git-annex/Locations.hs

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{- git-annex file locations
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-
- Copyright 2010-2013 Joey Hess <id@joeyh.name>
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-
- Licensed under the GNU GPL version 3 or higher.
-}
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module Locations (
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keyFile,
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fileKey,
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keyPaths,
keyPath,
annexDir,
objectDir,
gitAnnexLocation,
gitAnnexLink,
gitAnnexContentLock,
gitAnnexMapping,
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gitAnnexInodeCache,
gitAnnexInodeSentinal,
gitAnnexInodeSentinalCache,
annexLocations,
annexLocation,
gitAnnexDir,
gitAnnexObjectDir,
gitAnnexTmpMiscDir,
gitAnnexTmpObjectDir,
gitAnnexTmpObjectLocation,
gitAnnexBadDir,
gitAnnexBadLocation,
gitAnnexUnusedLog,
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gitAnnexFsckState,
gitAnnexFsckResultsLog,
gitAnnexScheduleState,
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gitAnnexTransferDir,
gitAnnexCredsDir,
gitAnnexWebCertificate,
gitAnnexWebPrivKey,
gitAnnexFeedStateDir,
gitAnnexFeedState,
gitAnnexMergeDir,
gitAnnexJournalDir,
gitAnnexJournalLock,
gitAnnexPreCommitLock,
gitAnnexMergeLock,
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gitAnnexIndex,
gitAnnexIndexStatus,
gitAnnexViewIndex,
gitAnnexViewLog,
gitAnnexIgnoredRefs,
gitAnnexPidFile,
gitAnnexDaemonStatusFile,
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gitAnnexLogFile,
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gitAnnexFuzzTestLogFile,
gitAnnexHtmlShim,
gitAnnexUrlFile,
gitAnnexTmpCfgFile,
gitAnnexSshDir,
gitAnnexRemotesDir,
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gitAnnexAssistantDefaultDir,
isLinkToAnnex,
annexHashes,
hashDirMixed,
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hashDirLower,
Better sanitization of problem characters when generating URL and WORM keys. FAT has a lot of characters it does not allow in filenames, like ? and * It's probably the worst offender, but other filesystems also have limitiations. In 2011, I made keyFile escape : to handle FAT, but missed the other characters. It also turns out that when I did that, I was also living dangerously; any existing keys that contained a : had their object location change. Oops. So, adding new characters to escape to keyFile is out. Well, it would be possible to make keyFile behave differently on a per-filesystem basis, but this would be a real nightmare to get right. Consider that a rsync special remote uses keyFile to determine the filenames to use, and we don't know the underlying filesystem on the rsync server.. Instead, I have gone for a solution that is backwards compatable and simple. Its only downside is that already generated URL and WORM keys might not be able to be stored on FAT or some other filesystem that dislikes a character used in the key. (In this case, the user can just migrate the problem keys to a checksumming backend. If this became a big problem, fsck could be made to detect these and suggest a migration.) Going forward, new keys that are created will escape all characters that are likely to cause problems. And if some filesystem comes along that's even worse than FAT (seems unlikely, but here it is 2013, and people are still using FAT!), additional characters can be added to the set that are escaped without difficulty. (Also, made WORM limit the part of the filename that is embedded in the key, to deal with filesystem filename length limits. This could have already been a problem, but is more likely now, since the escaping of the filename can make it longer.) This commit was sponsored by Ian Downes
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preSanitizeKeyName,
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prop_idempotent_fileKey
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) where
import Data.Bits
import Data.Word
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import Data.Hash.MD5
Better sanitization of problem characters when generating URL and WORM keys. FAT has a lot of characters it does not allow in filenames, like ? and * It's probably the worst offender, but other filesystems also have limitiations. In 2011, I made keyFile escape : to handle FAT, but missed the other characters. It also turns out that when I did that, I was also living dangerously; any existing keys that contained a : had their object location change. Oops. So, adding new characters to escape to keyFile is out. Well, it would be possible to make keyFile behave differently on a per-filesystem basis, but this would be a real nightmare to get right. Consider that a rsync special remote uses keyFile to determine the filenames to use, and we don't know the underlying filesystem on the rsync server.. Instead, I have gone for a solution that is backwards compatable and simple. Its only downside is that already generated URL and WORM keys might not be able to be stored on FAT or some other filesystem that dislikes a character used in the key. (In this case, the user can just migrate the problem keys to a checksumming backend. If this became a big problem, fsck could be made to detect these and suggest a migration.) Going forward, new keys that are created will escape all characters that are likely to cause problems. And if some filesystem comes along that's even worse than FAT (seems unlikely, but here it is 2013, and people are still using FAT!), additional characters can be added to the set that are escaped without difficulty. (Also, made WORM limit the part of the filename that is embedded in the key, to deal with filesystem filename length limits. This could have already been a problem, but is more likely now, since the escaping of the filename can make it longer.) This commit was sponsored by Ian Downes
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import Data.Char
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import Common
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import Types
import Types.Key
import Types.UUID
import Types.Difference
import qualified Git
{- Conventions:
-
- Functions ending in "Dir" should always return values ending with a
- trailing path separator. Most code does not rely on that, but a few
- things do.
