git-annex/Annex/Content.hs

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{- git-annex file content managing
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-
- Copyright 2010-2022 Joey Hess <id@joeyh.name>
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-
- Licensed under the GNU AGPL version 3 or higher.
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-}
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{-# LANGUAGE CPP #-}
{-# LANGUAGE OverloadedStrings #-}
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module Annex.Content (
inAnnex,
inAnnex',
inAnnexSafe,
inAnnexCheck,
objectFileExists,
lockContentShared,
lockContentForRemoval,
ContentRemovalLock,
RetrievalSecurityPolicy(..),
getViaTmp,
getViaTmpFromDisk,
verificationOfContentFailed,
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checkDiskSpaceToGet,
checkSecureHashes,
prepTmp,
withTmp,
checkDiskSpace,
needMoreDiskSpace,
moveAnnex,
populatePointerFile,
linkToAnnex,
linkFromAnnex,
linkFromAnnex',
LinkAnnexResult(..),
unlinkAnnex,
checkedCopyFile,
linkOrCopy,
linkOrCopy',
sendAnnex,
prepSendAnnex,
prepSendAnnex',
removeAnnex,
moveBad,
KeyLocation(..),
listKeys,
info: Allow using matching options in more situations File matching options like --include will be rejected in situations where there is no filename to match against. (Or where there is a filename but it's not relative to the cwd, or otherwise seemed too bothersome to match against.) The addition of listKeys' was necessary to avoid using more memory in the common case of "git-annex info". Adding a filterM would have caused the list to buffer in memory and not stream. This is an ugly hack, but listKeys had previously run Annex operations inside unafeInterleaveIO (for direct mode). And matching against a matcher should hopefully not change any Annex state. This does allow for eg `git-annex info somefile --include=*.ext` although why someone would want to do that I don't really know. But it seems to make sense to allow it. But, consider: `git-annex info ./somefile --include=somefile` This does not match, so will not display info about somefile. If the user really wants to, they can `--include=./somefile`. Using matching options like --copies or --in=remote seems likely to be slower than git-annex find with those options, because unlike such commands, info does not have optimised streaming through the matcher. Note that `git-annex info remote` is not the same as `git-annex info --in remote`. The former shows info about all files in the remote. The latter shows local keys that are also in that remote. The output should make that clear, but this still seems like a point where users could get confused. Sponsored-by: Jochen Bartl on Patreon
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listKeys',
saveState,
downloadUrl,
preseedTmp,
dirKeys,
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withObjectLoc,
staleKeysPrune,
pruneTmpWorkDirBefore,
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isUnmodified,
isUnmodifiedCheap,
verifyKeyContentPostRetrieval,
verifyKeyContent,
VerifyConfig,
VerifyConfigA(..),
Verification(..),
unVerified,
withTmpWorkDir,
KeyStatus(..),
isKeyUnlockedThin,
getKeyStatus,
getKeyFileStatus,
cleanObjectDirs,
) where
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import System.IO.Unsafe (unsafeInterleaveIO)
import qualified Data.Set as S
import Annex.Common
import Annex.Content.Presence
import Annex.Content.LowLevel
import Annex.Content.PointerFile
import Annex.Verify
import qualified Git
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import qualified Annex
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import qualified Annex.Queue
import qualified Annex.Branch
import qualified Annex.Url as Url
import qualified Backend
import qualified Database.Keys
import Git.FilePath
import Annex.Perms
import Annex.Link
import Annex.LockPool
import Annex.UUID
import Annex.InodeSentinal
import Annex.ReplaceFile
import Annex.AdjustedBranch (adjustedBranchRefresh)
import Annex.DirHashes
import Messages.Progress
import Types.Remote (RetrievalSecurityPolicy(..), VerifyConfigA(..))
import Types.NumCopies
annex.securehashesonly Cryptographically secure hashes can be forced to be used in a repository, by setting annex.securehashesonly. This does not prevent the git repository from containing files with insecure hashes, but it does prevent the content of such files from being pulled into .git/annex/objects from another repository. We want to make sure that at no point does git-annex accept content into .git/annex/objects that is hashed with an insecure key. Here's how it was done: * .git/annex/objects/xx/yy/KEY/ is kept frozen, so nothing can be written to it normally * So every place that writes content must call, thawContent or modifyContent. We can audit for these, and be sure we've considered all cases. * The main functions are moveAnnex, and linkToAnnex; these were made to check annex.securehashesonly, and are the main security boundary for annex.securehashesonly. * Most other calls to modifyContent deal with other files in the KEY directory (inode cache etc). The other ones that mess with the content are: - Annex.Direct.toDirectGen, in which content already in the annex directory is moved to the direct mode file, so not relevant. - fix and lock, which don't add new content - Command.ReKey.linkKey, which manually unlocks it to make a copy. * All other calls to thawContent appear safe. Made moveAnnex return a Bool, so checked all callsites and made them deal with a failure in appropriate ways. linkToAnnex simply returns LinkAnnexFailed; all callsites already deal with it failing in appropriate ways. This commit was sponsored by Riku Voipio.
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import Types.Key
import Types.Transfer
import Logs.Transfer
import Logs.Location
import Utility.InodeCache
import Utility.CopyFile
import Utility.Metered
import Utility.FileMode
import qualified Utility.RawFilePath as R
import qualified System.FilePath.ByteString as P
import System.PosixCompat.Files (isSymbolicLink, linkCount)
{- Prevents the content from being removed while the action is running.
- Uses a shared lock.
-
- If locking fails, or the content is not present, throws an exception
- rather than running the action.
-}
lockContentShared :: Key -> (VerifiedCopy -> Annex a) -> Annex a
lockContentShared key a = lockContentUsing lock key notpresent $
ifM (inAnnex key)
( do
u <- getUUID
withVerifiedCopy LockedCopy u (return True) a
, notpresent
)
where
notpresent = giveup $ "failed to lock content: not present"
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
lock _ (Just lockfile) =
( posixLocker tryLockShared lockfile
, Just (posixLocker tryLockExclusive lockfile)
)
lock contentfile Nothing =
( tryLockShared Nothing contentfile
, Nothing
)
#else
lock = winLocker lockShared
#endif
{- Exclusively locks content, while performing an action that
- might remove it.
-
- If locking fails, throws an exception rather than running the action.
