remote depots, the user's Perforce client program uses the Perforce server specified by the user's P4PORT environment variable or equivalent setting as a means to access a second, remote, Perforce server. The local Perforce server communicates with the remote Perforce server in order to access a subset of its files. Remote depots are primarily used to facilitate the sharing of code (that is, "code drops") between separate organizations, and are discussed in "Remote depots and distributed development" on page 68.
Remote depots are not a generalized solution for load-balancing or network access problems. To support shared development or to deal with load-balancing or network access problems, see "Perforce Proxy" on page 143.
The spec depot is a special case. If present, the spec depot tracks changes to user-edited forms such as client workspace specifications, jobs, branch specifications, and so on. There can be only one spec depot per server.
Naming depots
Depot names share the same namespace as branches, client workspaces, and labels. For example, //rel2 refers uniquely to one of the depot rel2, the workspace rel2, the branch rel2, or the label rel2; you can't simultaneously have both a depot and a label named rel2.
Defining new local depots
To define a new local depot (that is, to create a new depot in the current Perforce server namespace), call p4 depot with the new depot name, and edit only the Map: field in the resulting form.
For example, to create a new depot called book with the files stored in the local Perforce server namespace in a root subdirectory called book (that is, $P4ROOT/book), enter the command p4 depot book, and fill in the resulting form as follows:
Depot: book Type: local Address: local Suffix: .p4s Map: book/...
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The Address: and Suffix: fields do not apply to local depots and are ignored.
By default, the Map: field on a local depot points to a depot directory matching the depot name, relative to the server root (P4ROOT) setting for your server. To store a depot's versioned files on another volume or drive, specify an absolute path in the Map: field. This path need not be under P4ROOT. Absolute paths in the Map: field on Windows must be specified with forward slashes (for instance, d:/newdepot/) in the p4 depot form.
Enabling versioned specifications with the spec depot
In order for your users to retrieve change histories of user-edited forms, you must enable versioned specifications. The spec depot can have any name, but it must be of type spec, and there can only be one spec depot per server. (If you already have a spec depot, attempting to create another one results in an error message.)
After you have enabled versioned specs by creating the spec depot, all user-generated forms (such as client workspace specifications, jobs, branch specifications, and so on) are automatically archived as text files in the spec depot. Filenames within the spec depot are automatically generated by the server, and are represented in Perforce syntax as follows:
//specdepotname/formtype/objectname[suffix]
Creating the spec depot
To create a spec depot named //spec, enter p4 depot spec, and fill in the resulting form as follows:
Depot: spec Type: spec Address: local Map: spec/... Suffix: .p4s
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The Address: field does not apply to spec depots and is ignored.
Using a Suffix: is optional, but specifying a file extension for objects in the spec depot simplifies usability for users of graphical client programs such as P4V or P4Win, because users can associate the suffix used for Perforce specifications with their preferred text editor. The default suffix for these files is .p4s.
For example, if you create a spec depot named spec, and use the default suffix of .p4s, your users can see the history of changes to job000123 by using the command
p4 filelog //spec/job/job000123.p4s
or by using P4V or P4Win to review changes to job000123.p4s in whatever editor is associated with the .p4s file extension on their workstation.
Populating the spec depot with current forms
After you create a spec depot, you can populate it with the p4 admin updatespecdepot command. This command causes the Perforce Server to archive stored forms (specifically, client, depot, branch, label, typemap, group, user, and job forms) into the spec depot.
To archive all current forms, use the -a flag:
p4 admin updatespecdepot -a
To populate the spec depot with only one type of form (for instance, extremely large sites might elect to update only one table at a time), use the -s flag and specify the form type on the command line. For example:
p4 admin updatespecdepot -s job
In either case, only those forms that have not yet been archived are added to the spec depot; after the spec depot is created, you only need to use p4 admin updatespecdepot once.
Listing depots
To list all depots known to the current Perforce server, use the p4 depots command.
Deleting depots
To delete a depot, use p4 depot -d depotname.
To delete a depot, it must be empty; you must first obliterate all files in the depot with p4 obliterate.