-
- Everything else should not end in a trailing path sepatator.
-
- Only functions (with names starting with "git") that build a path
- based on a git repository should return full path relative to the git
- repository. Everything else returns path segments.
-}
{- The directory git annex uses for local state, relative to the .git
- directory -}
annexDir :: FilePath
annexDir = addTrailingPathSeparator "annex"
{- The directory git annex uses for locally available object content,
- relative to the .git directory -}
objectDir :: FilePath
objectDir = addTrailingPathSeparator $ annexDir </> "objects"
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{- Annexed file's possible locations relative to the .git directory.
- There are two different possibilities, using different hashes. -}
annexLocations :: Key -> [FilePath]
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annexLocations key = map (annexLocation key) annexHashes
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annexLocation :: Key -> Hasher -> FilePath
annexLocation key hasher = objectDir </> keyPath key hasher
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{- Annexed object's location in a repository.
-
- When there are multiple possible locations, returns the one where the
- file is actually present.
-
- When the file is not present, returns the location where the file should
- be stored.
-
- This does not take direct mode into account, so in direct mode it is not
- the actual location of the file's content.
-}
gitAnnexLocation :: Key -> Git.Repo -> GitConfig -> IO FilePath
gitAnnexLocation key r config = gitAnnexLocation' key r config (annexCrippledFileSystem config)
gitAnnexLocation' :: Key -> Git.Repo -> GitConfig -> Bool -> IO FilePath
gitAnnexLocation' key r config crippled
{- Bare repositories default to hashDirLower for new
- content, as it's more portable.
-
- Repositories on filesystems that are crippled also use
- hashDirLower, since they do not use symlinks and it's
- more portable.
-
- ObjectHashLower can also be set to force it.
-}
| Git.repoIsLocalBare r
|| crippled
|| hasDifference (== ObjectHashLower True) (annexDifferences config) =
check $ map inrepo $ annexLocations key
{- Non-bare repositories only use hashDirMixed, so
- don't need to do any work to check if the file is
- present. -}
| otherwise = return $ inrepo $ annexLocation key hashDirMixed
where
inrepo d = Git.localGitDir r </> d
check locs@(l:_) = fromMaybe l <$> firstM doesFileExist locs
check [] = error "internal"
{- Calculates a symlink to link a file to an annexed object. -}
gitAnnexLink :: FilePath -> Key -> Git.Repo -> GitConfig -> IO FilePath
gitAnnexLink file key r config = do
currdir <- getCurrentDirectory
let absfile = fromMaybe whoops $ absNormPathUnix currdir file
loc <- gitAnnexLocation' key r config False
relPathDirToFile (parentDir absfile) loc
where
whoops = error $ "unable to normalize " ++ file
{- File used to lock a key's content. -}
gitAnnexContentLock :: Key -> Git.Repo -> GitConfig -> IO FilePath
gitAnnexContentLock key r config = do
loc <- gitAnnexLocation key r config
return $ loc ++ ".lck"
{- File that maps from a key to the file(s) in the git repository.
