Perforce Proxy
Perforce is built to handle distributed development in a wide range of network topologies. Where bandwidth to remote sites is limited, P4P, the Perforce Proxy, improves performance by mediating between Perforce applications and the versioning service to cache frequently transmitted file revisions. By intercepting requests for cached file revisions, P4P reduces demand on the Perforce service and the network over which it runs.
To improve performance obtained by multiple Perforce users accessing a shared Perforce repository across a WAN, configure P4P on the side of the network close to the users and configure the users to access the service through P4P; then configure P4P to access the master Perforce service. (On a LAN, you can also obtain performance improvements by setting up proxies to divert workload from the master server's CPU and disks.)
The following diagram illustrates a typical P4P configuration.

In this configuration, file revisions requested by users at a remote
development site are fetched first from a central Perforce server
(p4d running on central
) and
transferred over a relatively slow WAN. Subsequent requests for that
same revision, however, are delivered from the Perforce Proxy,
(p4p
running on outpost
), over
the remote development site's LAN, reducing both network traffic across
the WAN and CPU load on the central server.
System requirements
To use Perforce Proxy, you must have:
-
A Perforce Server at Release 2002.2 or higher (2012.1 or higher to use SSL)
-
Sufficient disk space on the proxy host to store a cache of file revisions
Installing P4P
UNIX
To install P4P on UNIX or Linux, do the following:
-
Download the p4p executable to the machine on which you want to run the proxy.
-
Select a directory on this machine (
P4PCACHE
) in which to cache file revisions. -
Select a port (
P4PORT
) on which p4p will listen for requests from Perforce applications. -
Select the target Perforce server (
P4TARGET
) for which this proxy will cache.
Windows
Install P4P from the Windows installer's custom/administrator installation dialog.
Running P4P
To run P4P, invoke the p4p executable, configuring it with environment variables or command-line flags. Flags you specify on the command line override environment variable settings.
For example, the following command line starts a proxy that
communicates with a central Perforce server located on a host named
central
, listening on port 1666.
p4p -p tcp64:[::]:1999 -t central:1666 -r /var/proxyroot
To use the proxy, Perforce applications connect to P4P on port 1999
on the machine where the proxy runs. The proxy listens on both the
IPv6 and IPv4 transports. P4P file revisions are stored under a
directory named /var/proxyroot
.
The Perforce proxy supports connectivity over IPv6 networks as well as IPv4. See the Perforce System Administrator's Guide for more information.
Running P4P as a Windows service
To run P4P as a Windows service, either install P4P from the
Windows installer, or specify the -s
flag
when you invoke p4p.exe, or rename the P4P
executable to p4ps.exe.
To pass parameters to the P4Proxy service, set the
P4POPTIONS
registry variable using the p4
set command. For example, if you normally run the Proxy
with the command:
p4p -p 1999 -t ssl:mainserver:1666
you can set the P4POPTIONS
variable for a Windows
service named Perforce Proxy
by setting the
service parameters as follows:
p4 set -S "Perforce Proxy" P4POPTIONS="-p 1999 -t ssl:mainserver:1666"
When the "Perforce Proxy"
service starts, P4P
listens for plaintext connections on port 1999 and communicates
with the Perforce Server via SSL at
ssl:mainserver:1666
.
P4P flags
The following command-line flags specific to the proxy are supported.
Proxy options:
Flag |
Meaning |
---|---|
|
Run as daemon - fork first, then run (UNIX only). |
|
Do not fork - run as a single-threaded server (UNIX only). |
|
Run for inetd (socket on
|
|
Run quietly; suppress startup messages. |
|
Do not compress data stream between the Perforce server to P4P. (This option reduces CPU load on the central server at the expense of slightly higher bandwidth consumption.) |
|
Run as a Windows service (Windows only). Running p4p.exe -s is equivalent to invoking p4ps.exe. |
|
Disable cache fault coordination.