For local and spec depots, p4 obliterate deletes the versioned files as well as all their associated metadata. For remote depots, p4 obliterate erases only the locally held client and label records; the files and metadata still residing on the remote server remain intact.
Before you use p4 obliterate, and especially if you're about to use it to obliterate all files in a depot, read and understand the warnings in "Reclaiming disk space by obliterating files" on page 46.
Remote depots and distributed development
Remote depots are designed to support shared code, not shared development. They enable independent organizations with separate Perforce installations to integrate changes between Perforce installations. Briefly:
- A "remote depot" is a depot on your Perforce server of type remote. It acts as a pointer to a depot of type "local" that resides on a second Perforce server.
- A user of a remote depot is typically a build engineer or handoff administrator responsible for integrating software between separate organizations.
- Control over what files are available to a user of a remote depot resides with the administrator of the remote server, not the users of the local server.
- See "Restricting access to remote depots" on page 72 for security requirements.
When to use remote depots
Perforce is designed to cope with the latencies of large networks and inherently supports users with client workspaces at remote sites. A single Perforce installation is ready, out of the box, to support a shared development project, regardless of the geographic distribution of its contributors.
Partitioning joint development projects into separate Perforce installations does not improve throughput, and usually only complicates administration. If your site is engaged in distributed development (that is, developers in multiple sites working on the same body of code), it is usually preferable to set up a Perforce installation with all code in depots resident on one Perforce server, and to cache frequently accessed files at each development site with Perforce Proxy.
If, however, your organization regularly imports or exports material from other organizations, you might want to consider using Perforce's remote depot functionality to streamline your code drop procedures.
How remote depots work
The following diagram illustrates how Perforce client programs use a user's default Perforce server to access files in a depot hosted on another Perforce server.
In this example, an administrator of a Perforce server at oak:1234 is retrieving a file from a remote server at pine:1818.
Although it is possible to permit individual developers to sync files from remote depots into their client workspaces, this is generally an inefficient use of resources.
The preferred technique for using remote depots is for your organization's build or handoff administrator to integrate files from a remote depot into an area of your local depot. After the integration, your developers can access copies of the files from the local depot into which the files were integrated.
To accept a code drop from a remote depot, create a branch in a local depot from files in a remote depot, and then integrate changes from the remote depot into the local branch. This integration is a one-way operation; you cannot make changes in the local branch and integrate them back into the remote depot. The copies of the files integrated into your Perforce installation become the responsibility of your site's development team; the files on the depot remain under the control of the development team at the other Perforce installation.
Restrictions on remote depots
Prior to Release 99.2, remote depots were accessible only by Perforce servers running at the same release levels. At Release 99.2 and higher, remote depots are interoperable between release levels.
Remote depots facilitate the sharing of code between organizations (as opposed to the sharing of development within a single organization). Consequently, access to remote depots is restricted to read-only operations, and server metadata (information about client workspaces, changelists, labels, and so on) cannot be accessed using remote depots.
Using remote depots for code drops
Performing a code drop requires coordination between two organizations, namely the site receiving the code drop and the site providing the code drop. In most cases, the following three things must be configured:
- The Perforce administrator at the site receiving the code drop must create a remote depot on his or her Perforce server that points to the site providing the code drop.
- This is described in "Defining remote depots" on page 71.
- The Perforce administrator at the site providing the code drop should configure his or her Perforce server to allow the recipient site's remote depot to access the providing site's Perforce server.
- This is described in "Restricting access to remote depots" on page 72.
- The configuration manager or integration manager at the receiving site must integrate the desired files from the remote depot into a local depot under his or her control.
- This is described in "Receiving a code drop" on page 73.
Defining remote depots
To define a new remote depot:
- Create the depot with p4 depot depotname.
- Set the Type: to remote.
- Direct your Perforce server to contact the remote Perforce server by providing the remote server's name and listening port in the Address: field.
A remote server's host and port are specified in the Address: field just as though it were a P4PORT setting.
- Set the Map: field to map into the desired portion of the remote server's namespace.