- Used in direct mode. -}
gitAnnexMapping :: Key -> Git.Repo -> GitConfig -> IO FilePath
gitAnnexMapping key r config = do
loc <- gitAnnexLocation key r config
return $ loc ++ ".map"
{- File that caches information about a key's content, used to determine
- if a file has changed.
- Used in direct mode. -}
gitAnnexInodeCache :: Key -> Git.Repo -> GitConfig -> IO FilePath
gitAnnexInodeCache key r config = do
loc <- gitAnnexLocation key r config
return $ loc ++ ".cache"
gitAnnexInodeSentinal :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexInodeSentinal r = gitAnnexDir r </> "sentinal"
gitAnnexInodeSentinalCache :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexInodeSentinalCache r = gitAnnexInodeSentinal r ++ ".cache"
{- The annex directory of a repository. -}
gitAnnexDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
Clean up handling of git directory and git worktree. Baked into the code was an assumption that a repository's git directory could be determined by adding ".git" to its work tree (or nothing for bare repos). That fails when core.worktree, or GIT_DIR and GIT_WORK_TREE are used to separate the two. This was attacked at the type level, by storing the gitdir and worktree separately, so Nothing for the worktree means a bare repo. A complication arose because we don't learn where a repository is bare until its configuration is read. So another Location type handles repositories that have not had their config read yet. I am not entirely happy with this being a Location type, rather than representing them entirely separate from the Git type. The new code is not worse than the old, but better types could enforce more safety. Added support for core.worktree. Overriding it with -c isn't supported because it's not really clear what to do if a git repo's config is read, is not bare, and is then overridden to bare. What is the right git directory in this case? I will worry about this if/when someone has a use case for overriding core.worktree with -c. (See Git.Config.updateLocation) Also removed and renamed some functions like gitDir and workTree that misused git's terminology. One minor regression is known: git annex add in a bare repository does not print a nice error message, but runs git ls-files in a way that fails earlier with a less nice error message. This is because before --work-tree was always passed to git commands, even in a bare repo, while now it's not.
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gitAnnexDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ Git.localGitDir r </> annexDir
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{- The part of the annex directory where file contents are stored. -}
gitAnnexObjectDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
Clean up handling of git directory and git worktree. Baked into the code was an assumption that a repository's git directory could be determined by adding ".git" to its work tree (or nothing for bare repos). That fails when core.worktree, or GIT_DIR and GIT_WORK_TREE are used to separate the two. This was attacked at the type level, by storing the gitdir and worktree separately, so Nothing for the worktree means a bare repo. A complication arose because we don't learn where a repository is bare until its configuration is read. So another Location type handles repositories that have not had their config read yet. I am not entirely happy with this being a Location type, rather than representing them entirely separate from the Git type. The new code is not worse than the old, but better types could enforce more safety. Added support for core.worktree. Overriding it with -c isn't supported because it's not really clear what to do if a git repo's config is read, is not bare, and is then overridden to bare. What is the right git directory in this case? I will worry about this if/when someone has a use case for overriding core.worktree with -c. (See Git.Config.updateLocation) Also removed and renamed some functions like gitDir and workTree that misused git's terminology. One minor regression is known: git annex add in a bare repository does not print a nice error message, but runs git ls-files in a way that fails earlier with a less nice error message. This is because before --work-tree was always passed to git commands, even in a bare repo, while now it's not.