-
finishing up move --from --to Lock the local content for drop after getting it from src, to prevent another process from using the local content as a copy and dropping it from src, which would prevent dropping the local content after sending it to dest. Support resuming an interrupted move that downloaded the content from src, leaving the local content populated. In this case, the location log has not been updated to say the content is present locally, so we can assume that it's resuming and go ahead and drop the local content after sending it to dest. Note that if a `git-annex get` is being ran at the same time as a `git-annex move --from --to`, it may get a file just before the move processes it. So the location log has not been updated yet, and the move thinks it's resuming. Resulting in local copy being dropped after it's sent to the dest. This race is something we'll just have to live with, it seems. I also gave up on the idea of checking if the location log had been updated by a `git-annex get` that is ran at the same time. That wouldn't work, because the location log is precached in the seek stage, so reading it again after sending the content to dest would not notice changes made to it, unless the cache were invalidated, which would slow it down a lot. That idea anyway was subject to races where it would not detect the concurrent `git-annex get`. So concurrent `git-annex get` will have results that may be surprising. To make that less surprising, updated the documentation of this feature to be explicit that it downloads content to the local repository temporarily. Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
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- When the content file itself is used as the lock file,
- and locking fails because the the content is not present, runs the
- fallback action instead. However, the content is not guaranteed to be
- present when this succeeds.
-}
lockContentForRemoval :: Key -> Annex a -> (ContentRemovalLock -> Annex a) -> Annex a
lockContentForRemoval key fallback a = lockContentUsing lock key fallback $
a (ContentRemovalLock key)
where
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
lock _ (Just lockfile) = (posixLocker tryLockExclusive lockfile, Nothing)
{- No lock file, so the content file itself is locked.
- Since content files are stored with the write bit
- disabled, have to fiddle with permissions to open
- for an exclusive lock. -}
lock contentfile Nothing =
let lck = bracket_
(thawContent contentfile)
(freezeContent contentfile)
(tryLockExclusive Nothing contentfile)
in (lck, Nothing)
#else
lock = winLocker lockExclusive
#endif
{- Passed the object content file, and maybe a separate lock file to use,
- when the content file itself should not be locked. -}
type ContentLocker = RawFilePath -> Maybe LockFile -> (Annex (Maybe LockHandle), Maybe (Annex (Maybe LockHandle)))
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
posixLocker :: (Maybe ModeSetter -> LockFile -> Annex (Maybe LockHandle)) -> LockFile -> Annex (Maybe LockHandle)
posixLocker takelock lockfile = do
mode <- annexFileMode
modifyContentDirWhenExists lockfile $
takelock (Just mode) lockfile
#else
winLocker :: (LockFile -> IO (Maybe LockHandle)) -> ContentLocker
winLocker takelock _ (Just lockfile) =
let lck = do
modifyContentDir lockfile $
void $ liftIO $ tryIO $
writeFile (fromRawFilePath lockfile) ""
liftIO $ takelock lockfile
in (lck, Nothing)
-- never reached; windows always uses a separate lock file
winLocker _ _ Nothing = (return Nothing, Nothing)
#endif
{- The fallback action is run if the ContentLocker throws an IO exception
- and the content is not present. It's not guaranteed to always run when
- the content is not present, because the content file is not always
- the file that is locked. -}
lockContentUsing :: ContentLocker -> Key -> Annex a -> Annex a -> Annex a
lockContentUsing contentlocker key fallback a = withContentLockFile key $ \mlockfile -> do
contentfile <- calcRepo (gitAnnexLocation key)
let (locker, sharedtoexclusive) = contentlocker contentfile mlockfile
bracket
(lock locker mlockfile)
(either (const noop) (unlock sharedtoexclusive mlockfile))
go
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where
alreadylocked = giveup "content is locked"
failedtolock e = giveup $ "failed to lock content: " ++ show e
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
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lock locker mlockfile =
#else
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lock locker _mlockfile =
#endif
tryIO $ locker >>= \case
Nothing -> alreadylocked
Just h ->
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
case mlockfile of
Nothing -> return h
Just lockfile ->
ifM (checkSaneLock lockfile h)
( return h
, alreadylocked
)
#else
return h
#endif
go (Right _) = a
go (Left e) = ifM (inAnnex key)
( failedtolock e
, fallback
)
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
unlock sharedtoexclusive mlockfile lck = case (sharedtoexclusive, mlockfile) of
-- We have a shared lock, so other processes may also
-- have shared locks of the same lock file. To avoid
-- deleting the lock file when there are other shared
-- locks, try to convert to an exclusive lock, and only
-- delete it when that succeeds.
--
-- Since other processes might be doing the same,
-- a race is possible where we open the lock file
-- and then another process takes the exclusive lock and
-- deletes it, leaving us with an invalid lock. To avoid
-- that race, checkSaneLock is used after taking the lock
-- here, and above.
(Just exclusivelocker, Just lockfile) -> do
liftIO $ dropLock lck
exclusivelocker >>= \case
Nothing -> return ()
Just h -> do
whenM (checkSaneLock lockfile h) $ do
cleanuplockfile lockfile
liftIO $ dropLock h
-- We have an exclusive lock, so no other process can have
-- the lock file locked, and so it's safe to remove it, as
-- long as all lock attempts use checkSaneLock.
_ -> do
maybe noop cleanuplockfile mlockfile
liftIO $ dropLock lck
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#else
unlock _ mlockfile lck = do
-- Can't delete a locked file on Windows,
-- so close our lock first. If there are other shared
-- locks, they will prevent the file deletion from
-- happening.
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liftIO $ dropLock lck
maybe noop cleanuplockfile mlockfile
#endif
cleanuplockfile lockfile = void $ tryNonAsync $ do
thawContentDir lockfile
liftIO $ removeWhenExistsWith R.removeLink lockfile
cleanObjectDirs lockfile
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{- Runs an action, passing it the temp file to get,
- and if the action succeeds, verifies the file matches
- the key and moves the file into the annex as a key's content. -}
getViaTmp :: RetrievalSecurityPolicy -> VerifyConfig -> Key -> AssociatedFile -> (RawFilePath -> Annex (Bool, Verification)) -> Annex Bool
getViaTmp rsp v key af action = checkDiskSpaceToGet key False $
getViaTmpFromDisk rsp v key af action
{- Like getViaTmp, but does not check that there is enough disk space
- for the incoming key. For use when the key content is already on disk
- and not being copied into place. -}
getViaTmpFromDisk :: RetrievalSecurityPolicy -> VerifyConfig -> Key -> AssociatedFile -> (RawFilePath -> Annex (Bool, Verification)) -> Annex Bool
getViaTmpFromDisk rsp v key af action = checkallowed $ do
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tmpfile <- prepTmp key
resuming <- liftIO $ R.doesPathExist tmpfile
(ok, verification) <- action tmpfile
-- When the temp file already had content, we don't know if
-- that content is good or not, so only trust if it the action
-- Verified it in passing. Otherwise, force verification even
-- if the VerifyConfig normally disables it.
let verification' = if resuming
then case verification of
Verified -> Verified
_ -> MustVerify
else verification
if ok
then ifM (verifyKeyContentPostRetrieval rsp v verification' key tmpfile)
( pruneTmpWorkDirBefore tmpfile (moveAnnex key af)
, do
verificationOfContentFailed tmpfile
return False
)
-- On transfer failure, the tmp file is left behind, in case
-- caller wants to resume its transfer
else return False
where
-- Avoid running the action to get the content when the
-- RetrievalSecurityPolicy would cause verification to always fail.
checkallowed a = case rsp of
RetrievalAllKeysSecure -> a
RetrievalVerifiableKeysSecure -> ifM (isVerifiable key)
( a
, ifM (annexAllowUnverifiedDownloads <$> Annex.getGitConfig)
( a
, warnUnverifiableInsecure key >> return False
)
)
{- When the content of a file that was successfully transferred from a remote
- fails to verify, use this to display a message so the user knows why it
- failed, and to clean up the corrupted content.