The proxy maintains a table of concurrent sync operations,
called
When |
General options:
Flag |
Meaning |
---|---|
|
Display a help message. |
|
Display the version of the Perforce Proxy. |
|
Specify the directory where revisions are cached. Default
is |
|
Specify the location of the log file. Default is
|
|
Specify the port on which P4P will listen for requests from
Perforce applications. Default is |
|
Specify the port of the target Perforce server (that is,
the Perforce server for which P4P acts as a proxy). Default
is |
|
Cache only those files that are larger than
|
|
For proxy servers, authenticate as the specified
|
|
Specifies server trace level. Debug messages are stored in
the proxy server's log file. Debug messages from
p4p are not passed through to
p4d, and debug messages from
p4d are not passed through to instances
of p4p. Default is
|
Certificate-handling options:
Flag |
Meaning |
---|---|
-Gc |
Generate SSL credentials files for the proxy: create a
private key (
Requires that |
-Gf |
Display the fingerprint of the proxy's public key, and exit. Administrators can communicate this fingerprint to end users, who can then use the p4 trust command to determine whether or not the fingerprint (of the server to which they happen to be connecting) is accurate. |
Proxy monitoring options:
Flag |
Meaning |
---|---|
|
List pending archive transfers |
|
List pending archive transfers, summarized |
|
Set the file status interval, in seconds. If not set, defaults to 10 seconds. |
|
|
|
Proxy monitoring interval, in seconds. If not set, defaults to 10 seconds. |
|
Show currently-active connections and their status.
Requires |
Proxy archive cache options:
Flag |
Meaning |
---|---|
|
|
Administering P4P
No backups required
You never need to back up the P4P cache directory.
If necessary, P4P reconstructs the cache based on Perforce server metadata.
Stopping P4P
P4P is effectively stateless; to stop P4P under UNIX,
kill
the p4p process with
SIGTERM
or SIGKILL
. Under Windows,
click in the
.
Upgrading P4P
After you have replaced the p4p executable with
the upgraded version, you must also remove the
pdb.lbr
and pdb.monitor
files
(if they exist) from the proxy root before you restart the upgraded
proxy.
Enabling SSL support
To encrypt the connection between a Perforce Proxy and its end
users, your proxy must have a valid private key and certificate
pair in the directory specified by its P4SSLDIR
environment variable. Certificate and key generation and management
for the proxy works the same as it does for the Perforce Server.
See “Linking Perforce services together”. The users' Perforce
applications must be configured to trust the fingerprint of the
proxy.
To encrypt the connection between a Perforce Proxy and its upstream
Perforce service, your proxy installation must be configured to
trust the fingerprint of the upstream Perforce service. That is,
the user that runs p4p (typically a service
user) must create a P4TRUST
file (using p4
trust) that recognizes the fingerprint of the upstream
Perforce service.
Localizing P4P
If your Perforce server has localized error messages (see
"Localizing server error messages" in Perforce System
Administrator's Guide), you can localize your proxy's
error message output by shutting down the proxy, copying the
server's db.message
file into the proxy root,
and restarting the proxy.
Managing disk space consumption
P4P caches file revisions in its cache directory. These revisions accumulate until you delete them. P4P does not delete its cached files or otherwise manage its consumption of disk space.
Warning!
If you do not delete cached files, you will eventually run out of disk space. To recover disk space, remove files under the proxy's root.
You do not need to stop the proxy to delete its cached files or
the pdb.lbr
file.
If you delete files from the cache without stopping the proxy, you
must also delete the pdb.lbr
file at the
proxy's root directory. (The proxy uses the
pdb.lbr
file to keep track of which files are
scheduled for transfer, so that if multiple users simultaneously
request the same file, only one copy of the file is transferred.)
Determining if your Perforce applications are using the proxy
If your Perforce application is using the proxy, the proxy's version information appears in the output of p4 info.
For example, if a Perforce service is hosted at
ssl:central:1666
and you direct your Perforce
application to a Perforce Proxy hosted at
outpost:1999
, the output of p4
info resembles the following:
$ export P4PORT=tcp:outpost:1999 $ p4 info User name: p4adm Client name: admin-temp Client host: remotesite22 Client root: /home/p4adm/tmp Current directory: /home/p4adm/tmp Client address: 192.168.0.123 Server address: central:1666 Server root: /usr/depot/p4d Server date: 2012/03/28 15:03:05 -0700 PDT Server uptime: 752:41:23 Server version: P4D/FREEBSD4/2012.1/406375 (2012/01/25) Server encryption: encrypted Proxy version: P4P/SOLARIS26/2012.1/406884 (2012/01/25) Server license: P4 Admin <p4adm> 20 users (expires 2013/01/01) Server license-ip: 10.0.0.2 Case handling: sensitive
P4P and protections
To apply the IP address of a Perforce Proxy user's workstation
against the protections table, prepend the string
proxy-
to the workstation's IP address.
