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Re: [tor-bugs] #31690 [Internal Services/Service - trac]: study trac.torproject.org archival possibilities
#31690: study trac.torproject.org archival possibilities
----------------------------------------------+---------------------
Reporter: anarcat | Owner: qbi
Type: project | Status: new
Priority: Medium | Milestone:
Component: Internal Services/Service - trac | Version:
Severity: Normal | Resolution:
Keywords: tickets-migration | Actual Points:
Parent ID: #30857 | Points:
Reviewer: | Sponsor:
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Old description:
> this is a split out of #30857 to discuss specifically the question of
> if/how to archive trac.torproject.org.
>
> As mentioned in that ticket, there are a few options on how to deal with
> trac, provided we have another system we want to use:
>
> 1. '''the golden redirect set''': every migrated ticket and wiki page
> has a corresponding ticket/wiki page in GitLab and a gigantic set of
> redirection rules makes sure they are mapped correctly. probably
> impractical, but solves the maintenance problem possibly forever.
>
> 2. '''read-only Trac''': user creation is disabled and existing users
> are locked from making any change to the site. only a temporary or
> intermediate measure.
>
> 3. '''fossilization''': Trac is turned into a static HTML site that can
> be mirrored like any other site. can be a long term solution and a good
> compromise with a possibly impossible to design and therefore failing
> (because incomplete) set of redirection rules.
>
> 4. '''destruction''': we hate the web and pretend link rot is not a
> problem and just get rid of the old site, assuming everything is migrated
> and people will find their stuff eventually. probably not an option.
>
> == Archive team work
>
> With my archive team hat, I was able to coordinate a first archival of
> the website during the summer of 2019, as documented in #30857. This is
> an attempt at doing "3. '''fossilization'''".
>
> All those jobs end up populating the wayback machine at web.archive.org,
> but are also available as WARC files, an archival format for web pages.
>
> A first archival of all tickets up to #30856 has been performed here:
>
> https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/job/5vytc
>
> It's about 600MB of compressed HTML (more or less).
>
> Then a full archival job of the entire site was performed here:
>
> https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/job/bpu6j
>
> It created about 10GB of WARC files, crawled over 730,000 links
> (including external sites linked from Trac) and 105.34GiB of data. It
> took over 5 days:
>
> {{{
> 2019-06-17 01:49:02,514 - wpull.application.tasks.stats - INFO -
> Duration: 5 days, 7:32:55. Speed: 0.0 B/s.
> 2019-06-17 01:49:02,514 - wpull.application.tasks.stats - INFO -
> Downloaded: 732488 files, 105.4 GiB.
> }}}
>
> == Other statistics
>
> Archiving the server itself means dealing with:
>
> * ~1GB of attachments
> * 4GB PostgreSQL database
>
> The actual server uses around 25GB of disk space because of random junk
> here and there but that's the very minimum it can be trimmed down to.
> naturally, we can keep *that* data forever, the problem is keeping the
> app running on top of that... That would be some incarnation of "4.
> '''destruction'''".
New description:
this is a split out of #30857 to discuss specifically the question of
if/how to archive trac.torproject.org.
As mentioned in that ticket, there are a few options on how to deal with
trac, provided we have another system we want to use:
1. '''the golden redirect set''': every migrated ticket and wiki page has
a corresponding ticket/wiki page in GitLab and a gigantic set of
redirection rules makes sure they are mapped correctly. probably
impractical, but solves the maintenance problem possibly forever.
2. '''read-only Trac''': user creation is disabled and existing users are
locked from making any change to the site. only a temporary or
intermediate measure.
3. '''fossilization''': Trac is turned into a static HTML site that can
be mirrored like any other site. can be a long term solution and a good
compromise with a possibly impossible to design and therefore failing
(because incomplete) set of redirection rules.
4. '''destruction''': we hate the web and pretend link rot is not a
problem and just get rid of the old site, assuming everything is migrated
and people will find their stuff eventually. probably not an option.
5. '''redirect to the wayback machine''': like '''fossilization''', but
delegate to the internet archive and hope for the best
== Archive team work
With my archive team hat, I was able to coordinate a first archival of the
website during the summer of 2019, as documented in #30857. This is an
attempt at doing "3. '''fossilization'''".
All those jobs end up populating the wayback machine at web.archive.org,
but are also available as WARC files, an archival format for web pages.
A first archival of all tickets up to #30856 has been performed here:
https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/job/5vytc
It's about 600MB of compressed HTML (more or less).
Then a full archival job of the entire site was performed here:
https://archive.fart.website/archivebot/viewer/job/bpu6j
It created about 10GB of WARC files, crawled over 730,000 links (including
external sites linked from Trac) and 105.34GiB of data. It took over 5
days:
{{{
2019-06-17 01:49:02,514 - wpull.application.tasks.stats - INFO - Duration:
5 days, 7:32:55. Speed: 0.0 B/s.
2019-06-17 01:49:02,514 - wpull.application.tasks.stats - INFO -
Downloaded: 732488 files, 105.4 GiB.
}}}
== Other statistics
Archiving the server itself means dealing with:
* ~1GB of attachments
* 4GB PostgreSQL database
The actual server uses around 25GB of disk space because of random junk
here and there but that's the very minimum it can be trimmed down to.
naturally, we can keep *that* data forever, the problem is keeping the app
running on top of that... That would be some incarnation of "4.
'''destruction'''".
--
Comment (by anarcat):
a conversation is happening over tor-internal about which option to choose
between fossilization (3), destruction (4) and "just use the internet
archive (added as option 5) in the above list. so far (3) has two votes,
but I've warned about the complexity of the problem and personally favor
option 5 at this stage.
the golden redirect set (option 1) has been ruled out for now because the
gitlab migration has stalled and we are unsure that we can actually
reliably migrate those tickets.
--
Ticket URL: <https://trac.torproject.org/projects/tor/ticket/31690#comment:2>
Tor Bug Tracker & Wiki <https://trac.torproject.org/>
The Tor Project: anonymity online
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