git-annex/Remote/Helper/ExportImport.hs

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{- Helper to make remotes support export and import (or not).
-
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- Copyright 2017-2019 Joey Hess <id@joeyh.name>
-
- Licensed under the GNU AGPL version 3 or higher.
-}
{-# LANGUAGE FlexibleInstances, FlexibleContexts #-}
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module Remote.Helper.ExportImport where
import Annex.Common
import Types.Remote
import Types.Key
import Types.ProposedAccepted
import Annex.Verify
import Remote.Helper.Encryptable (encryptionIsEnabled)
import qualified Database.Export as Export
import qualified Database.ContentIdentifier as ContentIdentifier
import Annex.Export
import Annex.LockFile
import Annex.SpecialRemote.Config
import Git.Types (fromRef)
import Logs.Export
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import Logs.ContentIdentifier (recordContentIdentifier)
import Control.Concurrent.STM
-- | Use for remotes that do not support exports.
class HasExportUnsupported a where
exportUnsupported :: a
instance HasExportUnsupported (ParsedRemoteConfig -> RemoteGitConfig -> Annex Bool) where
exportUnsupported = \_ _ -> return False
instance HasExportUnsupported (ExportActions Annex) where
exportUnsupported = ExportActions
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{ storeExport = nope
, retrieveExport = nope
, checkPresentExport = \_ _ -> return False
, removeExport = nope
, versionedExport = False
, removeExportDirectory = nope
, renameExport = \_ _ _ -> return Nothing
}
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where
nope = giveup "export not supported"
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-- | Use for remotes that do not support imports.
class HasImportUnsupported a where
importUnsupported :: a
instance HasImportUnsupported (ParsedRemoteConfig -> RemoteGitConfig -> Annex Bool) where
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importUnsupported = \_ _ -> return False
instance HasImportUnsupported (ImportActions Annex) where
importUnsupported = ImportActions
{ listImportableContents = nope
, importKey = Nothing
, retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier = nope
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, storeExportWithContentIdentifier = nope
, removeExportWithContentIdentifier = nope
, removeExportDirectoryWhenEmpty = nope
, checkPresentExportWithContentIdentifier = \_ _ _ -> return False
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}
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where
nope = giveup "import not supported"
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exportIsSupported :: ParsedRemoteConfig -> RemoteGitConfig -> Annex Bool
exportIsSupported = \_ _ -> return True
importIsSupported :: ParsedRemoteConfig -> RemoteGitConfig -> Annex Bool
importIsSupported = \_ _ -> return True
-- | Prevent or allow exporttree=yes and importtree=yes when
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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-- setting up a new remote, depending on the remote's capabilities.
adjustExportImportRemoteType :: RemoteType -> RemoteType
adjustExportImportRemoteType rt = rt { setup = setup' }
where
setup' st mu cp c gc = do
pc <- either giveup return . parseRemoteConfig c
=<< configParser rt c
let checkconfig supported configured configfield cont =
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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ifM (supported rt pc gc <&&> pure (not (thirdPartyPopulated rt)))
( case st of
Init
| configured pc && encryptionIsEnabled pc ->
giveup $ "cannot enable both encryption and " ++ fromProposedAccepted configfield
| otherwise -> cont
Enable oldc -> enable oldc pc configured configfield cont
AutoEnable oldc -> enable oldc pc configured configfield cont
, if configured pc
then giveup $ fromProposedAccepted configfield ++ " is not supported by this special remote"
else cont
)
checkconfig exportSupported exportTree exportTreeField $
checkconfig importSupported importTree importTreeField $
setup rt st mu cp c gc
enable oldc pc configured configfield cont = do
oldpc <- parsedRemoteConfig rt oldc
if configured pc /= configured oldpc
then giveup $ "cannot change " ++ fromProposedAccepted configfield ++ " of existing special remote"
else cont
-- | Adjust a remote to support exporttree=yes and/or importree=yes.
adjustExportImport :: Remote -> RemoteStateHandle -> Annex Remote
adjustExportImport r rs = do
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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isexport <- pure (exportTree (config r))
<&&> isExportSupported r
-- When thirdPartyPopulated is True, the remote
-- does not need to be configured with importTree to support
-- imports.
isimport <- pure (importTree (config r) || thirdPartyPopulated (remotetype r))
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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<&&> isImportSupported r
let r' = r
{ remotetype = (remotetype r)
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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{ exportSupported = if isexport
then exportSupported (remotetype r)
else exportUnsupported
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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, importSupported = if isimport
then importSupported (remotetype r)
else importUnsupported
}
}
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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if not isexport && not isimport
then return r'
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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else adjustExportImport' isexport isimport r' rs
adjustExportImport' :: Bool -> Bool -> Remote -> RemoteStateHandle -> Annex Remote
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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adjustExportImport' isexport isimport r rs = do
dbv <- prepdbv
ciddbv <- prepciddb
let versioned = versionedExport (exportActions r)
return $ r
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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{ exportActions = if isexport
then if isimport
then exportActionsForImport dbv ciddbv (exportActions r)
else exportActions r
else exportUnsupported
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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, importActions = if isimport
then importActions r
else importUnsupported
, storeKey = \k af p ->
-- Storing a key on an export could be implemented,
-- but it would perform unncessary work
-- when another repository has already stored the
-- key, and the local repository does not know
-- about it. To avoid unnecessary costs, don't do it.
