version 6.20170101
XMPP support has been removed from the assistant in this release.
If your repositories used XMPP to keep in sync, that will no longer work, and you should enable some other remote to keep them in sync. A ssh server is one way, or use the new Tor pairing feature.
version 5.20140421
This release begins to deprecate XMPP support. In particular, if you use the assistant with a ssh remote that has this version of git-annex installed, you don't need XMPP any longer to get immediate syncing of changes.
version 5.20140411
This release fixes a bug that could cause the assistant to use a lot of CPU, when monthly fscking was set up.
Automatic upgrading was broken on OSX for previous versions. This has been fixed, but you'll need to manually upgrade to this version to get it going again. Workaround: Remove the wget bundled inside the git-annex dmg.
version 5.20140221
The Windows port of the assistant and webapp is now considered to be beta quality. There are important missing features (notably Jabber), documented on windows support, but the webapp is broadly usable on Windows now.
version 5.20131221
There is now a arm linux standalone build of git-annex, including the assistant and webapp, which can be installed on a variety of systems including Raspberry Pi, Synology NAS, and Google Chromebooks. Details in this forum thread.
version 5.20131213
The assistant can now be used on Windows! However, it has known problems, described in windows support, and should be considered an alpha-level preview.
version 5.20131127
Starting with this version, when git-annex is installed from a build on this website, it will detect when new versions are available, and allow easily upgrading. Automatic upgrades can also be configured if desired, or automatic upgrade checking can be disabled in the preferences page.
git-annex builds from distributions, like Debian will not automatically upgrade; use the distribution's package manager for that. However, the git-annex webapp will also detect when a distribution has upgraded git-annex and offer to restart the assistant.
version 4.20131024
This version fixes several different bugs that could cause the webapp to refuse to create a repository. Several other bugs are also fixed, including a bug that caused it to not add files on Android.
New in this release is the ability to use the webapp to set up scheduled consistency checks of your repositories. Many problems with repositories are now automatically corrected, and it can even repair damaged git repositories.
This is a recommended upgrade.
version 4.20131002
Now you can use the webapp to set up an encrypted git repository on a remote ssh server, or on rsync.net, and use it as a live cloud backup. Or, use the webapp to make an encrypted git repository on a removable drive, and store it offsite as a secure backup.
version 4.20130920
This release is the first to support fully encrypted git repositories stored on removable drives. This can be set up easily using the webapp.
version 4.20130909
This release fixes a crash that could occur when using XMPP with the assitant. It has only been seen on OS X so far. The bug is not believed to be explitable, but upgrading is still recommended.
version 4.20130802
This release fixes several bugs, including a reversion introduced in the last version that broke direct mode on Windows, Android, and other crippled filesystems. It contains a workaround for a bug in recent git pre-releases that broke handling of filenames containing spaces. It is a highly recommended upgrade.
The webapp can now detect repositories that did not finish getting properly set
up, and can recover from one common bug that broke local pairing and remote
ssh server setups on systems using ssh-agent
.
version 4.20130723
This release fixes some bugs. Notably it fixes a bug that could result in data loss when adding a tarball of a git-annex repository to your git-annex repository.
Rsync.net have committed to support git-annex and offer a special discounted rate for git-annex users. http://www.rsync.net/products/git-annex-pricing.html
version 4.20130709
This release is mostly bug fixes.
One of the bugs involved setting up rsync remotes on servers other than
rsync.net. The wrong .ssh/authorized_keys
line was deployed to the
remote server. If you set up a rsync remote with a past release, and it does
not work, you will need to manually edit the .ssh/authorized_keys
file,
and remove the command=
forced command.
version 4.20130621, 4.20130627
These releases mostly consist of bug fixes.
version 4.20130601
This is a bugfix release, featuring significant XMPP improvements and more robustness thanks to automated fuzz testing. Recommended upgrade.
This version changes its XMPP protocol, so it will fail to sync with older git-annex versions over XMPP.
version 4.20130521
This is a bugfix release. Recommended upgrade.
version 4.20130516
This version contains numerous bug fixes, and improvements.
This is the first release with a fully usable Android app. No command-line typing needed to set up syncing to your Android phone or tablet! A few of the more advanced features may not work (or not work reliably) on Android. The Android app is still beta quality.
This is also the first release with a Windows port! The Windows port is in an alpha quality state, and is missing many features. It does not yet include the assistant.
version 4.20130501
This version contains numerous bug fixes, and improvements.
version 4.20130417
This version contains numerous bug fixes, and improvements.
One bug that was fixed can affect users of gnome-keyring who have set up remote repositories on ssh servers using the webapp. The gnome-keyring may load the restricted key that is set up for that, and make it be used for regular logins to the server; with the result that you'll get an error message about "git-annex-shell" when sshing to the server.
If you experience this problem you can fix it by
moving .ssh/key.git-annex*
to .ssh/git-annex/
(creating
that directory first), and edit .ssh/config
to reflect the new
location of the key. You will also need to restart gnome-keyring.
