title | summary | aliases | |||
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Create a Private Mirror |
Learn how to create a private mirror. |
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When creating a private cloud, usually, you need to use an isolated network environment, where the official mirror of TiUP is not accessible. Therefore, you can create a private mirror, which is mainly implemented by the mirror
command. You can also use the mirror
command for offline deployment. A private mirror also allows you to use components that you build and package by yourself.
Execute the following command to get the help information of the mirror
command:
{{< copyable "shell-regular" >}}
tiup mirror --help
The `mirror` command is used to manage a component repository for TiUP, you can use
it to create a private repository, or to add new component to an existing repository.
The repository can be used either online or offline.
It also provides some useful utilities to help manage keys, users, and versions
of components or the repository itself.
Usage:
tiup mirror <command> [flags]
Available Commands:
init Initialize an empty repository
sign Add signatures to a manifest file
genkey Generate a new key pair
clone Clone a local mirror from a remote mirror and download all selected components
merge Merge two or more offline mirrors
publish Publish a component
show Show the mirror address
set Set mirror address
modify Modify published component
renew Renew the manifest of a published component.
grant grant a new owner
rotate Rotate root.json
Global Flags:
--help Help for this command
--skip-version-check Skip the strict version check, by default a version must be a valid SemVer string
Use "tiup mirror [command] --help" for more information about a command.
You can run the tiup mirror clone
command to build a local mirror:
{{< copyable "shell-regular" >}}
tiup mirror clone <target-dir> [global-version] [flags]
target-dir
: used to specify the directory in which cloned data is stored.global-version
: used to quickly set a global version for all components.
The tiup mirror clone
command provides many optional flags (might provide more in the future). These flags can be divided into the following categories according to their intended usages:
-
Determines whether to use prefix matching to match the version when cloning
If the
--prefix
flag is specified, the version number is matched by prefix for the clone. For example, if you specify--prefix
as "v5.0.0", then "v5.0.0-rc", and "v5.0.0" are matched. -
Determines whether to use the full clone
If you specify the
--full
flag, you can clone the official mirror fully.Note:
If
--full
,global-version
flags, and the component versions are not specified, only some meta information is cloned. -
Determines whether to clone packages from the specific platform
If you want to clone packages only for a specific platform, use
-os
and-arch
to specify the platform. For example:- Execute the
tiup mirror clone <target-dir> [global-version] --os=linux
command to clone for linux. - Execute the
tiup mirror clone <target-dir> [global-version] --arch=amd64
command to clone for amd64. - Execute the
tiup mirror clone <target-dir> [global-version] --os=linux --arch=amd64
command to clone for linux/amd64.
- Execute the
-
Determines whether to clone a specific version of a package
If you want to clone only one version (not all versions) of a component, use
--<component>=<version>
to specify this version. For example:- Execute the
tiup mirror clone <target-dir> --tidb v6.4.0
command to clone the v6.4.0 version of the TiDB component. - Run the
tiup mirror clone <target-dir> --tidb v6.4.0 --tikv all
command to clone the v6.4.0 version of the TiDB component and all versions of the TiKV component. - Run the
tiup mirror clone <target-dir> v6.4.0
command to clone the v6.4.0 version of all components in a cluster.
- Execute the
After cloning, signing keys are set up automatically.
You can share the repository cloned using tiup mirror clone
among hosts either by sharing files via SCP, NFS, or by making the repository available over the HTTP or HTTPS protocol. Use tiup mirror set <location>
to specify the location of the repository.
tiup mirror set /shared_data/tiup
tiup mirror set https://tiup-mirror.example.com/
Note:
If you run
tiup mirror set...
on the machine where you runtiup mirror clone
, the next time you runtiup mirror clone...
, the machine clones from the local mirror, not the remote one. Therefore, you need to reset the mirror by runningtiup mirror set --reset
before updating the private mirror.
Another way of using a mirror is to use the TIUP_MIRRORS
environment variable. Here is an example for running tiup list
with a private repository.
export TIUP_MIRRORS=/shared_data/tiup
tiup list
TIUP_MIRRORS
setting can permanently change the mirror configuration, for example, tiup mirror set
. For details, see tiup issue #651.
If you run the tiup mirror clone
command again with the same target-dir
, the machine will create new manifests and download the latest versions of components available.
Note:
Before recreating the manifest, ensure that all components and versions (including earlier ones downloaded previously) are included.
You can create a custom repository to work with TiDB components like TiDB, TiKV, or PD that you build by yourself. It is also possible to create your own tiup components.
To create your own components, run the tiup package
command and perform as instructed in Component packaging.
To create an empty repository in /data/mirror
:
tiup mirror init /data/mirror
As part of creating the repository, keys will be written to /data/mirror/keys
.
To create a new private key in ~/.tiup/keys/private.json
:
tiup mirror genkey
Grant jdoe
with private key ~/.tiup/keys/private.json
ownership of /data/mirror
:
tiup mirror set /data/mirror
tiup mirror grant jdoe
-
Create a custom component called hello.
$ cat > hello.c << END > #include <stdio.h> int main() { printf("hello\n"); return (0); } END $ gcc hello.c -o hello $ tiup package hello --entry hello --name hello --release v0.0.1
package/hello-v0.0.1-linux-amd64.tar.gz
is created. -
Create a repository and a private key, and grant ownership to the repository.
$ tiup mirror init /tmp/m $ tiup mirror genkey $ tiup mirror set /tmp/m $ tiup mirror grant $USER
tiup mirror publish hello v0.0.1 package/hello-v0.0.1-linux-amd64.tar.gz hello
-
Run the component. If it is not installed yet, it will be downloaded first.
$ tiup hello
The component `hello` version is not installed; downloading from repository. Starting component `hello`: /home/dvaneeden/.tiup/components/hello/v0.0.1/hello hello
With
tiup mirror merge
, you can merge a repository with custom components into another one. This assumes that all components in/data/my_custom_components
are signed by the current$USER
.$ tiup mirror set /data/my_mirror $ tiup mirror grant $USER $ tiup mirror merge /data/my_custom_components