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gitAnnexObjectDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ Git.localGitDir r </> objectDir
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{- .git/annex/misctmp/ is used for random temp files -}
gitAnnexTmpMiscDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexTmpMiscDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "misctmp"
{- .git/annex/tmp/ is used for temp files for key's contents -}
gitAnnexTmpObjectDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexTmpObjectDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "tmp"
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{- The temp file to use for a given key's content. -}
gitAnnexTmpObjectLocation :: Key -> Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexTmpObjectLocation key r = gitAnnexTmpObjectDir r </> keyFile key
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{- .git/annex/bad/ is used for bad files found during fsck -}
gitAnnexBadDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexBadDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "bad"
{- The bad file to use for a given key. -}
gitAnnexBadLocation :: Key -> Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexBadLocation key r = gitAnnexBadDir r </> keyFile key
{- .git/annex/foounused is used to number possibly unused keys -}
gitAnnexUnusedLog :: FilePath -> Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexUnusedLog prefix r = gitAnnexDir r </> (prefix ++ "unused")
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{- .git/annex/fsckstate is used to store information about incremental fscks. -}
gitAnnexFsckState :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexFsckState r = gitAnnexDir r </> "fsckstate"
{- .git/annex/fsckresults/uuid is used to store results of git fscks -}
gitAnnexFsckResultsLog :: UUID -> Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexFsckResultsLog u r = gitAnnexDir r </> "fsckresults" </> fromUUID u
{- .git/annex/schedulestate is used to store information about when
- scheduled jobs were last run. -}
gitAnnexScheduleState :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexScheduleState r = gitAnnexDir r </> "schedulestate"
{- .git/annex/creds/ is used to store credentials to access some special
- remotes. -}
gitAnnexCredsDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexCredsDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "creds"
{- .git/annex/certificate.pem and .git/annex/key.pem are used by the webapp
- when HTTPS is enabled -}
gitAnnexWebCertificate :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexWebCertificate r = gitAnnexDir r </> "certificate.pem"
gitAnnexWebPrivKey :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexWebPrivKey r = gitAnnexDir r </> "privkey.pem"
{- .git/annex/feeds/ is used to record per-key (url) state by importfeeds -}
gitAnnexFeedStateDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexFeedStateDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "feedstate"
gitAnnexFeedState :: Key -> Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexFeedState k r = gitAnnexFeedStateDir r </> keyFile k
{- .git/annex/merge/ is used for direct mode merges. -}
gitAnnexMergeDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexMergeDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "merge"
{- .git/annex/transfer/ is used to record keys currently
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- being transferred, and other transfer bookkeeping info. -}
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gitAnnexTransferDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexTransferDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "transfer"
{- .git/annex/journal/ is used to journal changes made to the git-annex
- branch -}
gitAnnexJournalDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexJournalDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "journal"
{- Lock file for the journal. -}
gitAnnexJournalLock :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexJournalLock r = gitAnnexDir r </> "journal.lck"
{- Lock file for the pre-commit hook. -}
gitAnnexPreCommitLock :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexPreCommitLock r = gitAnnexDir r </> "precommit.lck"
{- Lock file for direct mode merge. -}
gitAnnexMergeLock :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexMergeLock r = gitAnnexDir r </> "merge.lck"
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{- .git/annex/index is used to stage changes to the git-annex branch -}
gitAnnexIndex :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexIndex r = gitAnnexDir r </> "index"
{- Holds the ref of the git-annex branch that the index was last updated to.
