Otherwise, it can be confusing to clone from a wrong url, since it fails
to download a manifest and so appears as if the remote exists but is empty.
Sponsored-by: Jack Hill on Patreon
This will eventually be used to recover from an interrupted fullPush
and drop the old bundle keys it was unable to delete.
Sponsored-by: Luke T. Shumaker on Patreon
Such as annex::?type=foo&...
I accidentially left out the uuid when creating one,
and the result is it appears to clone an empty repository.
So let's guard against that mistake.
Full pushing will probably work, but is untested.
Incremental pushing is not implemented yet.
While a fairly straightforward port of the shell prototype, the details
of exactly how to get the objects to the remote were tricky. And the
prototype did not consider how to deal with partial failures and
interruptions.
I've taken considerable care to make sure it always leaves things in a
consistent state when interrupted or when it loses access to a remote in
the middle of a push.
Sponsored-by: Leon Schuermann on Patreon
It did not seem possible to avoid creating a git-annex branch while
git-remote-annex is running. Special remotes can even store their own
state in it. So instead, if it didn't exist before git-remote-annex
created it, it deletes it at the end.
This does possibly allow a race condition, where git-annex init and
perhaps other git-annex writing commands are run, that writes to the
git-annex branch, at the same time a git-remote-annex process is being
run by git fetch/push with a full annex:: url. Those writes would be
lost. If the repository has already been initialized before
git-remote-annex, that race won't happen. So it's pretty unlikely.
Sponsored-by: Graham Spencer on Patreon
Also support using annex:: urls that specify the whole special remote
config.
Both of these cases need a special remote to be initialized enough to
use it, which means writing to .git/config but not to the git-annex
branch. When cloning, the remote is left set up in .git/config,
so further use of it, by git-annex or git-remote-annex will work. When
using git with an annex:: url, a temporary remote is written to
.git/config, but then removed at the end.
While that's a little bit ugly, the fact is that the Remote interface
expects that it's ok to set git configs of the remote that is being
initialized. And it's nowhere near as ugly as the alternative of making
a temporary git repository and initializing the special remote in there.
Cloning from a repository that does not contain a git-annex branch and
then later running git-annex init is currently broken, although I've
gotten most of the way there to supporting it.
See cleanupInitialization FIXME.
Special shout out to git clone for running gitremote-helpers with
GIT_DIR set, but not in the git repository and with GIT_WORK_TREE not
set. Resulting in needing the fixupRepo hack.
Sponsored-by: unqueued on Patreon
Tested using a manually populated directory special remote.
Pushing is still to be done. So is fetching from special remotes
configured via the annex:: url.
Sponsored-by: Brock Spratlen on Patreon
Not quite there yet.
Also, changed the format of GITBUNDLE keys to use only one '-'
after the UUID. A sha256 does not contain that character, so can just
split at the last one.
Amusingly, the sha256 will probably not actually be verified. A git
bundle contains its own checksums that git uses to verify it. And if
someone wanted to replace the content of a GITBUNDLE object, they
could just edit the manifest to use a new one whose sha256 does verify.
Sponsored-by: Nicholas Golder-Manning
Changed the format of the url to use annex: rather than annex::
The reason is that in the future, might want to support an url that
includes an uriAuthority part, eg:
annex://foo@example.com:42/358ff77e-0bc3-11ef-bc49-872e6695c0e3?type=directory&encryption=none&directory=/mnt/foo/"
To parse that foo@example.com:42 as an uriAuthority it needs to start with
annex: rather than annex::
That would also need something to be done with uriAuthority, and also
the uriPath (the UUID) is prefixed with "/" in that example. So the
current parser won't handle that example currently. But this leaves the
possibility for expansion.
Sponsored-by: Joshua Antonishen on Patreon
What this can currently be used for is only to change an url from being
used by a special remote to being used by the web remote.
This could have been a --move-from option to registerurl. But, that would
have complicated its option and --batch processing, and also would have
complicated unregisterurl, which is implemented on top of
Command.Registerurl. So, a separate command was actually less complicated
to implement.