Another change relates to files in archive/
directories. Client repositories
now sync these files between themselves like any other files, until
the files reach an archive repository. Only then are they removed from
the client repositories. So you need to ensure you have at least one
archive repository if you want to use the archive/
directory feature.
version 4.20130323, 4.20130405
These versions continue fixing bugs and adding features.
version 4.20130314
This version makes a great many improvements and bugfixes, and is a recommended upgrade.
If you have already used the webapp to locally pair two computers, a bug caused the paired repository to not be given an appropriate cost. To fix this, go into the Repositories page in the webapp, and drag the repository for the locally paired computer to come before any repositories that it's more expensive to transfer data to.
version 4.20130227
This release fixes a bug with globbing that broke preferred content expressions. So, it is a recommended upgrade from the previous release, which introduced that bug.
In this release, the assistant is fully working on Android, although it must be set up using the command line.
Repositories can now be placed on filesystems that lack support for symbolic links; FAT support is complete.
version 3.20130216
This adds a port to Android. Only usable at the command line so far; beta qualitty.
Also a bugfix release, and improves support for FAT.
The following are known limitations of this release of the git-annex assistant:
- No Android app yet.
- On BSD operating systems (but not on OS X), the assistant uses kqueue to watch files. Kqueue has to open every directory it watches, so too many directories will run it out of the max number of open files (typically 1024), and fail. See this bug for a workaround.
- Also on systems with kqueue, modifications to existing files in direct mode will not be noticed.
version 3.20130107, 3.20130114, 3.20130124, 3.20130207
These are bugfix releases.
version 3.20130102
This release makes several significant improvements to the git-annex assistant, which is still in beta.
The main improvement is direct mode. This allows you to directly edit files
in the repository, and the assistant will automatically commit and sync
your changes. Direct mode is the default for new repositories created
by the assistant. To convert your existing repository to use direct mode,
manually run git annex direct
inside the repository.
version 3.20121211
This release of the git-annex assistant (which is still in beta) consists of mostly bugfixes, user interface improvements, and improvements to existing features.
In general, anything you can configure with the assistant's web app will work. Some examples of use cases supported by this release include:
- Using Box.com's 5 gigabytes of free storage space as a cloud transfer point between between repositories that cannot directly contact one-another. (Many other cloud providers are also supported, from Rsync.net to Amazon S3, to your own ssh server.)
- Archiving or backing up files to Amazon Glacier. See archival walkthrough.
- Sharing repositories with friends contacted through a Jabber server (such as Google Talk).
- Pairing two computers that are on the same local network (or VPN) and automatically keeping the files in the annex in sync as changes are made to them.
- Cloning your repository to removable drives, USB keys, etc. The assistant will notice when the drive is mounted and keep it in sync. Such a drive can be stored as an offline backup, or transported between computers to keep them in sync.
The following are known limitations of this release of the git-annex assistant:
- The Max OSX standalone app may not work on all versions of Max OSX. Please test!
- On Mac OSX and BSD operating systems, the assistant uses kqueue to watch files. Kqueue has to open every directory it watches, so too many directories will run it out of the max number of open files (typically 1024), and fail. See Issue on OSX with some system limits for a workaround.
version 3.20121126
This adds several features to the git-annex assistant, which is still in beta.
In general, anything you can configure with the assistant's web app will work. Some examples of use cases supported by this release include:
- Using Box.com's 5 gigabytes of free storage space as a cloud transfer point between between repositories that cannot directly contact one-another. (Many other cloud providers are also supported, from Rsync.net to Amazon S3, to your own ssh server.)
- Archiving or backing up files to Amazon Glacier.
- Sharing repositories with friends contacted through a Jabber server (such as Google Talk).
- Pairing two computers that are on the same local network (or VPN) and automatically keeping the files in the annex in sync as changes are made to them.
- Cloning your repository to removable drives, USB keys, etc. The assistant will notice when the drive is mounted and keep it in sync. Such a drive can be stored as an offline backup, or transported between computers to keep them in sync.
The following are known limitations of this release of the git-annex assistant:
- The Max OSX standalone app does not work on all versions of Max OSX.
- On Mac OSX and BSD operating systems, the assistant uses kqueue to watch files. Kqueue has to open every directory it watches, so too many directories will run it out of the max number of open files (typically 1024), and fail. See Issue on OSX with some system limits for a workaround.
- Retrieval of files from Amazon Glacier is not fully automated; the assistant does not automatically retry in the 4 to 5 hours period when Glacier makes the files available.
version 3.20121112
This is a major upgrade of the git-annex assistant, which is still in beta.
In general, anything you can configure with the assistant's web app will work. Some examples of use cases supported by this release include:
- Sharing repositories with friends contacted through a Jabber server (such as Google Talk).