For remote depots, the mapping contains a subdirectory relative to the remote depot namespace. For example, //depot/outbound/... maps to the outbound subdirectory of the depot named depot hosted on the remote server.
The Map: field must contain a single line pointing to this subdirectory, specified in depot syntax, and containing the "..." wildcard on its right side.
If you are unfamiliar with client views and mappings, see the P4 User's Guide for general information about how Perforce mappings work.
- The Suffix: field does not apply to remote depots; ignore this field.
In order for anyone on your site to access files in the remote depot, the administrator of the remote server must grant read access to user remote to the depots and subdirectories within the depots specified in the Map: field.
Example:
Defining a remote depot
Lisa is coordinating a project and wants to provide a set of libraries to her developers from a
third-party development shop. The third-party development shop uses a Perforce server on
host pine that listens on port 1818. Their policy is to place releases of their libraries on their
server's single depot depot under the subdirectory outbound.
Lisa creates a new depot from which she can access the code drop; she'll call this depot from-
pine; she'd type p4 depot from-pine and fill in the form as follows:
Depot: from-pine Type: remote Address: pine:1818 Map: //depot/outbound/...
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This creates a remote depot called from-pine on Lisa's Perforce server; this depot (//from-
pine) maps to the third party's depot's namespace under its outbound subdirectory.
Restricting access to remote depots
Remote depots are always accessed by a virtual user named remote. This virtual user does not consume a Perforce license.
By default, all the files on any Perforce server can be accessed remotely. To limit or eliminate remote access to a particular server, use p4 protect to set permissions for user remote on that server. Perforce recommends that administrators deny access to user remote across all files and all depots by adding the following permission line in the p4 protect table:
list user remote * -//...
Since remote depots can only be used for read access, it is not necessary to remove write or super access to user remote.
Example security configuration
Using the two organizations described in "Receiving a code drop" on page 73, a basic set of security considerations for each site would include:
On the local (oak) site:
- Deny access to //from-pine to all users. Developers at the oak site have no need to access files on the pine server by means of the remote depot mechanism.
- Grant read access to //from-pine to your integration or build managers. The only user at the oak site who requires access the //from-pine remote depot is the user (in this example, adm) who performs the integration from the remote depot to the local depot.
- To accomplish this, the oak Perforce administrator should include the following lines to the p4 protect table:
list user * * -//from-pine/... read user adm * //from-pine/...
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On the remote (pine) site, access to code residing on pine is entirely the responsibility of the pine server's administrator. At a minimum, this administrator should:
- Preemptively deny access to user remote across all depots from all IP addresses:
list user remote * -//...
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- Adding these lines to the p4 protect table is sound practice for any Perforce installation whether its administrator intends to use remote depots or not.
- Grant read access to user remote to only those areas of the pine server into which code drops are to be placed. In this example, outgoing code drops are published in the //depot/outbound/... subdirectory on the pine server.
- Grant read access for user remote only to the IP address of the Perforce servers authorized to receive code drops. If oak's IP address is 192.168.41.2, the pine Perforce administrator should add the following to the p4 protect table:
read user remote 192.168.41.2 //depot/outbound/...
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Receiving a code drop
To perform a handoff or code drop between two Perforce installations:
- Developers on pine:1818 complete work on a body of code for delivery.
- The build or release manager on pine:1818 branches the deliverable code into an area of pine:1818 intended for outbound code drops. In this example, the released code is branched to //depot/outbound/...
- A Perforce administrator at oak:1234 configures a remote depot called //from-pine on the oak server. This remote depot contains a Map: field that directs the oak server to the //depot/outbound area of pine:1818.
- Upon notification of the release's availability, a build or release manager at oak:1234 performs the code drop by integrating files in the //from-pine/... remote depot into a suitable area of the local depot, such as //depot/codedrops/pine.
- Developers at oak:1234 can now use the pine organization's code, now hosted locally under //depot/codedrops/pine. Should patches be required to pine's code, oak developers can make such patches under //depot/codedrops/pine. The pine group retains control over its code.
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Copyright 1999-2007 Perforce Software. All rights reserved.
Last updated: 05/21/07