Mark and team,

 

Again thank you for the team’s consideration of this issue.

 

Statement: “That said, based on I think Julian's comment, it seemed like we 
could restore the old order quite easily without breaking anything so that 
seemed harmless to me and I do not see that it has a negative impact on 1.9.x 
users for whom their order would now change either .. for same reason that we 
are still not claiming the order is significant to us.”

 

I am all in favor of moving forward fixing the order as proposed in Issue #4668 
as soon as possible. If we do not call it an issue but yet still fix it, that 
would be fine. My experience with the “INVALID” term is that the issue is 
dropped and ignored; that would not be palatable to address my system needs.

 

As a system administrator of an SVN repository system, I do not see the 
overwhelming need to maintain the 1.9 node key order. I would need to 
redistribute about 5GB of dump files instead of 300GB. So implementing a fixed 
order without a switch would be a reasonable compromise.

 

Thank-you,

 

Luke Perkins

 

From: Mark Phippard [mailto:markp...@gmail.com] 
Sent: Tuesday, January 24, 2017 14:07
To: lukeperk...@epicdgs.us
Cc: C. Michael Pilato <cmpil...@collab.net>; Subversion Development 
<dev@subversion.apache.org>; Daniel Shahaf <danie...@apache.org>; Julian Foad 
<julianf...@apache.org>
Subject: Re: [PATCH] Issue #4668: Fixing the node key order during svnadmin dump

 

On Tue, Jan 24, 2017 at 4:45 PM, Luke Perkins <lukeperk...@epicdgs.us 
<mailto:lukeperk...@epicdgs.us> > wrote:

Michael,

I appreciate everyone's audience on this issue. I have not felt a need to be 
directly involved in the subversion system mainly because it works so well. 
This is the first time in 10 years I have felt the need to get directly 
involved in the SVN development team.

Statement: " As a bug report alone, this one seems pretty easy:  
Closed/INVALID."

I completely disagree with this statement. I have nearly 300GB of dump files 
used as a means of backing up my repositories. Some of these dump files are 10 
years old. The incremental SVN dump file is automatically generated at each and 
every commit. After these incremental SVN dump files are created, they are 
copied and distributed to offsite locations. That way if my server farm 
crashes, I have a means of assured recovery.

Every month I run sha512sum integrity checks on both the dump files (remotely 
located in 3 different locations) and the dump file produced by the subversion 
server. Transferring thousands of 128 byte files is a much better option than 
transferring thousands of MB dump files over the internet to remote locations. 
This method and automated scripts have worked for 10 years. I have rebuilt my 
servers from the original dump files on at least 2 occasions because of 
computer crashes. This provides me a sanity and validation methodology so that 
I can spot problems quickly and rebuild before things get out of hand.

Asking me to redistribute 300GB of data to 3 different offsite (and remote) 
locations, is not a good option.

The SVN dump file has always been presented as the ultimate backup tool of the 
subversion system. The integrity of the SVN dump file system is of paramount 
importance. The whole reason why SVN exists in the first place is "data 
integrity and traceability". The code was changed back in 2015, for better or 
worse, and we need present solutions to address legacy backups.

 

 

OK, but aren't you moving the goal posts now?  You are implying those old dump 
files no longer work or will not load.  That is not true.  The only issue is 
with your own process where you diff a dump file.  Mike is simply saying you 
are doing something we never claimed should work.  The fact that it did for you 
was just luck that may have ran out.

 

That said, based on I think Julian's comment, it seemed like we could restore 
the old order quite easily without breaking anything so that seemed harmless to 
me and I do not see that it has a negative impact on 1.9.x users for whom their 
order would now change either .. for same reason that we are still not claiming 
the order is significant to us. 

 

Mike seemed to be pushing back on trying to formalize support for something we 
specifically do not support, which is that the headers in the dump file appear 
in a specific order.  I cannot really disagree with him on that point.


 

-- 

Thanks

Mark Phippard
http://markphip.blogspot.com/

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