-
- The bad content is not retained, because the transfer of it succeeded.
- So it's not incomplete and a resume using it will not work. While
- some protocols like rsync could recover such a bad content file,
- they are assumed to not write out bad data to a file in the first place.
- Most protocols, including the P2P protocol, pick up downloads where they
- left off, and so if the bad content were not deleted, repeated downloads
- would continue to fail.
-}
verificationOfContentFailed :: RawFilePath -> Annex ()
verificationOfContentFailed tmpfile = do
warning "Verification of content failed"
pruneTmpWorkDirBefore tmpfile
(liftIO . removeWhenExistsWith R.removeLink)
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{- Checks if there is enough free disk space to download a key
- to its temp file.
-
- When the temp file already exists, count the space it is using as
- free, since the download will overwrite it or resume.
-
- Wen there's enough free space, runs the download action.
-}
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checkDiskSpaceToGet :: Key -> a -> Annex a -> Annex a
checkDiskSpaceToGet key unabletoget getkey = do
tmp <- fromRepo (gitAnnexTmpObjectLocation key)
e <- liftIO $ doesFileExist (fromRawFilePath tmp)
alreadythere <- liftIO $ if e
then getFileSize tmp
else return 0
ifM (checkDiskSpace Nothing key alreadythere True)
( do
-- The tmp file may not have been left writable
when e $ thawContent tmp
getkey
, return unabletoget
)
prepTmp :: Key -> Annex RawFilePath
prepTmp key = do
tmp <- fromRepo $ gitAnnexTmpObjectLocation key
createAnnexDirectory (parentDir tmp)
return tmp
{- Prepares a temp file for a key, runs an action on it, and cleans up
- the temp file. If the action throws an exception, the temp file is
- left behind, which allows for resuming.
-}
withTmp :: Key -> (RawFilePath -> Annex a) -> Annex a
withTmp key action = do
tmp <- prepTmp key
res <- action tmp
pruneTmpWorkDirBefore tmp (liftIO . removeWhenExistsWith R.removeLink)
return res
{- Moves a key's content into .git/annex/objects/
-
- When a key has associated pointer files, the object is hard
- linked (or copied) to the files, and the object file is left thawed.
-
- What if the key there already has content? This could happen for
- various reasons; perhaps the same content is being annexed again.
- Perhaps there has been a hash collision generating the keys.
-
- The current strategy is to assume that in this case it's safe to delete
- one of the two copies of the content; and the one already in the annex
- is left there, assuming it's the original, canonical copy.
-
- I considered being more paranoid, and checking that both files had
- the same content. Decided against it because A) users explicitly choose
- a backend based on its hashing properties and so if they're dealing
- with colliding files it's their own fault and B) adding such a check
- would not catch all cases of colliding keys. For example, perhaps
- a remote has a key; if it's then added again with different content then
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- the overall system now has two different pieces of content for that
- key, and one of them will probably get deleted later. So, adding the
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- check here would only raise expectations that git-annex cannot truly
- meet.
annex.securehashesonly Cryptographically secure hashes can be forced to be used in a repository, by setting annex.securehashesonly. This does not prevent the git repository from containing files with insecure hashes, but it does prevent the content of such files from being pulled into .git/annex/objects from another repository. We want to make sure that at no point does git-annex accept content into .git/annex/objects that is hashed with an insecure key. Here's how it was done: * .git/annex/objects/xx/yy/KEY/ is kept frozen, so nothing can be written to it normally * So every place that writes content must call, thawContent or modifyContent. We can audit for these, and be sure we've considered all cases. * The main functions are moveAnnex, and linkToAnnex; these were made to check annex.securehashesonly, and are the main security boundary for annex.securehashesonly. * Most other calls to modifyContent deal with other files in the KEY directory (inode cache etc). The other ones that mess with the content are: - Annex.Direct.toDirectGen, in which content already in the annex directory is moved to the direct mode file, so not relevant. - fix and lock, which don't add new content - Command.ReKey.linkKey, which manually unlocks it to make a copy. * All other calls to thawContent appear safe. Made moveAnnex return a Bool, so checked all callsites and made them deal with a failure in appropriate ways. linkToAnnex simply returns LinkAnnexFailed; all callsites already deal with it failing in appropriate ways. This commit was sponsored by Riku Voipio.
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-
- May return false, when a particular variety of key is not being
- accepted into the repository. Will display a warning message in this
- case. May also throw exceptions in some cases.
-}
moveAnnex :: Key -> AssociatedFile -> RawFilePath -> Annex Bool
moveAnnex key af src = ifM (checkSecureHashes' key)
annex.securehashesonly Cryptographically secure hashes can be forced to be used in a repository, by setting annex.securehashesonly. This does not prevent the git repository from containing files with insecure hashes, but it does prevent the content of such files from being pulled into .git/annex/objects from another repository. We want to make sure that at no point does git-annex accept content into .git/annex/objects that is hashed with an insecure key. Here's how it was done: * .git/annex/objects/xx/yy/KEY/ is kept frozen, so nothing can be written to it normally * So every place that writes content must call, thawContent or modifyContent. We can audit for these, and be sure we've considered all cases. * The main functions are moveAnnex, and linkToAnnex; these were made to check annex.securehashesonly, and are the main security boundary for annex.securehashesonly. * Most other calls to modifyContent deal with other files in the KEY directory (inode cache etc). The other ones that mess with the content are: - Annex.Direct.toDirectGen, in which content already in the annex directory is moved to the direct mode file, so not relevant. - fix and lock, which don't add new content - Command.ReKey.linkKey, which manually unlocks it to make a copy. * All other calls to thawContent appear safe. Made moveAnnex return a Bool, so checked all callsites and made them deal with a failure in appropriate ways. linkToAnnex simply returns LinkAnnexFailed; all callsites already deal with it failing in appropriate ways. This commit was sponsored by Riku Voipio.
