Mirroring tool that implements the client (mirror) side of PEP 381
Project description
This is a PyPI mirror client according to PEP 381.
Build status
Installation
The following instructions will place the bandersnatch executable in a virtualenv under bandersnatch/bin/bandersnatch.
pip
This installs the latest stable, released version.
$ virtualenv-2.7 bandersnatch $ wget https://bitbucket.org/ctheune/bandersnatch/raw/stable/requirements.txt $ bin/pip install -r requirements.txt
zc.buildout
This installs the current development version. Use ‘hg up <version>’ and run buildout again to choose a specific release.
$ hg clone https://bitbucket.org/ctheune/bandersnatch $ cd bandersnatch $ virtualenv-2.7 . $ bin/python bootstrap.py $ bin/buildout
Configuration
Run bandersnatch mirror - it will create an empty configuration file for you in /etc/bandersnatch.conf.
Review /etc/bandersnatch.conf and adapt to your needs.
Run bandersnatch mirror again. It will populate your mirror with the current status of all PyPI packages - roughly 50GiB at the time of writing.
Run bandersnatch mirror regularly to update your mirror with any intermediate changes.
Webserver
Configure your webserver to serve the web/ sub-directory of the mirror. For nginx it should look something like this:
server { listen 127.0.0.1:80; server_name <mymirrorname>; root <path-to-mirror>/web; autoindex on; charset utf-8; }
Note that it is a good idea to have your webserver publish the HTML index files correctly with UTF-8 as the carset. The index pages will work without it but if humans look at the pages the characters will end up looking funny.
Make sure that the webserver uses UTF-8 to look up unicode path names. nginx gets this right by default - not sure about others.
Cron jobs
You need to set up one cron job to run the mirror itself. If you run a public mirror, then you need a second job that will create access statistics for aggregation on the master PyPI.
Here’s a sample that you could place in /etc/cron.d/bandersnatch:
LC_ALL=en_US.utf8 */2 * * * * root bandersnatch mirror |& logger -t bandersnatch[mirror] 12 * * * * root bandersnatch update-stats |& logger -t bandersnatch[update-stats]
This assumes that you have a logger utility installed that will convert the output of the commands to syslog entries.
Maintenance
bandersnatch does not keep much local state in addition to the mirrored data. In general you can just keep rerunning bandersnatch mirror to make it fix errors.
If you delete the state files then the next run will force it to check everything against the master PyPI:
* delete ``./state`` file and ``./todo`` if they exist in your mirror directory * run ``bandersnatch`` mirror to get a full sync
Be aware, that full syncs likely take hours depending on PyPIs performance and your network latency and bandwidth.
Migrating from pep381client
remove old status files, but keep actual data (everything under web/)
create config file, port command parameters from old cronjobs
update cron jobs
Contact
If you have questions or comments, please submit a bug report to http://bitbucket.org/ctheune/bandersnatch/issues/new.
Also, I’m reading the distutils sig mailing list.
Support this project
If you’d like to support my work on PyPI mirrors, please consider a gittip. I’m planning to run a couple more international mirrors if I get enough support.
Kudos
This client is based on the original pep381client by Martin v. Loewis.
Richard Jones was very patient answering questions at PyCon 2013 and made the protocol more reliable by implementing some PyPI enhancements.
1.0rc2 (2013-04-09)
Nothing changed yet.
1.0rc1 (2013-04-09)
Initial release. Massive rewrite of pep381client.
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