Provided by: profile-sync-daemon_6.34-1_all bug

NAME

       profile-sync-daemon  -  Symlinks  and  syncs browser profiles to RAM (tmpfs) thus reducing
       HDD/SSD calls and speeding-up browsers.

DESCRIPTION

       Profile-sync-daemon  (psd)  is  a  tiny   pseudo-daemon   designed   to   manage   browser
       profile/profiles  in  tmpfs  and to periodically sync back to the physical disc (HDD/SSD).
       This is accomplished by an innovative use of rsync to maintain synchronization  between  a
       tmpfs  copy  and  media-bound  backup  of  the browser profile/profiles. Additionally, psd
       features several crash-recovery features.

       Design goals of psd:

              •  Completely transparent user experience.

              •  Reduced wear to physical discs (particularly SSDs).

              •  Speed.

       Since the profile/profiles, browser cache*, etc. are relocated into tmpfs (RAM disk),  the
       corresponding  I/O  associated with using the browser is also redirected from the physical
       disc to  the  RAM,  thus  reducing  wear  to  the  physical  disc  and  improving  browser
       responsiveness.

       *Note  that some browsers such as Chrome/Chromium, Firefox (since v21), Midori, and Rekonq
       actually keeps their cache directories separately from their browser profile directory. It
       is  not  within the scope of profile-sync-daemon to modify this behavior; users wishing to
       relocate this directory,  may  refer  to  the  following  url  for  several  work-arounds:
       https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Chromium_Tips_and_Tweaks#Cache_in_tmpfs

SETUP

       $XDG_CONFIG_HOME/psd/psd.conf  (referred  to  hereafter as "the config file") contains all
       user managed settings.

       NOTE: edits made to the config file while psd is active will be  applied  only  after  the
       service has been restarted.

              •  Optionally  enable  the  use  of  overlayfs  to  improve sync speed and to use a
                 smaller memory footprint. Do this in the USE_OVERLAYFS variable. The  user  will
                 require  no  password  sudo  rights  to  /usr/bin/psd-overlay-helper to use this
                 option and the kernel must support overlayfs version 22 or higher. See  the  FAQ
                 below for additional details.

              •  Optionally  define  which  browsers  are to be managed in the BROWSERS array. If
                 none are defined, the default is all detected browsers.

              •  Optionally disable the use of crash-recovery  snapshots  (not  recommended).  Do
                 this in the USE_BACKUPS variable.

              •  Optionally define the number of crash-recovery snapshots to keep. Do this in the
                 BACKUP_LIMIT variable.

       NOTE:   occasionally,   updates/changes   are   made   to   the   default   config    file
       (/usr/share/psd/psd.conf)  upstream.  The  user  copy ($XDG_CONFIG_HOME/psd/psd.conf) will
       need to be diffed against it.

RUNNING PSD

   PREVIEW MODE
       The preview option can be called to show users exactly what psd will do/is doing based  on
       the  entries  in  the config file. It will also provide useful information such as profile
       size, paths, and if any recovery snapshots have been created.

        $ psd p

        Profile-sync-daemon on Arch Linux.

         Systemd service is currently active.
         Systemd resync-timer is currently active.
         Overlayfs v23 is currently active.

              Psd will manage the following per /home/facade/.config/psd/.psd.conf settings:

                browser/psname:  chromium/chromium
                owner/group id:  facade/100
                sync target:     /home/facade/.config/chromium
                tmpfs dir:       /run/user/1000/facade-chromium
                profile size:    93M
                overlayfs size:  39M
                recovery dirs:   2 <- delete with the c option
                 dir path/size:  /home/facade/.config/chromium-backup-crashrecovery-20150117_171359 (92M)
                 dir path/size:  /home/facade/.config/chromium-backup-crashrecovery-20150119_112204 (93M)

                browser/psname:  firefox/firefox
                owner/group id:  facade/100
                sync target:     /home/facade/.mozilla/firefox/f8cv8bfu.default
                tmpfs dir:       /run/user/1000/facade-firefox-f8cv8bfu.default

                profile size:    145M
                overlayfs size:  13M
                recovery dirs:   none

   CLEAN MODE
       The clean mode will delete ALL recovery snapshots that have accumulated. Only run it  when
       sure these are no longer needed.