- Setting up cloud repositories, that are used as backups, archives, or transfer points between repositories that cannot directly contact one-another.
- Pairing two computers that are on the same local network (or VPN) and automatically keeping the files in the annex in sync as changes are made to them.
- Cloning your repository to removable drives, USB keys, etc. The assistant will notice when the drive is mounted and keep it in sync. Such a drive can be stored as an offline backup, or transported between computers to keep them in sync.
The following upgrade notes apply if you're upgrading from a previous version:
- For best results, edit the configuration of repositories you set up with older versions, and place them in a repository group. This lets the assistant know how you want to use the repository; for backup, archival, as a transfer point for clients, etc. Go to Configuration -> Manage Repositories, and click in the "configure" link to edit a repository's configuration.
- If you set up a cloud repository with an older version, and have multiple clients using it, you are recommended to configure an Jabber account, so that clients can use it to communicate when sending data to the cloud repository. Configure Jabber by opening the webapp, and going to Configuration -> Configure jabber account
- When setting up local pairing, the assistant did not limit the paired
computer to accessing a single git repository. This new version does,
by setting GIT_ANNEX_SHELL_DIRECTORY in
~/.ssh/authorized_keys
.
The following are known limitations of this release of the git-annex assistant:
- On Mac OSX and BSD operating systems, the assistant uses kqueue to watch files. Kqueue has to open every directory it watches, so too many directories will run it out of the max number of open files (typically 1024), and fail. See Issue on OSX with some system limits for a workaround.
version 3.20121009
This is a maintenance release of the git-annex assistant, which is still in beta.
In general, anything you can configure with the assistant's web app will work. Some examples of use cases supported by this release include:
- Pairing two computers that are on the same local network (or VPN) and automatically keeping the files in the annex in sync as changes are made to them.
- Cloning your repository to removable drives, USB keys, etc. The assistant will notice when the drive is mounted and keep it in sync. Such a drive can be stored as an offline backup, or transported between computers to keep them in sync.
- Cloning your repository to a remote server, running ssh, and uploading changes made to your files to the server. There is special support for using the rsync.net cloud provider this way, or any shell account on a typical unix server, such as a Linode VPS can be used.
The following are known limitations of this release of the git-annex assistant:
- On Mac OSX and BSD operating systems, the assistant uses kqueue to watch files. Kqueue has to open every directory it watches, so too many directories will run it out of the max number of open files (typically 1024), and fail. See Issue on OSX with some system limits for a workaround.
- In order to ensure that all multiple repositories are kept in sync, each computer with a repository must be running the git-annex assistant.
- The assistant does not yet always manage to keep repositories in sync when some are hidden from others behind firewalls.
version 3.20120924
This is the first beta release of the git-annex assistant.
In general, anything you can configure with the assistant's web app will work. Some examples of use cases supported by this release include:
- Pairing two computers that are on the same local network (or VPN) and automatically keeping the files in the annex in sync as changes are made to them.
- Cloning your repository to removable drives, USB keys, etc. The assistant will notice when the drive is mounted and keep it in sync. Such a drive can be stored as an offline backup, or transported between computers to keep them in sync.
- Cloning your repository to a remote server, running ssh, and uploading changes made to your files to the server. There is special support for using the rsync.net cloud provider this way, or any shell account on a typical unix server, such as a Linode VPS can be used.
The following are known limitations of this release of the git-annex assistant:
- On Mac OSX and BSD operating systems, the assistant uses kqueue to watch files. Kqueue has to open every directory it watches, so too many directories will run it out of the max number of open files (typically 1024), and fail. See Issue on OSX with some system limits for a workaround.
- In order to ensure that all multiple repositories are kept in sync, each computer with a repository must be running the git-annex assistant.
- The assistant does not yet always manage to keep repositories in sync when some are hidden from others behind firewalls.
- If a file is checked into git as a normal file and gets modified (or merged, etc), it will be converted into an annexed file. So you should not mix use of the assistant with normal git files in the same repository yet.
- If you
git annex unlock
a file, it will immediately be re-locked. See ?watcher commits unlocked files.
Trying to run this release on OSX results in an error message from Gatekeeper:
It would be nice if the binary could be signed to make Gatekeeper happy. Until then a note in the installation instructions might be useful.
After telling Gatekeeper that I really want to run git-annex it still fails:
[fog;~]-131> open Applications/git-annex.app LSOpenURLsWithRole() failed with error -10810 for the file /Users/wichert/Applications/git-annex.app.
This has been previously reported: ?OSX git-annex.app error: LSOpenURLsWithRole()
No clue what that error is supposed to mean.
The Debian package should depend on xdg-utils:
@cscsordas, please don't post problems on random pages of this website, there is a bug tracker that you can use.
I do not think that git-annex needs to depend on xdg-open, any more than it needs to depend on a web browser. Current behavior seems ok to me, the user can open the url that it displays themselves, or can work out how to install xdg-open.