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( do
withObjectLoc key storeobject
annex.securehashesonly Cryptographically secure hashes can be forced to be used in a repository, by setting annex.securehashesonly. This does not prevent the git repository from containing files with insecure hashes, but it does prevent the content of such files from being pulled into .git/annex/objects from another repository. We want to make sure that at no point does git-annex accept content into .git/annex/objects that is hashed with an insecure key. Here's how it was done: * .git/annex/objects/xx/yy/KEY/ is kept frozen, so nothing can be written to it normally * So every place that writes content must call, thawContent or modifyContent. We can audit for these, and be sure we've considered all cases. * The main functions are moveAnnex, and linkToAnnex; these were made to check annex.securehashesonly, and are the main security boundary for annex.securehashesonly. * Most other calls to modifyContent deal with other files in the KEY directory (inode cache etc). The other ones that mess with the content are: - Annex.Direct.toDirectGen, in which content already in the annex directory is moved to the direct mode file, so not relevant. - fix and lock, which don't add new content - Command.ReKey.linkKey, which manually unlocks it to make a copy. * All other calls to thawContent appear safe. Made moveAnnex return a Bool, so checked all callsites and made them deal with a failure in appropriate ways. linkToAnnex simply returns LinkAnnexFailed; all callsites already deal with it failing in appropriate ways. This commit was sponsored by Riku Voipio.
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return True
, return False
)
where
storeobject dest = ifM (liftIO $ R.doesPathExist dest)
( alreadyhave
, adjustedBranchRefresh af $ modifyContentDir dest $ do
liftIO $ moveFile src dest
-- Freeze the object file now that it is in place.
-- Waiting until now to freeze it allows for freeze
-- hooks that prevent moving the file.
freezeContent dest
g <- Annex.gitRepo
fs <- map (`fromTopFilePath` g)
<$> Database.Keys.getAssociatedFiles key
unless (null fs) $ do
destic <- withTSDelta $
liftIO . genInodeCache dest
ics <- mapM (populatePointerFile (Restage True) key dest) fs
Database.Keys.addInodeCaches key
(catMaybes (destic:ics))
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)
alreadyhave = liftIO $ R.removeLink src
checkSecureHashes :: Key -> Annex (Maybe String)
checkSecureHashes key = ifM (Backend.isCryptographicallySecure key)
( return Nothing
, ifM (annexSecureHashesOnly <$> Annex.getGitConfig)
( return $ Just $ "annex.securehashesonly blocked adding " ++ decodeBS (formatKeyVariety (fromKey keyVariety key)) ++ " key"
, return Nothing
annex.securehashesonly Cryptographically secure hashes can be forced to be used in a repository, by setting annex.securehashesonly. This does not prevent the git repository from containing files with insecure hashes, but it does prevent the content of such files from being pulled into .git/annex/objects from another repository. We want to make sure that at no point does git-annex accept content into .git/annex/objects that is hashed with an insecure key. Here's how it was done: * .git/annex/objects/xx/yy/KEY/ is kept frozen, so nothing can be written to it normally * So every place that writes content must call, thawContent or modifyContent. We can audit for these, and be sure we've considered all cases. * The main functions are moveAnnex, and linkToAnnex; these were made to check annex.securehashesonly, and are the main security boundary for annex.securehashesonly. * Most other calls to modifyContent deal with other files in the KEY directory (inode cache etc). The other ones that mess with the content are: - Annex.Direct.toDirectGen, in which content already in the annex directory is moved to the direct mode file, so not relevant. - fix and lock, which don't add new content - Command.ReKey.linkKey, which manually unlocks it to make a copy. * All other calls to thawContent appear safe. Made moveAnnex return a Bool, so checked all callsites and made them deal with a failure in appropriate ways. linkToAnnex simply returns LinkAnnexFailed; all callsites already deal with it failing in appropriate ways. This commit was sponsored by Riku Voipio.
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)
)
annex.securehashesonly Cryptographically secure hashes can be forced to be used in a repository, by setting annex.securehashesonly. This does not prevent the git repository from containing files with insecure hashes, but it does prevent the content of such files from being pulled into .git/annex/objects from another repository. We want to make sure that at no point does git-annex accept content into .git/annex/objects that is hashed with an insecure key. Here's how it was done: * .git/annex/objects/xx/yy/KEY/ is kept frozen, so nothing can be written to it normally * So every place that writes content must call, thawContent or modifyContent. We can audit for these, and be sure we've considered all cases. * The main functions are moveAnnex, and linkToAnnex; these were made to check annex.securehashesonly, and are the main security boundary for annex.securehashesonly. * Most other calls to modifyContent deal with other files in the KEY directory (inode cache etc). The other ones that mess with the content are: - Annex.Direct.toDirectGen, in which content already in the annex directory is moved to the direct mode file, so not relevant. - fix and lock, which don't add new content - Command.ReKey.linkKey, which manually unlocks it to make a copy. * All other calls to thawContent appear safe. Made moveAnnex return a Bool, so checked all callsites and made them deal with a failure in appropriate ways. linkToAnnex simply returns LinkAnnexFailed; all callsites already deal with it failing in appropriate ways. This commit was sponsored by Riku Voipio.
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checkSecureHashes' :: Key -> Annex Bool
checkSecureHashes' key = checkSecureHashes key >>= \case
Nothing -> return True
Just msg -> do
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warning $ UnquotedString $ msg ++ " to annex objects"
return False
data LinkAnnexResult = LinkAnnexOk | LinkAnnexFailed | LinkAnnexNoop
deriving (Eq)
{- Populates the annex object file by hard linking or copying a source
- file to it. -}
linkToAnnex :: Key -> RawFilePath -> Maybe InodeCache -> Annex LinkAnnexResult
linkToAnnex key src srcic = ifM (checkSecureHashes' key)
annex.securehashesonly Cryptographically secure hashes can be forced to be used in a repository, by setting annex.securehashesonly. This does not prevent the git repository from containing files with insecure hashes, but it does prevent the content of such files from being pulled into .git/annex/objects from another repository. We want to make sure that at no point does git-annex accept content into .git/annex/objects that is hashed with an insecure key. Here's how it was done: * .git/annex/objects/xx/yy/KEY/ is kept frozen, so nothing can be written to it normally * So every place that writes content must call, thawContent or modifyContent. We can audit for these, and be sure we've considered all cases. * The main functions are moveAnnex, and linkToAnnex; these were made to check annex.securehashesonly, and are the main security boundary for annex.securehashesonly. * Most other calls to modifyContent deal with other files in the KEY directory (inode cache etc). The other ones that mess with the content are: - Annex.Direct.toDirectGen, in which content already in the annex directory is moved to the direct mode file, so not relevant. - fix and lock, which don't add new content - Command.ReKey.linkKey, which manually unlocks it to make a copy. * All other calls to thawContent appear safe. Made moveAnnex return a Bool, so checked all callsites and made them deal with a failure in appropriate ways. linkToAnnex simply returns LinkAnnexFailed; all callsites already deal with it failing in appropriate ways. This commit was sponsored by Riku Voipio.