        $ psd c

        Profile-sync-daemon on Arch Linux.

        Deleting 2 crashrecovery dirs for profile /home/facade/.config/chromium
         /home/facade/.config/chromium-backup-crashrecovery-20150117_171359
         /home/facade/.config/chromium-backup-crashrecovery-20150119_112204

   START AND STOP PSD
       With the release of the version 6.x series of psd, the only init system that is officially
       supported is systemd. Psd  ships  with  a  systemd  user  service  to  start  or  stop  it
       (psd.service).  Additionally, a provided resync-timer will run an hourly resync from tmpfs
       back to the disk. The resync-timer is started automatically with psd.service so  there  is
       no need to start the timer; only start psd.service.

        $ systemctl --user [option] psd.service

       Available options: start stop enable disable

SUPPORTED BROWSERS

       •  Chromium (stable, beta, and dev)

       •  Conkeror

       •  Epiphany

       •  Falkon

       •  Firefox (stable, beta, and aurora)

       •  Firefox-trunk  (this is an Ubuntu-only browser: http://www.webupd8.org/2011/05/install-
          firefox-nightly-from-ubuntu-ppa.html)

       •  Google Chrome (stable, beta, and dev)

       •  Heftig's          version          of           Aurora           (Arch           Linux:
          https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=117157)

       •  Icecat

       •  Iceweasel

       •  Inox (https://bbs.archlinux.org/viewtopic.php?id=198763)

       •  Luakit

       •  Midori

       •  Opera (legacy, stable, next, and developer)

       •  Otter-browser

       •  Palemoon

       •  QupZilla

       •  Qutebrowser

       •  Rekonq

       •  Seamonkey

       •  Vivaldi

       •  Vivaldi-snapshot

NOTE ON SYMLINKED PROFILES

       Currently,  psd  does  not  support  symlinked  profiles and will refuse to sync if one is
       detected. For example, your firefox profile is ~/.mozilla/firefox/f8cv8bfu.default but you
       have moved that directory to /foo/bar/f8cv8bfu.default and replaced it with symlink:

        $ ls -l ~/.mozilla/firefox
        lrwxrwxrwx 1 facade users  26 Oct  1 17:02 f8cv8bfu.default -> /foo/bar/f8cv8bfu.default

       Running psd in preview mode will end in an error in forming you of this:

        $ psd p

        Warning!
        /home/facade/.mozilla/firefox/f8cv8bfu.default appears to be a symlink but these are not supported.
        Please make the browser profile a live directory and try again. Exiting.

       A  proper  work  around  for  firefox  is  to  simply edit ~/.mozilla/firefox/profiles.ini
       defining the canonical path there. One also needs to adjust the IsRelative flag like so:

        [Profile0]
        Name=default
        IsRelative=0
        Path=/foo/bar/f8cv8bfu.default

       Other solutions may exist for others browser but documenting  them  all  here  is  out  of
       scope.

SUPPORTED DISTROS

       Since  psd  is  just  a bash script with a systemd service, it should run on any flavor of
       Linux running systemd. Around a  dozen  distros  provide  an  official  package  or  user-
       maintained  option  to  install  psd. One can also build psd from source. See the official
       website for available packages and installation instructions.

FAQ

       Q1: What is overlayfs mode?

       A1: Overlayfs is a simple union file-system mainlined in the Linux kernel version  3.18.0.
       When used with psd, a reduced memory footprint and faster sync operations can be realized.
       The magic is in how the overlay mount only writes out data that has  changed  rather  than
       the  entire  profile.  The  same  recovery  features psd uses in its default mode are also
       active when running in overlayfs mode.

       See the example in the PREVIEW MODE section above which shows a system using overlayfs  to
       illustrate  the  typical  memory savings. Note the "overlayfs size" report compared to the
       total "profile size" report for each profile. Be aware  that  these  numbers  will  change
       depending  on  just  how much new data is written to the profile, but in common use cases,
       the overlayfs size will always be less than the profile size.

       Q2: How do I enable overlayfs mode?