The generic description of the command is because I want to make this
command a catch-all for other url updating kind of things, if there are
ever any more. Also because it was hard to come up with a good name for the
specific action. I considered `git-annex moveurl`, but that seems to
indicate data is perhaps actually being moved, and seems to sit at the same
level as addurl and rmurl, and this command is at the plumbing
level of registerurl and unregisterurl.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
This will allow distributed migration: Start a migration in one clone of
a repo, and then update other clones.
commitMigration is a bit of a bear.. There is some inversion of control
that needs some TMVars. Also streamLogFile's finalizer does not handle
recording the trees, so an interrupt at just the wrong time can cause
migration.log to be emptied but the git-annex branch not updated.
Sponsored-by: Graham Spencer on Patreon
Implementation was simple because it's equivilant to
--from=foo --to remote for each other remote, followed by
--to remote when there's a local copy.
(Or, in the edge case of --from-anywhere --to=here,
it's the same as --to=here.)
Note that, when the local repo does not have a copy,
fromToPerform gets it from a remote, sends it to the destination,
and drops the local copy. Another call to that for a second remote
will notice that the dest now has a copy, and simply drop from the
second remote, avoiding a second transfer.
Also note that, when numcopies doesn't allow dropping it from
everywhere, it will drop it from the cheapest remotes first
(maybe not ideal) up to more expensive remotes, and finally from the local
repo. So the local repo will generally end up holding a copy. Maybe not
ideal in all cases either, but it seems no worse to do that than to end up
with a copy undropped from a remote.
And I'm not entirely happy with the output, eg:
copy bigfile (from r3...) ok
copy bigfile ok
That makes sense if you think of the second line as being
the same as what is output by `git-annex copy bigfile --to bar`,
but it's less clear in this context. Maybe add "(from here...)"?
Also the --json output doesn't have a machine-readable field for
the "from" uuid, and maybe it should?
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
Factored out overLocationLogs from CmdLine.Seek, which can calculate this
pretty fast even in a large repo. In my big repo, the time to run git-annex
info went up from 1.33s to 8.5s.
Note that the "backend usage" stats are for annexed files in the working
tree only, not all annexed files. This new data source would let that be
changed, but that would be a confusing behavior change. And I cannot
retitle it either, out of fear something uses the current title (eg parsing
the json).
Also note that, while time says "402108maxresident" in my big repo now,
up from "54092maxresident", top shows the RES constant at 64mb, and it
was 48mb before. So I don't think there is a memory leak. I tried using
deepseq to force full evaluation of addKeyCopies and memory use didn't
change, which also says no memory leak. And indeed, not even calling
addKeyCopies resulted in the same memory use. Probably the increased memory
usage is buffering the stream of data from git in overLocationLogs.
Sponsored-by: Brett Eisenberg on Patreon
Fix more breakage caused by git's fix for CVE-2022-24765, this time
involving a remote (either local or ssh) that is a repository not owned by
the current user.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
The tricky thing about this turned out to be handling renames and reverts.
For that, it has to make two passes over the git log, and to avoid
buffering a possibly huge amount of logs in memory (ie the whole git log of
an entire repository!), runs git log twice.
(It might be possible to speed this up by asking git log to show a diff,
and so avoid needing to use catKey.)
Sponsored-By: Brock Spratlen on Patreon
Currently it only displays explanations of options like --in and --copies.
In the future, it should explain preferred content expression evaluation
and other decisions.
The explanations of a few things could be better. In particular,
"standard" will just appear as-is (or as "!standard" if it doesn't
match), rather than explaining why the standard preferred content expression
for the group matches or not.
Currently as implemented, it goes to stdout, and so commands like
git-annex find that have custom output will not display --explain
information. Perhaps that should change, dunno.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
This ended up having an interface like sync, rather than like get/copy/drop.
That let it be implemented in terms of sync, which took a lot less code.
Also, it lets it handle many of the edge cases that sync does, such as
getting files that are not visible in a --hide-missing branch, and sending
files to exporttree remotes.
As well as being easier to implement, `git-annex satisfy myremote` makes
sense as it satisfies the preferred content settings of the remote.
`git-annex satisfy somefile` does not form a sentence that makes sense. So
while -C can be a little bit annoying, it still makes sense to have this
syntax.
Note that, while I initially thought this would also satisfy numcopies, it
does not. Arguably it ought to. But, sync does not send files in order to
satisfy numcopies, it only sends files to satisfy preferred content. And
it's important that this transfer the same files as sync does, because
it will probably be used in a workflow where the user sometimes syncs and
sometimes satisfies, and does not expect satisfy to do things that sync
would not do.