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( do
dest <- calcRepo (gitAnnexLocation key)
modifyContentDir dest $ linkAnnex To key src srcic dest Nothing
annex.securehashesonly Cryptographically secure hashes can be forced to be used in a repository, by setting annex.securehashesonly. This does not prevent the git repository from containing files with insecure hashes, but it does prevent the content of such files from being pulled into .git/annex/objects from another repository. We want to make sure that at no point does git-annex accept content into .git/annex/objects that is hashed with an insecure key. Here's how it was done: * .git/annex/objects/xx/yy/KEY/ is kept frozen, so nothing can be written to it normally * So every place that writes content must call, thawContent or modifyContent. We can audit for these, and be sure we've considered all cases. * The main functions are moveAnnex, and linkToAnnex; these were made to check annex.securehashesonly, and are the main security boundary for annex.securehashesonly. * Most other calls to modifyContent deal with other files in the KEY directory (inode cache etc). The other ones that mess with the content are: - Annex.Direct.toDirectGen, in which content already in the annex directory is moved to the direct mode file, so not relevant. - fix and lock, which don't add new content - Command.ReKey.linkKey, which manually unlocks it to make a copy. * All other calls to thawContent appear safe. Made moveAnnex return a Bool, so checked all callsites and made them deal with a failure in appropriate ways. linkToAnnex simply returns LinkAnnexFailed; all callsites already deal with it failing in appropriate ways. This commit was sponsored by Riku Voipio.
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, return LinkAnnexFailed
)
{- Makes a destination file be a link or copy from the annex object.
-
- linkAnnex stats the file after copying it to add to the inode
- cache. But dest may be a file in the working tree, which could
- get modified immediately after being populated. To avoid such a
- race, call linkAnnex on a temporary file and move it into place
- afterwards. Note that a consequence of this is that, if the file
- already exists, it will be overwritten.
-}
linkFromAnnex :: Key -> RawFilePath -> Maybe FileMode -> Annex LinkAnnexResult
linkFromAnnex key dest destmode =
replaceFile' (const noop) (fromRawFilePath dest) (== LinkAnnexOk) $ \tmp ->
linkFromAnnex' key tmp destmode
{- This is only safe to use when dest is not a worktree file. -}
linkFromAnnex' :: Key -> RawFilePath -> Maybe FileMode -> Annex LinkAnnexResult
linkFromAnnex' key dest destmode = do
src <- calcRepo (gitAnnexLocation key)
srcic <- withTSDelta (liftIO . genInodeCache src)
linkAnnex From key src srcic dest destmode
data FromTo = From | To
{- Hard links or copies from or to the annex object location.
- Updates inode cache.
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-
- Freezes or thaws the destination appropriately.
-
- When a hard link is made, the annex object necessarily has to be thawed
- too. So, adding an object to the annex with a hard link can prevent
- losing the content if the source file is deleted, but does not
- guard against modifications.
-
- Nothing is done if the destination file already exists.
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-}
linkAnnex :: FromTo -> Key -> RawFilePath -> Maybe InodeCache -> RawFilePath -> Maybe FileMode -> Annex LinkAnnexResult
linkAnnex _ _ _ Nothing _ _ = return LinkAnnexFailed
linkAnnex fromto key src (Just srcic) dest destmode =
withTSDelta (liftIO . genInodeCache dest) >>= \case
Just destic -> do
cs <- Database.Keys.getInodeCaches key
if null cs
then Database.Keys.addInodeCaches key [srcic, destic]
else Database.Keys.addInodeCaches key [srcic]
return LinkAnnexNoop
Nothing -> linkOrCopy key src dest destmode >>= \case
Nothing -> failed
Just r -> do
case fromto of
From -> thawContent dest
To -> case r of
Copied -> freezeContent dest
Linked -> noop
checksrcunchanged
where
failed = do
Database.Keys.addInodeCaches key [srcic]
return LinkAnnexFailed
checksrcunchanged = withTSDelta (liftIO . genInodeCache src) >>= \case
Just srcic' | compareStrong srcic srcic' -> do
destic <- withTSDelta (liftIO . genInodeCache dest)
Database.Keys.addInodeCaches key $
catMaybes [destic, Just srcic]
return LinkAnnexOk
_ -> do
liftIO $ removeWhenExistsWith R.removeLink dest
failed
{- Removes the annex object file for a key. Lowlevel. -}
unlinkAnnex :: Key -> Annex ()
unlinkAnnex key = do
obj <- calcRepo (gitAnnexLocation key)
modifyContentDir obj $ do
secureErase obj
liftIO $ removeWhenExistsWith R.removeLink obj
{- Runs an action to transfer an object's content.
-
- In some cases, it's possible for the file to change as it's being sent.
- If this happens, runs the rollback action and throws an exception.
- The rollback action should remove the data that was transferred.
-}
sendAnnex :: Key -> Annex () -> (FilePath -> Annex a) -> Annex a
sendAnnex key rollback sendobject = go =<< prepSendAnnex' key
where
go (Just (f, check)) = do
r <- sendobject f
check >>= \case
Nothing -> return r
Just err -> do
rollback
giveup err
go Nothing = giveup "content not available to send"
{- Returns a file that contains an object's content,
- and a check to run after the transfer is complete.
-
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- When a file is unlocked, it's possible for its content to
- change as it's being sent. The check detects this case
- and returns False.
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-
- Note that the returned check action is, in some cases, run in the
- Annex monad of the remote that is receiving the object, rather than
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- the sender. So it cannot rely on Annex state.
-}
prepSendAnnex :: Key -> Annex (Maybe (FilePath, Annex Bool))
prepSendAnnex key = withObjectLoc key $ \f -> do
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let retval c = return $ Just (fromRawFilePath f, sameInodeCache f c)
cache <- Database.Keys.getInodeCaches key
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if null cache
-- Since no inode cache is in the database, this
-- object is not currently unlocked. But that could
-- change while the transfer is in progress, so
-- generate an inode cache for the starting
-- content.
