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131 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
131 lines
7.6 KiB
Markdown
---
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draft: false
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title: "Gitea, git-lfs, and syncing Obsidian Vaults"
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aliases: ["Gitea, git-lfs, and syncing Obsidian Vaults"]
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date: "2023-01-31"
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author: "Nick Dumas"
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cover: ""
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tags: ["obsidian", "git", "gitea"]
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keywords: ["obsidian", "git", "gitea"]
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summary: "A brief overview of how I stood up a gitea instance for the purpose of backing up and syncing my Obsidian vault."
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showFullContent: false
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---
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## What am I Doing?
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I take notes on a broad spectrum of topics ranging from tabletop roleplaying games to recipes to the last wishes of my loved ones. Because of how valuable these notes are, I need to accomplish two things:
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1) Back up my notes so that no single catastrophe can wipe them out
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2) Make my notes accessible on multiple devices like my phone and various work laptops
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For writing and organizing my notes, I use an application called [Obsidian](https://obsidian.md), an Electron Markdown reader and editor with an emphasis on plaintext, local-only files to represent your notes. This has a lot of interesting implications which are well beyond the scope of this post, but this is the one that's germane: your notes are a textbook use-case for version control.
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Markdown files are plain-text, human-readable content that every modern Version Control System is supremely optimized for handling. In this arena, there's a lot of options ( mercurial, bzr, git, svn, fossil, and more ) but I'm partial to git.
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## Life with git
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```bash
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nick@DESKTOP-D6H8V4O MINGW64 ~/Desktop/general-notes (main)
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$ git log $(!!)
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git log $(git rev-list --max-parents=0 HEAD)
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commit 18de1f967d7d9c667ec42f0cb41ede868d6bdd31
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Author: unknown <>
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Date: Tue May 31 09:44:49 2022 -0400
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adding gitignore
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```
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I've kept my vault under git for all but the first 2 months of my vault's lifetime and I cannot count the number of times it's saved me from a mistake or a bug.
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A few times a day, I'll commit changes to my notes, plugins, or snippets and push them up. This is a manual process, but by reviewing all my changes as they're committed I kill a few birds with one stone:
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1) I get a crude form of spaced repetition by forcing myself to review notes as they change
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2) I verify that templates and other code/plugins are working correctly and if they aren't, I can revert to a known-good copy trivially
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3) reorganizations become much easier ( see point 2, reverting to known-good copies )
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For convenience, I chose to start off with Github as my provider. I set up a private repository because my notes contain sensitive information of various flavors and had no problems with it, except for attachments. This works great, Github is a fast reliable provider and meets all the requirements I laid out above.
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## The catch
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There is no free lunch. On Github, free repositories have restrictions:
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1) github will warn you if you commit files larger than 50mb and ask you to consider removing them or using git-lfs
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2) github will not permit any files larger than 100mb to be committed
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3) You're allowed a limited number of private repositories, depending on the type and tier of your account.
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My vault does not exclusively consist of plaintext files, though; there's PDFs, PNGs, PSDs, and more hanging out, taking up space and refusing to diff efficiently. I've got a lot of PDFs of TTRPG content, screenshots of important parts of software I care about for work or my personal life, and a lot of backup copies of configuration files.
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In theory, this is sustainable. None of my attachments currently exceed 100mb, the median size is well under 1mb.
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```bash
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$ pwd
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~/evac/obsidian-vaults/bonk/Resources/attachments
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$ ls -lah|awk '{print $5}'|sort -hr|head -n5
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62M
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36M
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8.4M
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3.1M
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2.9M
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```
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I'm not satisfied with theoretical sustainability, though. For something this important and sensitive, I'd like to have total confidence that my system will work as expected for the foreseeable future.
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## What are the options?
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1) Github has its own [lfs service](https://docs.github.com/en/repositories/working-with-files/managing-large-files/about-git-large-file-storage) with the free tier capped at 2gb of storage.
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2) Pay for a higher tier of Github's LFS
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3) Managed Gitlab (or similar) instance
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4) Host my own
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Options 1 and 2 are the lowest effort solution and rely the most on third parties. I've opted not to go with this because Github may change its private repository or git-lfs policies at any time.
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Option 3 is better; a managed git hosting service splits the difference nicely. Using Gitlab would give me built-in CI/CD.
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I've opted out of this mostly for price and partly because I know for a fact that I can implement option 4.
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## Option 4
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I chose to use what I'm already familiar with: [Gitea](https://gitea.io/en-us/). Gitea is a fork of Gogs, a hosted git service written in Go. It's lightweight and its simplest implementation runs off an sqlite database so I don't even need a PostgreSQL service running.
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I've been using gogs and gitea for years and they've been extremely reliable and performant. It also integrates tightly with [Drone](https://www.drone.io/), a CI/CD system which will help me automate my blog, publish my notes, and more I haven't had the energy to plan.
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## docker-compose and gitea
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For my first implementation, I'm going to host gitea using docker-compose. This will give me a simple, reproducible setup that I can move between providers if necessary.
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Hosting will be done on my DigitalOcean droplet running a comically old version of Fedora for now. This droplet is really old and up until now I've had very poor reproducibility on my setups. I'm working on fixing that with [caddy](/notes/automating-caddy-on-my-droplet), and using gitea for code management is next.
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Below you'll see the `docker-compose.yaml` for my gitea instance. This is ripped directly from the gitea documentation so there's very little to comment on. The `ports` field is arbitrary and needs to be adjusted based on your hosting situation.
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```yaml
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version: "3"
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networks:
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gitea:
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external: false
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services:
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server:
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image: gitea/gitea:1.18.0
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container_name: gitea
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environment:
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- USER_UID=1000
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- USER_GID=1000
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restart: always
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networks:
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- gitea
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volumes:
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- ./gitea:/data
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- /etc/timezone:/etc/timezone:ro
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- /etc/localtime:/etc/localtime:ro
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ports:
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- "3069:3000"
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- "222:22"
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```
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Starting it up is similarly uninteresting; using detached mode for "production" work because I'm not super interested in watching all the logs. If something breaks, I can start it back up again without detaching and see whatever error output is getting kicked up.
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```bash
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$ docker-compose up -d
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Starting gitea ... done
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$
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```
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Once this is done, you've got a gitea instance waiting to be configured with an admin user and a few other bootstrap settings. Navigate to the URL you chose for your gitea instance while following the docs and you're ready to create a repository for your vault.
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The web UI will guide you from there.
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## Success Story???
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This solution is only a week or two old so it has not be put under a lot of load yet, but gitea has a good reputation and supports a lot of very high profile projects, and DigitalOcean has been an extremely reliable provider for years.
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Migrating my attachments into git-lfs was trivial, but it did rewrite every commit which is something to be mindful of if you're collaborating between people or devices.
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I don't intend to get more aggressive with adding large media attachments to my vault, I *prefer* plaintext when it's an option. Backing up my notes was only one item on a list of reasons I stood gitea up, in the coming weeks I'm going to work on using Drone to automate blog posts and use that as a springboard into more automation.
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