(Also opened a new bug that also affects sync et all, not only this command.)
Sponsored-by: Nicholas Golder-Manning on Patreon
Commit b6642dde8a broke it by enabling
non-concurrent display mode while leaving concurrency set in the config
and having already started concurrency earlier.
(I don't actually know if that commit was a good idea.)
Sponsored-By: Brett Eisenberg on Patreon
The obvious way to fix this would be to adapt lines to split on null.
However, it's actually nontrivial to rewrite lines. In particular it has a
weird implementation to avoid a space leak. See:
https://gitlab.haskell.org/ghc/ghc/-/issues/4334
Also, while that is a small amount of code, it's covered by a rather
complex copyright and I'd have to include that copyright in git-annex.
So, I opted to filter out the trailing empty string instead.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
assist: New command, which is the same as git-annex sync but with
new files added and content transferred by default.
(Also this fixes another reversion in git-annex sync,
--commit --no-commit, and --message were not enabled, oops.)
See added comment for why git-annex assist does commit staged
changes elsewhere in the work tree, but only adds files under
the cwd.
Note that it does not support --no-commit, --no-push, --no-pull
like sync does. My thinking is, why should it? If you want that
level of control, use git commit, git annex push, git annex pull.
Sync only got those options because pull and push were not split
out.
Sponsored-by: k0ld on Patreon
Split out two new commands, git-annex pull and git-annex push. Those plus a
git commit are equivilant to git-annex sync.
In a sense, git-annex sync conflates 3 things, and it would have been
better to have push and pull from the beginning and not sync. Although
note that git-annex sync --content is faster than a pull followed by a
push, because it only has to walk the tree once, look at preferred
content once, etc. So there is some value in git-annex sync in speed, as
well as user convenience.
And it would be hard to split out pull and push from sync, as far as the
implementaton goes. The implementation inside sync was easy, just adjust
SyncOptions so it does the right thing.
Note that the new commands default to syncing content, unless
annex.synccontent is explicitly set to false. I'd like sync to also do
that, but that's a hard transition to make. As a start to that
transition, I added a note to git-annex-sync.mdwn that it may start to
do so in a future version of git-annex. But a real transition would
necessarily involve displaying warnings when sync is used without
--content, and time.
Sponsored-by: Kevin Mueller on Patreon
Had to convert uninit to do everything that can error out inside a
CommandStart. This was harder than feels nice.
(Also, in passing, converted CommandCheck to use a data type, not a
weird number that it was not clear how it managed to be unique.)
Sponsored-By: the NIH-funded NICEMAN (ReproNim TR&D3) project
When a nonexistant file is passed to a command and --json-error-messages
is enabled, output a JSON object indicating the problem.
(But git ls-files --error-unmatch still displays errors about such files in
some situations.)
I don't like the duplication of the name of the command introduced by this,
but I can't see a great way around it. One way would be to pass the Command
instead.
When json is not enabled, the stderr is unchanged. This is necessary
because some commands like find have custom output. So dislaying
"find foo not found" would be wrong. So had to complicate things with
toplevelFileProblem having different output with and without json.
When not using --json-error-messages but still using --json, it displays
the error to stderr, but does display a json object without the error. It
does have an errorid though. Unsure how useful that behavior is.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
This reverts commit a325524454.
Turns out this was predicated on an incorrect belief that json output
didn't already sometimes lack the "key" field. Since json output already
can when `giveup` was used, it seems unncessary to add a whole new
option for this.
Added a --json-exceptions option, which makes some exceptions be output in json.
The distinction is that --json-error-messages is for messages relating
to a particular ActionItem, while --json-exceptions is for messages that
are not, eg ones for a file that does not exist.
It's unfortunate that we need two switches with such a fine distinction
between them, but I'm worried about maintaining backwards compatability
in the json output, to avoid breaking anything that parses it, and this was
the way to make sure I didn't.
toplevelWarning is generally used for the latter kind of message. And
the other calls to toplevelWarning could be converted to showException. The
only possible gotcha is that if toplevelWarning is ever called after
starting acting on a file, it will add to the --json-error-messages of the
json displayed for that file and converting to showException would be a
behavior change. That seems unlikely, but I didn't convery everything to
avoid needing to satisfy myself it was not a concern.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
New command, currently limited to changing autoenable= setting of a special remote.