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then maybe (return Nothing) (retval . (:[]))
=<< withTSDelta (liftIO . genInodeCache f)
-- Verify that the object is not modified. Usually this
-- only has to check the inode cache, but if the cache
-- is somehow stale, it will fall back to verifying its
-- content.
else withTSDelta (liftIO . genInodeCache f) >>= \case
Just fc -> ifM (isUnmodified' key f fc cache)
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( retval (fc:cache)
, return Nothing
)
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Nothing -> return Nothing
prepSendAnnex' :: Key -> Annex (Maybe (FilePath, Annex (Maybe String)))
prepSendAnnex' key = prepSendAnnex key >>= \case
Just (f, checksuccess) ->
let checksuccess' = ifM checksuccess
( return Nothing
, return (Just "content changed while it was being sent")
)
in return (Just (f, checksuccess'))
Nothing -> return Nothing
cleanObjectLoc :: Key -> Annex () -> Annex ()
cleanObjectLoc key cleaner = do
file <- calcRepo (gitAnnexLocation key)
void $ tryIO $ thawContentDir file
{- Thawing is not necessary when the file was frozen only
- by removing write perms. But if there is a thaw hook, it may do
- something else that is necessary to allow the file to be
- deleted.
-}
whenM hasThawHook $
void $ tryIO $ thawContent file
cleaner
cleanObjectDirs file
{- Given a filename inside the object directory, tries to remove the object
- directory, as well as the object hash directories.
-
- Does nothing if the object directory is not empty, and does not
- throw an exception if it's unable to remove a directory. -}
cleanObjectDirs :: RawFilePath -> Annex ()
cleanObjectDirs f = do
HashLevels n <- objectHashLevels <$> Annex.getGitConfig
liftIO $ go f (succ n)
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where
go _ 0 = noop
go file n = do
let dir = parentDir file
maybe noop (const $ go dir (n-1))
<=< catchMaybeIO $ tryWhenExists $
removeDirectory (fromRawFilePath dir)
{- Removes a key's file from .git/annex/objects/ -}
removeAnnex :: ContentRemovalLock -> Annex ()
removeAnnex (ContentRemovalLock key) = withObjectLoc key $ \file ->
cleanObjectLoc key $ do
secureErase file
liftIO $ removeWhenExistsWith R.removeLink file
g <- Annex.gitRepo
mapM_ (\f -> void $ tryIO $ resetpointer $ fromTopFilePath f g)
=<< Database.Keys.getAssociatedFiles key
Database.Keys.removeInodeCaches key
where
-- Check associated pointer file for modifications, and reset if
-- it's unmodified.
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resetpointer file = unlessM (liftIO $ isSymbolicLink <$> R.getSymbolicLinkStatus file) $
ifM (isUnmodified key file)
( adjustedBranchRefresh (AssociatedFile (Just file)) $
depopulatePointerFile key file
-- Modified file, so leave it alone.
-- If it was a hard link to the annex object,
-- that object might have been frozen as part of the
-- removal process, so thaw it.
, void $ tryIO $ thawContent file
)
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{- Moves a key out of .git/annex/objects/ into .git/annex/bad, and
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- returns the file it was moved to. -}
moveBad :: Key -> Annex RawFilePath
moveBad key = do
src <- calcRepo (gitAnnexLocation key)
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bad <- fromRepo gitAnnexBadDir
let dest = bad P.</> P.takeFileName src
createAnnexDirectory (parentDir dest)
cleanObjectLoc key $
liftIO $ moveFile src dest
logStatus key InfoMissing
return dest
data KeyLocation = InAnnex | InAnywhere
{- InAnnex only lists keys with content in .git/annex/objects.
- InAnywhere lists all keys that have directories in
- .git/annex/objects, whether or not the content is present.
-}
listKeys :: KeyLocation -> Annex [Key]
info: Allow using matching options in more situations File matching options like --include will be rejected in situations where there is no filename to match against. (Or where there is a filename but it's not relative to the cwd, or otherwise seemed too bothersome to match against.) The addition of listKeys' was necessary to avoid using more memory in the common case of "git-annex info". Adding a filterM would have caused the list to buffer in memory and not stream. This is an ugly hack, but listKeys had previously run Annex operations inside unafeInterleaveIO (for direct mode). And matching against a matcher should hopefully not change any Annex state. This does allow for eg `git-annex info somefile --include=*.ext` although why someone would want to do that I don't really know. But it seems to make sense to allow it. But, consider: `git-annex info ./somefile --include=somefile` This does not match, so will not display info about somefile. If the user really wants to, they can `--include=./somefile`. Using matching options like --copies or --in=remote seems likely to be slower than git-annex find with those options, because unlike such commands, info does not have optimised streaming through the matcher. Note that `git-annex info remote` is not the same as `git-annex info --in remote`. The former shows info about all files in the remote. The latter shows local keys that are also in that remote. The output should make that clear, but this still seems like a point where users could get confused. Sponsored-by: Jochen Bartl on Patreon
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listKeys keyloc = listKeys' keyloc (const (pure True))
{- Due to use of unsafeInterleaveIO, the passed filter action
- will be run in a copy of the Annex state, so any changes it
- makes to the state will not be preserved. -}
listKeys' :: KeyLocation -> (Key -> Annex Bool) -> Annex [Key]
listKeys' keyloc want = do
dir <- fromRepo gitAnnexObjectDir
s <- Annex.getState id
info: Allow using matching options in more situations File matching options like --include will be rejected in situations where there is no filename to match against. (Or where there is a filename but it's not relative to the cwd, or otherwise seemed too bothersome to match against.) The addition of listKeys' was necessary to avoid using more memory in the common case of "git-annex info". Adding a filterM would have caused the list to buffer in memory and not stream. This is an ugly hack, but listKeys had previously run Annex operations inside unafeInterleaveIO (for direct mode). And matching against a matcher should hopefully not change any Annex state. This does allow for eg `git-annex info somefile --include=*.ext` although why someone would want to do that I don't really know. But it seems to make sense to allow it. But, consider: `git-annex info ./somefile --include=somefile` This does not match, so will not display info about somefile. If the user really wants to, they can `--include=./somefile`. Using matching options like --copies or --in=remote seems likely to be slower than git-annex find with those options, because unlike such commands, info does not have optimised streaming through the matcher. Note that `git-annex info remote` is not the same as `git-annex info --in remote`. The former shows info about all files in the remote. The latter shows local keys that are also in that remote. The output should make that clear, but this still seems like a point where users could get confused. Sponsored-by: Jochen Bartl on Patreon
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r <- Annex.getRead id
depth <- gitAnnexLocationDepth <$> Annex.getGitConfig