-
- The .lck in the name is a historical accident; this is not used as a
- lock. -}
gitAnnexIndexStatus :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexIndexStatus r = gitAnnexDir r </> "index.lck"
{- The index file used to generate a filtered branch view._-}
gitAnnexViewIndex :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexViewIndex r = gitAnnexDir r </> "viewindex"
{- File containing a log of recently accessed views. -}
gitAnnexViewLog :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexViewLog r = gitAnnexDir r </> "viewlog"
{- List of refs that should not be merged into the git-annex branch. -}
gitAnnexIgnoredRefs :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexIgnoredRefs r = gitAnnexDir r </> "ignoredrefs"
{- Pid file for daemon mode. -}
gitAnnexPidFile :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexPidFile r = gitAnnexDir r </> "daemon.pid"
{- Status file for daemon mode. -}
gitAnnexDaemonStatusFile :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexDaemonStatusFile r = gitAnnexDir r </> "daemon.status"
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{- Log file for daemon mode. -}
gitAnnexLogFile :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexLogFile r = gitAnnexDir r </> "daemon.log"
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{- Log file for fuzz test. -}
gitAnnexFuzzTestLogFile :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexFuzzTestLogFile r = gitAnnexDir r </> "fuzztest.log"
{- Html shim file used to launch the webapp. -}
gitAnnexHtmlShim :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexHtmlShim r = gitAnnexDir r </> "webapp.html"
{- File containing the url to the webapp. -}
gitAnnexUrlFile :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexUrlFile r = gitAnnexDir r </> "url"
{- Temporary file used to edit configuriation from the git-annex branch. -}
gitAnnexTmpCfgFile :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexTmpCfgFile r = gitAnnexDir r </> "config.tmp"
{- .git/annex/ssh/ is used for ssh connection caching -}
gitAnnexSshDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexSshDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "ssh"
{- .git/annex/remotes/ is used for remote-specific state. -}
gitAnnexRemotesDir :: Git.Repo -> FilePath
gitAnnexRemotesDir r = addTrailingPathSeparator $ gitAnnexDir r </> "remotes"
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{- This is the base directory name used by the assistant when making
- repositories, by default. -}
gitAnnexAssistantDefaultDir :: FilePath
gitAnnexAssistantDefaultDir = "annex"
{- Checks a symlink target to see if it appears to point to annexed content.
-
- We only look at paths inside the .git directory, and not at the .git
- directory itself, because GIT_DIR may cause a directory name other
- than .git to be used.
-}
isLinkToAnnex :: FilePath -> Bool
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isLinkToAnnex s = (pathSeparator:objectDir) `isInfixOf` s
Better sanitization of problem characters when generating URL and WORM keys. FAT has a lot of characters it does not allow in filenames, like ? and * It's probably the worst offender, but other filesystems also have limitiations. In 2011, I made keyFile escape : to handle FAT, but missed the other characters. It also turns out that when I did that, I was also living dangerously; any existing keys that contained a : had their object location change. Oops. So, adding new characters to escape to keyFile is out. Well, it would be possible to make keyFile behave differently on a per-filesystem basis, but this would be a real nightmare to get right. Consider that a rsync special remote uses keyFile to determine the filenames to use, and we don't know the underlying filesystem on the rsync server.. Instead, I have gone for a solution that is backwards compatable and simple. Its only downside is that already generated URL and WORM keys might not be able to be stored on FAT or some other filesystem that dislikes a character used in the key. (In this case, the user can just migrate the problem keys to a checksumming backend. If this became a big problem, fsck could be made to detect these and suggest a migration.) Going forward, new keys that are created will escape all characters that are likely to cause problems. And if some filesystem comes along that's even worse than FAT (seems unlikely, but here it is 2013, and people are still using FAT!), additional characters can be added to the set that are escaped without difficulty. (Also, made WORM limit the part of the filename that is embedded in the key, to deal with filesystem filename length limits. This could have already been a problem, but is more likely now, since the escaping of the filename can make it longer.) This commit was sponsored by Ian Downes
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{- Sanitizes a String that will be used as part of a Key's keyName,
- dealing with characters that cause problems on substandard filesystems.
-
- This is used when a new Key is initially being generated, eg by getKey.
- Unlike keyFile and fileKey, it does not need to be a reversable
- escaping. Also, it's ok to change this to add more problimatic
- characters later. Unlike changing keyFile, which could result in the
- filenames used for existing keys changing and contents getting lost.
-
- It is, however, important that the input and output of this function
- have a 1:1 mapping, to avoid two different inputs from mapping to the
- same key.