       A2: First, be sure psd is not active or else any  changes  to  the  config  file  will  be
       ignored  until it is restarted. Overlayfs mode is enabled with the USE_OVERLAYFS= variable
       which should be set to "yes" in  the  config  file.  Psd  will  automatically  detect  the
       overlayfs  version  available  to the kernel if it is configured to use one of them. It is
       recommended to run psd in preview mode to verify that the system can in fact use overlayfs
       (note that Debian 8 currently does not support an overlayfs capable kernel version).

       Since  version  6.05  of psd, users wanting to use this mode MUST have sudo rights without
       password prompt to /usr/bin/psd-overlay-helper or  global  sudo  rights  without  password
       prompt.  If  the  user does not have global rights, add the following line to /etc/sudoers
       after any other lines defining sudo access. It is recommended to  use  /usr/bin/visudo  as
       root to set this up:

        foo ALL=(ALL) NOPASSWD: /usr/bin/psd-overlay-helper

       Q3:  Why  do  I  have  another  browser  profile  directory  "foo-back-ovfs" when I enable
       overlayfs?

       A3: The way overlayfs works is to mount a read-only base copy (so-called lower dir) of the
       profile,  and manage the new data on top of that. In order to avoid resyncing to the read-
       only file system, a copy is used instead. So  using  overlayfs  is  a  trade  off:  faster
       initial sync times and less memory usage vs. disk space in the home dir.

       Q4:  I  need  more  memory to accommodate my profile/profiles in /run/user/xxxx. How can I
       allocate more?

       A4: The standard way of controlling the size  of  /run/user  is  the  RuntimeDirectorySize
       directive  in  logind.conf (see the man page for logind.conf for more). By default, 10% of
       physical memory is used but one can increase it safely. Remember that tmpfs only  consumes
       what is actually used; the number specified here is just a maximum allowed.

       Q5: My system crashed for some reason and psd didn't sync back. What do I do?

       A5:  The  "last  good"  backup  of  the  browser profile/profiles should be happily on the
       filesystem. Upon restarting psd (on a reboot for example), a check is preformed to see  if
       the  symlink  to  the  tmpfs  copy  of  the profile is invalid. If it is invalid, psd will
       snapshot the "last good" backup before it rotates it back into place. This is more  for  a
       sanity check that psd did no harm and that any data loss was a function of something else.

       Q6: Where can I find this snapshot?

       A6:  It  depends on the browser. The snapshot will be located in the same directory as the
       browser profile and it will contain a date-time-stamp that  corresponds  to  the  time  at
       which   the   recovery   took   place.   For   example,   a   chromium  snapshot  will  be
       ~/.config/chromium-backup-crashrecovery-20130912_153310 -- of course, the date_time suffix
       will be different.

       Q7: How can I restore the snapshot?

       A7: Follow these steps:

              1.  Stop psd.

              2.  Move the "bad" copy of the profile to a backup (don't blindly delete anything).

              3.  Copy the snapshot directory to the name that browser expects.

              Example using chromium:

              1.  systemctl --user stop psd.service

              3.  mv ~/.config/chromium ~/.config/chromium-bad

              2.  cp          -a          ~/.config/chromium-backup-crashrecovery-20130912_153310
                  ~/.config/chromium

       At this point, launch chromium which will use the backup snapshot just copied into  place.
       If all is well, it is safe to delete ~/.config/chromium-bad and the snapshot. Remember, to
       start psd, no browsers must be open (or psd will refuse to start).

       Q8: Can psd delete the snapshots automatically?

       A8: Yes, run psd with the "clean" switch to delete snapshots.

CONTRIBUTE

       Users wishing to contribute to this code, should fork and send a pull request.  Source  is
       freely available on the project page linked below.

BUGS

       Discover a bug? Please open an issue on the project page linked below.

              •  Several  cases  of  data  loss  have  been reported when using eCryptFS and psd,
                 therefore until this issue is flushed out, users of eCryptFS are encouraged  not
                 to  use  psd  unless  willing to help troubleshoot suspected browser corruption.
                 See: https://github.com/graysky2/profile-sync-daemon/issues/158

ONLINE

       •  Project page: https://github.com/graysky2/profile-sync-daemon

       •  Wiki page: https://wiki.archlinux.org/index.php/Profile-sync-daemon

AUTHOR

       graysky (graysky AT archlinux DOT us)

                                         28 February 2018                  profile-sync-daemon(1)