info: Allow using matching options in more situations File matching options like --include will be rejected in situations where there is no filename to match against. (Or where there is a filename but it's not relative to the cwd, or otherwise seemed too bothersome to match against.) The addition of listKeys' was necessary to avoid using more memory in the common case of "git-annex info". Adding a filterM would have caused the list to buffer in memory and not stream. This is an ugly hack, but listKeys had previously run Annex operations inside unafeInterleaveIO (for direct mode). And matching against a matcher should hopefully not change any Annex state. This does allow for eg `git-annex info somefile --include=*.ext` although why someone would want to do that I don't really know. But it seems to make sense to allow it. But, consider: `git-annex info ./somefile --include=somefile` This does not match, so will not display info about somefile. If the user really wants to, they can `--include=./somefile`. Using matching options like --copies or --in=remote seems likely to be slower than git-annex find with those options, because unlike such commands, info does not have optimised streaming through the matcher. Note that `git-annex info remote` is not the same as `git-annex info --in remote`. The former shows info about all files in the remote. The latter shows local keys that are also in that remote. The output should make that clear, but this still seems like a point where users could get confused. Sponsored-by: Jochen Bartl on Patreon
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liftIO $ walk (s, r) depth (fromRawFilePath dir)
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where
walk s depth dir = do
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contents <- catchDefaultIO [] (dirContents dir)
if depth < 2
then do
info: Allow using matching options in more situations File matching options like --include will be rejected in situations where there is no filename to match against. (Or where there is a filename but it's not relative to the cwd, or otherwise seemed too bothersome to match against.) The addition of listKeys' was necessary to avoid using more memory in the common case of "git-annex info". Adding a filterM would have caused the list to buffer in memory and not stream. This is an ugly hack, but listKeys had previously run Annex operations inside unafeInterleaveIO (for direct mode). And matching against a matcher should hopefully not change any Annex state. This does allow for eg `git-annex info somefile --include=*.ext` although why someone would want to do that I don't really know. But it seems to make sense to allow it. But, consider: `git-annex info ./somefile --include=somefile` This does not match, so will not display info about somefile. If the user really wants to, they can `--include=./somefile`. Using matching options like --copies or --in=remote seems likely to be slower than git-annex find with those options, because unlike such commands, info does not have optimised streaming through the matcher. Note that `git-annex info remote` is not the same as `git-annex info --in remote`. The former shows info about all files in the remote. The latter shows local keys that are also in that remote. The output should make that clear, but this still seems like a point where users could get confused. Sponsored-by: Jochen Bartl on Patreon
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contents' <- filterM present contents
keys <- filterM (Annex.eval s . want) $
mapMaybe (fileKey . P.takeFileName . toRawFilePath) contents'
continue keys []
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else do
let deeper = walk s (depth - 1)
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continue [] (map deeper contents)
continue keys [] = return keys
continue keys (a:as) = do
{- Force lazy traversal with unsafeInterleaveIO. -}
morekeys <- unsafeInterleaveIO a
continue (morekeys++keys) as
inanywhere = case keyloc of
InAnywhere -> True
_ -> False
info: Allow using matching options in more situations File matching options like --include will be rejected in situations where there is no filename to match against. (Or where there is a filename but it's not relative to the cwd, or otherwise seemed too bothersome to match against.) The addition of listKeys' was necessary to avoid using more memory in the common case of "git-annex info". Adding a filterM would have caused the list to buffer in memory and not stream. This is an ugly hack, but listKeys had previously run Annex operations inside unafeInterleaveIO (for direct mode). And matching against a matcher should hopefully not change any Annex state. This does allow for eg `git-annex info somefile --include=*.ext` although why someone would want to do that I don't really know. But it seems to make sense to allow it. But, consider: `git-annex info ./somefile --include=somefile` This does not match, so will not display info about somefile. If the user really wants to, they can `--include=./somefile`. Using matching options like --copies or --in=remote seems likely to be slower than git-annex find with those options, because unlike such commands, info does not have optimised streaming through the matcher. Note that `git-annex info remote` is not the same as `git-annex info --in remote`. The former shows info about all files in the remote. The latter shows local keys that are also in that remote. The output should make that clear, but this still seems like a point where users could get confused. Sponsored-by: Jochen Bartl on Patreon
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present _ | inanywhere = pure True
present d = presentInAnnex d
presentInAnnex = doesFileExist . contentfile
contentfile d = d </> takeFileName d
{- Things to do to record changes to content when shutting down.
-
- It's acceptable to avoid committing changes to the branch,
- especially if performing a short-lived action.
-}
saveState :: Bool -> Annex ()
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saveState nocommit = doSideAction $ do
Annex.Queue.flush
avoid flushing keys db queue after each Annex action The flush was only done Annex.run' to make sure that the queue was flushed before git-annex exits. But, doing it there means that as soon as one change gets queued, it gets flushed soon after, which contributes to excessive writes to the database, slowing git-annex down. (This does not yet speed git-annex up, but it is a stepping stone to doing so.) Database queues do not autoflush when garbage collected, so have to be flushed explicitly. I don't think it's possible to make them autoflush (except perhaps if git-annex sqitched to using ResourceT..). The comment in Database.Keys.closeDb used to be accurate, since the automatic flushing did mean that all writes reached the database even when closeDb was not called. But now, closeDb or flushDb needs to be called before stopping using an Annex state. So, removed that comment. In Remote.Git, change to using quiesce everywhere that it used to use stopCoProcesses. This means that uses on onLocal in there are just as slow as before. I considered only calling closeDb on the local git remotes when git-annex exits. But, the reason that Remote.Git calls stopCoProcesses in each onLocal is so as not to leave git processes running that have files open on the remote repo, when it's on removable media. So, it seemed to make sense to also closeDb after each one, since sqlite may also keep files open. Although that has not seemed to cause problems with removable media so far. It was also just easier to quiesce in each onLocal than once at the end. This does likely leave performance on the floor, so could be revisited. In Annex.Content.saveState, there was no reason to close the db, flushing it is enough. The rest of the changes are from auditing for Annex.new, and making sure that quiesce is called, after any action that might possibly need it. After that audit, I'm pretty sure that the change to Annex.run' is safe. The only concern might be that this does let more changes get queued for write to the db, and if git-annex is interrupted, those will be lost. But interrupting git-annex can obviously already prevent it from writing the most recent change to the db, so it must recover from such lost data... right? Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
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Database.Keys.flushDb
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unless nocommit $
whenM (annexAlwaysCommit <$> Annex.getGitConfig) $
Annex.Branch.commit =<< Annex.Branch.commitMessage
{- Downloads content from any of a list of urls, displaying a progress
- meter.
-
- Only displays error message if all the urls fail to download.