if thirdpartypopulated
then giveup "remote is not populated by git-annex"
else if isexport
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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then giveup "remote is configured with exporttree=yes; use `git-annex export` to store content on it"
else if isimport
then giveup "remote is configured with importtree=yes and without exporttree=yes; cannot modify content stored on it"
else storeKey r k af p
, removeKey = \k ->
-- Removing a key from an export would need to
-- change the tree in the export log to not include
-- the file. Otherwise, conflicts when removing
-- files would not be dealt with correctly.
-- There does not seem to be a good use case for
-- removing a key from an export in any case.
if thirdpartypopulated
then giveup "dropping content from this remote is not supported"
else if isexport
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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then giveup "dropping content from an export is not supported; use `git annex export` to export a tree that lacks the files you want to remove"
else if isimport
then giveup "dropping content from this remote is not supported because it is configured with importtree=yes"
else removeKey r k
, lockContent = if versioned
then lockContent r
else Nothing
, retrieveKeyFile = \k af dest p vc ->
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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if isimport
then supportversionedretrieve k af dest p vc $
retrieveKeyFileFromImport dbv ciddbv k af dest p
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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else if isexport
then supportversionedretrieve k af dest p vc $
retrieveKeyFileFromExport dbv k af dest p
else retrieveKeyFile r k af dest p vc
, retrieveKeyFileCheap = if versioned
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then retrieveKeyFileCheap r
else Nothing
, checkPresent = \k -> if versioned
then checkPresent r k
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
2020-12-18 18:52:57 +00:00
else if isimport
then anyM (checkPresentImport ciddbv k)
=<< getanyexportlocs dbv k
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
2020-12-18 18:52:57 +00:00
else if isexport
-- Check if any of the files a key
-- was exported to are present. This
-- doesn't guarantee the export
-- contains the right content,
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
2020-12-18 18:52:57 +00:00
-- if the remote is an export,
-- or if something else can write
-- to it. Remotes that have such
-- problems are made untrusted,
-- so it's not worried about here.
then anyM (checkPresentExport (exportActions r) k)
=<< getanyexportlocs dbv k
else checkPresent r k
2020-12-17 18:01:42 +00:00
-- checkPresent from an export is more expensive
-- than otherwise, so not cheap. Also, this
-- avoids things that look at checkPresentCheap and
-- silently skip non-present files from behaving
-- in confusing ways when there's an export
-- conflict (or an import conflict).
, checkPresentCheap = False
-- Export/import remotes can lose content stored on them in
-- many ways. This is not a problem with versioned
-- ones though, since they still allow accessing by Key.
-- And for thirdPartyPopulated, it depends on how the
-- content gets actually stored in the remote, so
-- is not overriddden here.
, untrustworthy =
if versioned || thirdPartyPopulated (remotetype r)
then untrustworthy r
else True
2020-12-17 18:01:42 +00:00
-- git-annex testremote cannot be used to test
-- import/export since it stores keys.
, mkUnavailable = return Nothing
, getInfo = do
is <- getInfo r
is' <- if isexport && not thirdpartypopulated
then do
ts <- map fromRef . exportedTreeishes
<$> getExport (uuid r)
return (is++[("exporttree", "yes"), ("exportedtree", unwords ts)])
else return is
return $ if isimport && not thirdpartypopulated
then (is'++[("importtree", "yes")])
else is'
}
where
thirdpartypopulated = thirdPartyPopulated (remotetype r)
add thirdPartyPopulated interface This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote. So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not, because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated, of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted into the git-annex branch. importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from being included in the tree. It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only git-annex sync does it. Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now. (Untested and unused as of yet.) This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
2020-12-18 18:52:57 +00:00
-- exportActions adjusted to use the equivilant import actions,
-- which take ContentIdentifiers into account.