-}
preSanitizeKeyName :: String -> String
preSanitizeKeyName = concatMap escape
where
escape c
Better sanitization of problem characters when generating URL and WORM keys. FAT has a lot of characters it does not allow in filenames, like ? and * It's probably the worst offender, but other filesystems also have limitiations. In 2011, I made keyFile escape : to handle FAT, but missed the other characters. It also turns out that when I did that, I was also living dangerously; any existing keys that contained a : had their object location change. Oops. So, adding new characters to escape to keyFile is out. Well, it would be possible to make keyFile behave differently on a per-filesystem basis, but this would be a real nightmare to get right. Consider that a rsync special remote uses keyFile to determine the filenames to use, and we don't know the underlying filesystem on the rsync server.. Instead, I have gone for a solution that is backwards compatable and simple. Its only downside is that already generated URL and WORM keys might not be able to be stored on FAT or some other filesystem that dislikes a character used in the key. (In this case, the user can just migrate the problem keys to a checksumming backend. If this became a big problem, fsck could be made to detect these and suggest a migration.) Going forward, new keys that are created will escape all characters that are likely to cause problems. And if some filesystem comes along that's even worse than FAT (seems unlikely, but here it is 2013, and people are still using FAT!), additional characters can be added to the set that are escaped without difficulty. (Also, made WORM limit the part of the filename that is embedded in the key, to deal with filesystem filename length limits. This could have already been a problem, but is more likely now, since the escaping of the filename can make it longer.) This commit was sponsored by Ian Downes
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| isAsciiUpper c || isAsciiLower c || isDigit c = [c]
| c `elem` ".-_ " = [c] -- common, assumed safe
| c `elem` "/%:" = [c] -- handled by keyFile
-- , is safe and uncommon, so will be used to escape
-- other characters. By itself, it is escaped to
-- doubled form.
| c == ',' = ",,"
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| otherwise = ',' : show (ord c)
Better sanitization of problem characters when generating URL and WORM keys. FAT has a lot of characters it does not allow in filenames, like ? and * It's probably the worst offender, but other filesystems also have limitiations. In 2011, I made keyFile escape : to handle FAT, but missed the other characters. It also turns out that when I did that, I was also living dangerously; any existing keys that contained a : had their object location change. Oops. So, adding new characters to escape to keyFile is out. Well, it would be possible to make keyFile behave differently on a per-filesystem basis, but this would be a real nightmare to get right. Consider that a rsync special remote uses keyFile to determine the filenames to use, and we don't know the underlying filesystem on the rsync server.. Instead, I have gone for a solution that is backwards compatable and simple. Its only downside is that already generated URL and WORM keys might not be able to be stored on FAT or some other filesystem that dislikes a character used in the key. (In this case, the user can just migrate the problem keys to a checksumming backend. If this became a big problem, fsck could be made to detect these and suggest a migration.) Going forward, new keys that are created will escape all characters that are likely to cause problems. And if some filesystem comes along that's even worse than FAT (seems unlikely, but here it is 2013, and people are still using FAT!), additional characters can be added to the set that are escaped without difficulty. (Also, made WORM limit the part of the filename that is embedded in the key, to deal with filesystem filename length limits. This could have already been a problem, but is more likely now, since the escaping of the filename can make it longer.) This commit was sponsored by Ian Downes
2013-10-05 19:01:49 +00:00
2011-12-02 18:39:47 +00:00
{- Converts a key into a filename fragment without any directory.
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-
- Escape "/" in the key name, to keep a flat tree of files and avoid
- issues with keys containing "/../" or ending with "/" etc.
-
- "/" is escaped to "%" because it's short and rarely used, and resembles
- a slash
- "%" is escaped to "&s", and "&" to "&a"; this ensures that the mapping
- is one to one.
