Data in Renku

Renku uses the git Large File Storage (LFS) for handling data. Using standard git for large files is difficult because the data itself is converted into git objects and placed in the repository. Git LFS lets you include large data files in your repository efficiently while using more or less just the standard set of git commands. In addition, git LFS places large files on the server and allows you to work with your repository without actually having a local copy of the data. You can pull the data from the server as it becomes needed, saving you time and resources.

Using git LFS responsibly

The default configuration of git LFS is to pull recent data from the server and into the working copy of the repository. This is fine if the data is reasonably small (~GB size) but as it becomes larger, the default behavior can start to pose problems.

Imagine a renku project with 100GB of data in LFS. If a few collaborators all decide to work on the project at the same time and launch the JupyterLab environment to iterate over some changes, each might attempt to download 100GB of data to each of their JupterLab sessions. Not only will this take a long time, but it might also eventually lead to resource starvation on the host node.

Data in JupyterLab sessions

Due to the resource concerns, we therefore do not pull data into user JupyterLab sessions by default. As a result, you do need to be aware of dealing with data stored in LFS if you want to use it efficiently in your work with renku.

Uploading Data to a Renkulab session to create a Dataset with the CLI

You can use the renku dataset CLI command to create a dataset with data that is already present in your JupyterLab or RStudio session or with data that is on your local computer. For example, you can drag and drop files from your computer into the JupyterLab window to upload them and then use the renku dataset command to create a dataset, add the files to the dataset and also check them in git with LFS. Assuming that you have uploaded three files at the root of your repository named file1.csv, file2.csv and file3.csv, you can run the following command to create a dataset from them:

$ renku dataset add --create my-new-dataset file1.csv file2.csv file3.csv

Beside creating a renku dataset, the command will automatically track the files with LFS and commit them. In addition, you can use shell-like wildcards (e.g. , *, ?) when specifying paths to be added instead of explicitly naming every file.

Renku LFS configuration

Renku by default stores all files larger than 100kb in LFS to prevent slowing down git (and thus renku) with large files. This limit can be changed by running:

$ renku config set lfs_threshold <size>

where <size> is a file size formatted like 10b, 100kb, 0.5mb or 10gb.

Additionally, paths can be excluded from LFS storage by renku commands by editing the .renkulfsignore file in the project root folder. This file follows .gitignore convention Files matching a pattern in .renkulfsignore will never be added to git LFS by a renku command like renku run or renku dataset add.

Useful git LFS commands

  • git lfs ls-files: shows all the files currently in LFS

  • git lfs pull -I <path> [remote]: pull a specific path from LFS. It can be a single file or an entire folder.

  • git lfs migrate import --fixup --include-ref=refs/heads/master: move files into LFS. Use this command if you accidentally committed large files to a repo.

Note that you can also use wild-cards, e.g. git lfs pull -I "data/records_201*.csv" but be sure to include quote characters (" or ') when you use wild-cards.

See the git lfs tutorial for details.