exportActionsForImport dbv ciddbv ea = ea
{ storeExport = \f k loc p -> do
db <- getciddb ciddbv
exportdb <- getexportdb dbv
oldks <- liftIO $ Export.getExportTreeKey exportdb loc
oldcids <- liftIO $ concat
<$> mapM (ContentIdentifier.getContentIdentifiers db rs) oldks
newcid <- storeExportWithContentIdentifier (importActions r) f k loc oldcids p
cidlck <- calcRepo' gitAnnexContentIdentifierLock
withExclusiveLock cidlck $ do
liftIO $ ContentIdentifier.recordContentIdentifier db rs newcid k
liftIO $ ContentIdentifier.flushDbQueue db
recordContentIdentifier rs newcid k
, removeExport = \k loc ->
removeExportWithContentIdentifier (importActions r) k loc
=<< getkeycids ciddbv k
, removeExportDirectory = removeExportDirectoryWhenEmpty (importActions r)
-- renameExport is optional, and the remote's
-- implementation may lose modifications to the file
-- (by eg copying and then deleting) so don't use it
, renameExport = \_ _ _ -> return Nothing
, checkPresentExport = checkPresentImport ciddbv
}
prepciddb = do
lcklckv <- liftIO newEmptyTMVarIO
dbtv <- liftIO newEmptyTMVarIO
return (dbtv, lcklckv)
prepdbv = do
lcklckv <- liftIO newEmptyTMVarIO
dbv <- liftIO newEmptyTMVarIO
exportinconflict <- liftIO $ newTVarIO False
return (dbv, lcklckv, exportinconflict)
-- Only open the database once it's needed.
getciddb (dbtv, lcklckv) =
liftIO (atomically (tryReadTMVar dbtv)) >>= \case
Just db -> return db
-- let only one thread take the lock
Nothing -> ifM (liftIO $ atomically $ tryPutTMVar lcklckv ())
( do
db <- ContentIdentifier.openDb
ContentIdentifier.needsUpdateFromLog db >>= \case
Just v -> do
cidlck <- calcRepo' gitAnnexContentIdentifierLock
withExclusiveLock cidlck $
ContentIdentifier.updateFromLog db v
Nothing -> noop
liftIO $ atomically $ putTMVar dbtv db
return db
-- loser waits for winner to open the db and
-- can then also use its handle
, liftIO $ atomically (readTMVar dbtv)
)
-- Only open the database once it's needed.
--
-- After opening the database, check if the export log is
-- different than the database, and update the database, to notice
-- when an export has been updated from another repository.
getexportdb (dbv, lcklckv, exportinconflict) =
liftIO (atomically (tryReadTMVar dbv)) >>= \case
Just db -> return db
-- let only one thread take the lock
Nothing -> ifM (liftIO $ atomically $ tryPutTMVar lcklckv ())
( do
db <- Export.openDb (uuid r)
updateexportdb db exportinconflict
liftIO $ atomically $ putTMVar dbv db
return db
-- loser waits for winner to open the db and
-- can then also use its handle
, liftIO $ atomically (readTMVar dbv)
)
getexportinconflict (_, _, v) = v
updateexportdb db exportinconflict =
Export.updateExportTreeFromLog db >>= \case
Export.ExportUpdateSuccess -> return ()
Export.ExportUpdateConflict -> do
warnExportImportConflict r
liftIO $ atomically $
writeTVar exportinconflict True
getanyexportlocs dbv k = do
db <- getexportdb dbv
liftIO $ Export.getExportTree db k
getfirstexportloc dbv k = do
getexportlocs dbv k >>= \case
[] -> giveup "unknown export location"
(l:_) -> return l
getexportlocs dbv k = do
db <- getexportdb dbv
liftIO $ Export.getExportTree db k >>= \case
[] -> ifM (atomically $ readTVar $ getexportinconflict dbv)
( giveup "unknown export location, likely due to the export conflict"
, return []
)
ls -> return ls
getkeycids ciddbv k = do
db <- getciddb ciddbv
liftIO $ ContentIdentifier.getContentIdentifiers db rs k
-- Keys can be retrieved using retrieveExport, but since that
-- retrieves from a path in the remote that another writer could
-- have replaced with content not of the requested key, the content
-- has to be strongly verified.
retrieveKeyFileFromExport dbv k _af dest p = ifM (isVerifiable k)
( do
l <- getfirstexportloc dbv k
retrieveExport (exportActions r) k l dest p >>= return . \case
UnVerified -> MustVerify
IncompleteVerify iv -> MustFinishIncompleteVerify iv
v -> v
, giveup $ "exported content cannot be verified due to using the " ++ decodeBS (formatKeyVariety (fromKey keyVariety k)) ++ " backend"
)
retrieveKeyFileFromImport dbv ciddbv k af dest p =
getkeycids ciddbv k >>= \case
(cid:_) -> do
l <- getfirstexportloc dbv k
snd <$> retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier (importActions r) l cid dest (Left k) p
-- In case a content identifier is somehow missing,
-- try this instead.
[] -> if isexport
then retrieveKeyFileFromExport dbv k af dest p
else giveup "no content identifier is recorded, unable to retrieve"
-- versionedExport remotes have a key/value store, so can use
-- the usual retrieveKeyFile, rather than an import/export
-- variant. However, fall back to that if retrieveKeyFile fails.
supportversionedretrieve k af dest p vc a
| versionedExport (exportActions r) =
retrieveKeyFile r k af dest p vc
`catchNonAsync` const a
| otherwise = a
checkPresentImport ciddbv k loc =
checkPresentExportWithContentIdentifier
(importActions r)
k loc
=<< getkeycids ciddbv k