Better sanitization of problem characters when generating URL and WORM keys. FAT has a lot of characters it does not allow in filenames, like ? and * It's probably the worst offender, but other filesystems also have limitiations. In 2011, I made keyFile escape : to handle FAT, but missed the other characters. It also turns out that when I did that, I was also living dangerously; any existing keys that contained a : had their object location change. Oops. So, adding new characters to escape to keyFile is out. Well, it would be possible to make keyFile behave differently on a per-filesystem basis, but this would be a real nightmare to get right. Consider that a rsync special remote uses keyFile to determine the filenames to use, and we don't know the underlying filesystem on the rsync server.. Instead, I have gone for a solution that is backwards compatable and simple. Its only downside is that already generated URL and WORM keys might not be able to be stored on FAT or some other filesystem that dislikes a character used in the key. (In this case, the user can just migrate the problem keys to a checksumming backend. If this became a big problem, fsck could be made to detect these and suggest a migration.) Going forward, new keys that are created will escape all characters that are likely to cause problems. And if some filesystem comes along that's even worse than FAT (seems unlikely, but here it is 2013, and people are still using FAT!), additional characters can be added to the set that are escaped without difficulty. (Also, made WORM limit the part of the filename that is embedded in the key, to deal with filesystem filename length limits. This could have already been a problem, but is more likely now, since the escaping of the filename can make it longer.) This commit was sponsored by Ian Downes
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- ":" is escaped to "&c", because it seemed like a good idea at the time.
-
- Changing what this function escapes and how is not a good idea, as it
- can cause existing objects to get lost.
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-}
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keyFile :: Key -> FilePath
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keyFile key = replace "/" "%" $ replace ":" "&c" $
replace "%" "&s" $ replace "&" "&a" $ key2file key
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{- Reverses keyFile, converting a filename fragment (ie, the basename of
- the symlink target) into a key. -}
fileKey :: FilePath -> Maybe Key
fileKey file = file2key $
replace "&a" "&" $ replace "&s" "%" $
replace "&c" ":" $ replace "%" "/" file
{- for quickcheck -}
prop_idempotent_fileKey :: String -> Bool
prop_idempotent_fileKey s
| null s = True -- it's not legal for a key to have no keyName
| otherwise= Just k == fileKey (keyFile k)
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where
k = stubKey { keyName = s, keyBackendName = "test" }
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{- A location to store a key on the filesystem. A directory hash is used,
- to protect against filesystems that dislike having many items in a
- single directory.
-
- The file is put in a directory with the same name, this allows
- write-protecting the directory to avoid accidental deletion of the file.
-}
keyPath :: Key -> Hasher -> FilePath
keyPath key hasher = hasher key </> f </> f
where
f = keyFile key
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{- All possibile locations to store a key using different directory hashes. -}
keyPaths :: Key -> [FilePath]
keyPaths key = map (keyPath key) annexHashes
{- Two different directory hashes may be used. The mixed case hash
- came first, and is fine, except for the problem of case-strict
- filesystems such as Linux VFAT (mounted with shortname=mixed),
- which do not allow using a directory "XX" when "xx" already exists.
- To support that, most repositories use the lower case hash for new data. -}
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type Hasher = Key -> FilePath
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annexHashes :: [Hasher]
annexHashes = [hashDirLower, hashDirMixed]
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hashDirMixed :: Hasher
hashDirMixed k = addTrailingPathSeparator $ take 2 dir </> drop 2 dir
where
dir = take 4 $ display_32bits_as_dir =<< [a,b,c,d]
ABCD (a,b,c,d) = md5 $ md5FilePath $ key2file $ nonChunkKey k
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hashDirLower :: Hasher
hashDirLower k = addTrailingPathSeparator $ take 3 dir </> drop 3 dir
where
dir = take 6 $ md5s $ md5FilePath $ key2file $ nonChunkKey k
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{- modified version of display_32bits_as_hex from Data.Hash.MD5
- Copyright (C) 2001 Ian Lynagh
- License: Either BSD or GPL
-}
display_32bits_as_dir :: Word32 -> String
display_32bits_as_dir w = trim $ swap_pairs cs
where
-- Need 32 characters to use. To avoid inaverdently making
-- a real word, use letters that appear less frequently.
chars = ['0'..'9'] ++ "zqjxkmvwgpfZQJXKMVWGPF"
cs = map (\x -> getc $ (shiftR w (6*x)) .&. 31) [0..7]
getc n = chars !! fromIntegral n
swap_pairs (x1:x2:xs) = x2:x1:swap_pairs xs
swap_pairs _ = []
-- Last 2 will always be 00, so omit.
trim = take 6