For instance, consider an organization with a remote development
site with workstations on a subnet of
192.168.10.0/24
. The organization also has a
central office where local development takes place; the central
office exists on the 10.0.0.0/8
subnet. A
Perforce service resides in the 10.0.0.0/8
subnet, and a Perforce Proxy resides in the
192.168.10.0/24
subnet. Users at the remote site
belong to the group remotedev
, and occasionally
visit the central office. Each subnet also has a corresponding set
of IPv6 addresses.
To ensure that members of the remotedev
group
use the proxy while working at the remote site, but do not use the
proxy when visiting the local site, add the following lines to your
protections table:
list group remotedev 192.168.10.0/24 -//... list group remotedev [2001:db8:16:81::]/48 -//... write group remotedev proxy-192.168.10.0/24 //... write group remotedev proxy-[2001:db8:16:81::]/48 //... list group remotedev proxy-10.0.0.0/8 -//... list group remotedev proxy-[2001:db8:1008::]/32 -//... write group remotedev 10.0.0.0/8 //... write group remotedev proxy-[2001:db8:1008::]/32 //...
The first line denies list
access to all users in the
remotedev
group if they attempt to access Perforce
without using the proxy from their workstations in the
192.168.10.0/24
subnet. The second line denies access
in identical fashion when access is attempted from the IPV6
[2001:db8:16:81::]/48
subnet.
The third line grants write
access to all users in
the remotedev
group if they are using a Perforce
Proxy server and are working from the 192.168.10.0/24
subnet. Users of workstations at the remote site must use the proxy.
(The proxy server itself does not have to be in this subnet, for
example, it could be at 192.168.20.0
.) The fourth
line denies access in identical fashion when access is attempted from
the IPV6 [2001:db8:16:81::]/48
subnet.
Similarly, the fifth and sixth lines deny list
access
to remotedev
users when they attempt to use the proxy
from workstations on the central office's subnets
(10.0.0.0/8
and
[2001:db8:1008::]/32
). The seventh and eighth lines
grant write access to remotedev
users who access the
Perforce server directly from workstations on the central office's
subnets. When visiting the local site, users from the
remotedev
group must access the Perforce server
directly.
When the Perforce service evaluates protections table entries, the
dm.proxy.protects
configurable is also evaluated.
dm.proxy.protects
defaults to 1
,
which causes the proxy-
prefix to be prepended to all
client host addresses that connect via an intermediary (proxy, broker,
replica, or edge server), indicating that the connection is not direct.
Setting dm.proxy.protects
to 0
removes the proxy-
prefix and allows you to write a
single set of protection entries that apply both to directly-connected
clients as well as to those that connect via an intermediaty. This is
more convenient but less secure if it matters that a connection is made
using an intermediary. If you use this setting, all intermediaries must
be at release 2012.1 or higher.
Determining if specific files are being delivered from the proxy
Use the -Zproxyverbose
flag with
p4 to display messages indicating whether file
revisions are coming from the proxy (p4p) or the
central server (p4d). For example:
$ p4 -Zproxyverbose sync noncached.txt //depot/main/noncached.txt - refreshing /home/p4adm/tmp/noncached.txt $ p4 -Zproxyverbose sync cached.txt //depot/main/cached.txt - refreshing /home/p4adm/tmp/cached.txt File /home/p4adm/tmp/cached.txt delivered from proxy server
Case-sensitivity issues and the proxy
If you are running the proxy on a case-sensitive platform such as
UNIX, and your users are submitting files from case-insensitive
platforms (such as Windows), the default behavior of the proxy is
to fold case; that is, FILE.TXT
can overwrite
File.txt
or file.txt
.