- When listfailedurls is set, lists each url and why it failed.
- Otherwise, only displays one error message, from one of the urls
- that failed.
-}
downloadUrl :: Bool -> Key -> MeterUpdate -> Maybe IncrementalVerifier -> [Url.URLString] -> FilePath -> Url.UrlOptions -> Annex Bool
downloadUrl listfailedurls k p iv urls file uo =
-- Poll the file to handle configurations where an external
-- download command is used.
meteredFile file (Just p) k (go urls [])
where
go (u:us) errs = Url.download' p iv u file uo >>= \case
Right () -> return True
Left err -> do
-- If the incremental verifier was fed anything
-- while the download that failed ran, it's unable
-- to be used for the other urls.
case iv of
Just iv' ->
liftIO $ positionIncrementalVerifier iv' >>= \case
Just n | n > 0 -> unableIncrementalVerifier iv'
_ -> noop
Nothing -> noop
go us ((u, err) : errs)
go [] [] = return False
go [] errs@((_, err):_) = do
if listfailedurls
then warning $ UnquotedString $
unlines $ flip map errs $ \(u, err') ->
u ++ " " ++ err'
else warning $ UnquotedString err
return False
{- Copies a key's content, when present, to a temp file.
- This is used to speed up some rsyncs. -}
preseedTmp :: Key -> FilePath -> Annex Bool
preseedTmp key file = go =<< inAnnex key
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where
go False = return False
go True = do
ok <- copy
when ok $ thawContent (toRawFilePath file)
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return ok
copy = ifM (liftIO $ doesFileExist file)
( return True
, do
s <- fromRawFilePath <$> (calcRepo $ gitAnnexLocation key)
liftIO $ ifM (doesFileExist s)
( copyFileExternal CopyTimeStamps s file
, return False
)
)
{- Finds files directly inside a directory like gitAnnexBadDir
- (not in subdirectories) and returns the corresponding keys. -}
dirKeys :: (Git.Repo -> RawFilePath) -> Annex [Key]
dirKeys dirspec = do
dir <- fromRawFilePath <$> fromRepo dirspec
ifM (liftIO $ doesDirectoryExist dir)
( do
contents <- liftIO $ getDirectoryContents dir
files <- liftIO $ filterM doesFileExist $
map (dir </>) contents
return $ mapMaybe (fileKey . P.takeFileName . toRawFilePath) files
, return []
)
{- Looks in the specified directory for bad/tmp keys, and returns a list
- of those that might still have value, or might be stale and removable.
-
- Also, stale keys that can be proven to have no value
- (ie, their content is already present) are deleted.
-}
staleKeysPrune :: (Git.Repo -> RawFilePath) -> Bool -> Annex [Key]
staleKeysPrune dirspec nottransferred = do
contents <- dirKeys dirspec
dups <- filterM inAnnex contents
let stale = contents `exclude` dups
dir <- fromRepo dirspec
forM_ dups $ \k ->
pruneTmpWorkDirBefore (dir P.</> keyFile k)
(liftIO . R.removeLink)
if nottransferred
then do
inprogress <- S.fromList . map (transferKey . fst)
<$> getTransfers
return $ filter (`S.notMember` inprogress) stale
else return stale
{- Prune the work dir associated with the specified content file,
- before performing an action that deletes the file, or moves it away.
-
- This preserves the invariant that the workdir never exists without
- the content file.
-}
pruneTmpWorkDirBefore :: RawFilePath -> (RawFilePath -> Annex a) -> Annex a
pruneTmpWorkDirBefore f action = do
let workdir = fromRawFilePath $ gitAnnexTmpWorkDir f
liftIO $ whenM (doesDirectoryExist workdir) $
removeDirectoryRecursive workdir
action f
{- Runs an action, passing it a temporary work directory where
- it can write files while receiving the content of a key.
-
- Preserves the invariant that the workdir never exists without the
- content file, by creating an empty content file first.
-
- On exception, or when the action returns Nothing,
- the temporary work directory is retained (unless
- empty), so anything in it can be used on resume.
-}
withTmpWorkDir :: Key -> (RawFilePath -> Annex (Maybe a)) -> Annex (Maybe a)
withTmpWorkDir key action = do
-- Create the object file if it does not exist. This way,
-- staleKeysPrune only has to look for object files, and can
-- clean up gitAnnexTmpWorkDir for those it finds.
obj <- prepTmp key
let obj' = fromRawFilePath obj
unlessM (liftIO $ doesFileExist obj') $ do
liftIO $ writeFile obj' ""
setAnnexFilePerm obj
let tmpdir = gitAnnexTmpWorkDir obj
createAnnexDirectory tmpdir
res <- action tmpdir
case res of
Just _ -> liftIO $ removeDirectoryRecursive (fromRawFilePath tmpdir)
Nothing -> liftIO $ void $ tryIO $ removeDirectory (fromRawFilePath tmpdir)
return res
{- Finds items in the first, smaller list, that are not
- present in the second, larger list.
-
- Constructing a single set, of the list that tends to be
- smaller, appears more efficient in both memory and CPU
- than constructing and taking the S.difference of two sets. -}
exclude :: Ord a => [a] -> [a] -> [a]
exclude [] _ = [] -- optimisation
exclude smaller larger = S.toList $ remove larger $ S.fromList smaller
where
remove a b = foldl (flip S.delete) b a
data KeyStatus
= KeyMissing
| KeyPresent
| KeyUnlockedThin
-- ^ An annex.thin worktree file is hard linked to the object.
| KeyLockedThin
-- ^ The object has hard links, but the file being fscked
-- is not the one that hard links to it.
deriving (Show)
isKeyUnlockedThin :: KeyStatus -> Bool
isKeyUnlockedThin KeyUnlockedThin = True
isKeyUnlockedThin KeyLockedThin = False
isKeyUnlockedThin KeyPresent = False
isKeyUnlockedThin KeyMissing = False
getKeyStatus :: Key -> Annex KeyStatus
getKeyStatus key = catchDefaultIO KeyMissing $ do
afs <- not . null <$> Database.Keys.getAssociatedFiles key
obj <- calcRepo (gitAnnexLocation key)
multilink <- ((> 1) . linkCount <$> liftIO (R.getFileStatus obj))
return $ if multilink && afs
then KeyUnlockedThin
else KeyPresent
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getKeyFileStatus :: Key -> RawFilePath -> Annex KeyStatus
getKeyFileStatus key file = do
s <- getKeyStatus key
case s of
KeyUnlockedThin -> catchDefaultIO KeyUnlockedThin $
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ifM (isJust <$> isAnnexLink file)
( return KeyLockedThin
, return KeyUnlockedThin
)
_ -> return s