In the case of text files and source code, the performance impact
of this behavior is negligible. If, however, you are dealing with
large binaries such as .ISO
images or
.VOB
video objects, there can be performance
issues associated with this behavior.)
lbr.proxy.case |
Behavior |
---|---|
|
Proxy folds case; all files with the same name are assumed to be the same file, regardless of case. |
|
Proxy folds case if, and only if, the upstream server is case-insensitive (that is, if the upstream server is on Windows) |
|
Proxy never folds case. |
After any change to lbr.proxy.case
, you must
clear the cache before restarting the proxy.
Maximizing performance improvement
Reducing server CPU usage by disabling file compression
By default, P4P compresses communication between itself and the
Perforce versioning service, imposing additional overhead on the
service. To disable compression, specify the
-c
option when you invoke
p4p. This option is particularly effective if
you have excess network and disk capacity and are storing large
numbers of binary file revisions in the depot, because the proxy
(rather than the upstream versioning service) decompresses the
binary files from its cache before sending them to Perforce users.
Network topologies versus P4P
If network bandwidth on the same subnet as the Perforce service is nearly saturated, deploying proxy servers on the same subnet will not likely result in a performance improvement. Instead, deploy the proxies on the other side of a router so that the traffic from end users to the proxy is isolated to a subnet separate from the subnet containing the Perforce service.
For example:

Deploying an additional proxy on a subnet when network bandwidth on the subnet is nearly saturated will not likely result in a performance improvement. Instead, split the subnet into multiple subnets and deploy a proxy in each resulting subnet.
In the illustrated configuration, a server room houses a company's Perforce service (p4d), a network storage device (NAS), and a database server (RDBMS). The server room's network segment is saturated by heavy loads placed on it by a sales force constantly querying a database for live updates, and by developers and graphic artists frequently accessing large files versioned by Perforce.
Deploying two instances of the Perforce proxy (one on the developers' subnet, and one on the graphic artists' subnet) enables all three groups to benefit from improved performance due to decreased use on the server room's network segment.
Preloading the cache directory for optimal initial performance
P4P stores file revisions only when one of its users submits a new revision to the depot or requests an existing revision from the depot. That is, file revisions are not prefetched. Performance gains from P4P occur only after file revisions are cached.
After starting P4P, you can effectively prefetch the cache directory by creating a dedicated client workspace and syncing it to the head revision. All other users who subsequently connect to the proxy immediately obtain the performance improvements provided by P4P. For example, a development site located in Asia with a P4P server targeting a Perforce server in North America can preload its cache directory by using an automated job that runs a p4 sync against the entire Perforce depot after most work at the North American site has been completed, but before its own developers arrive for work.
By default, p4 sync writes files to the client workspace. If you have a dedicated client workspace that you use to prefetch files for the proxy, however, this step is redundant. If this machine has slower I/O performance than the machine running the Perforce Proxy, it can also be time-consuming.
To preload the proxy's cache without the redundant step of also
writing the files to the client workspace, use the
-Zproxyload
option when syncing. For
example:
$ export P4CLIENT=prefetch $ p4 sync //depot/main/written.txt //depot/main/written.txt - refreshing /home/prefetch/main/written.txt $ p4 -Zproxyload sync //depot/main/nonwritten.txt //depot/main/nonwritten.txt - file(s) up-to-date.
Both files are now cached, but nonwritten.txt
is never written to the the prefetch
client
workspace. When prefetching the entire depot, the time savings can
be considerable.
Distributing disk space consumption
P4P stores revisions as if there were only one depot tree. If this approach stores too much file data onto one filesystem, you can use symbolic links to spread the revisions across multiple filesystems.
For instance, if the P4P cache root is
/disk1/proxy
, and the Perforce server it
supports has two depots named //depot
and
//released
, you can split data across disks,
storing //depot
on disk1
and
//released
on disk2
as
follows:
mkdir /disk2/proxy/released cd /disk1/proxy ln -s /disk2/proxy/released released
The symbolic link means that when P4P attempts to cache files in
the //released
depot to
/disk1/proxy/released
, the files are stored on
/disk2/proxy/released
.