It will probably never be used for more than that given the limitations on
it.
Sponsored-by: Brock Spratlen on Patreon
Converted warning and similar to use StringContainingQuotedPath. Most
warnings are static strings, some do refer to filepaths that need to be
quoted, and others don't need quoting.
Note that, since quote filters out control characters of even
UnquotedString, this makes all warnings safe, even when an attacker
sneaks in a control character in some other way.
When json is being output, no quoting is done, since json gets its own
quoting.
This does, as a side effect, make warning messages in json output not
be indented. The indentation is only needed to offset warning messages
underneath the display of the file they apply to, so that's ok.
Sponsored-by: Brett Eisenberg on Patreon
giveup changed to filter out control characters. (It is too low level to
make it use StringContainingQuotedPath.)
error still does not, but it should only be used for internal errors,
where the message is not attacker-controlled.
Changed a lot of existing error to giveup when it is not strictly an
internal error.
Of course, other exceptions can still be thrown, either by code in
git-annex, or a library, that include some attacker-controlled value.
This does not guard against those.
Sponsored-by: Noam Kremen on Patreon
This serves two purposes. --remote=web bypasses other special remotes that
claim the url, same as addurl --raw. And, specifying some other remote
allows making sure that an url is claimed by the remote you expect,
which makes then using setpresentkey not be fragile.
Sponsored-By: the NIH-funded NICEMAN (ReproNim TR&D3) project
Works around this bug in unix-compat:
https://github.com/jacobstanley/unix-compat/issues/56
getFileStatus and other FilePath using functions in unix-compat do not do
UNC conversion on Windows.
Made Utility.RawFilePath use convertToWindowsNativeNamespace to do the
necessary conversion on windows to support long filenames.
Audited all imports of System.PosixCompat.Files to make sure that no
functions that operate on FilePath were imported from it. Instead, use
the equvilants from Utility.RawFilePath. In particular the
re-export of that module in Common had to be removed, which led to lots
of other changes throughout the code.
The changes to Build.Configure, Build.DesktopFile, and Build.TestConfig
make Utility.Directory not be needed to build setup. And so let it use
Utility.RawFilePath, which depends on unix, which cannot be in
setup-depends.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
And also to vadd usage.
Also added some other things to the usage that were omitted before to
save space.
Adding even FIELD?=GLOB made the git-annex --help list of commands grow
too wide for an 80 column display. So, removed the description of
parameters from that list of commands.
Sponsored-By: Brock Spratlen on Patreon
Allowing --from and --to as an alternative to --from or --to
is hard to do with optparse-applicative!
The obvious approach of (pfrom <|> pto <|> pfromandto) does not work
when pfromandto uses the same option names as pfrom and pto do.
It compiles but the generated parser does not work for all desired
combinations.
Instead, have to parse optionally from and optionally to. When neither
is provided, the parser succeeds, but it's a result that can't be
handled. So, have to giveup after option parsing. There does not seem to
be a way to make an optparse-applicative Parser give up internally
either.
Also, need seek' because I first tried making fto be a where binding,
but that resulted in a hang when git-annex move was run without --from
or --to. I think because startConcurrency was not expecting the stages
value to contain an exception and so ended up blocking.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
I've long been asked for `git-annex find --all` or something like that,
but pushed back on it because I feel that the command is analagous to
find(1) and so it would be surprising for it to list keys rather than
files. So instead, add a new findkeys subcommand.
Note that the use of withKeyOptions is rather strange because usually
that is used to fall back to --all rather than listing files, but here
it's made to default to --all like behavior and never list files.
A performance thing that could be improved is that withKeyOptions
always reads and caches location logs. But findkeys with no options does
not need them, so it could be made faster. That caching does speed up
options like --in though. This is really just a subset of a more general
performance thing that --all reads location logs sometimes unncessarily.
Anyway, it needs to read the location log in order to checkDead,
and it seems good that findkeys does skip dead keys.
Also, cleaned up comments on git-annex-find man page asking for --all
option.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
Added --anything (and --nothing). Eg, git-annex find --anything will list
all annexed files whether or not the content is present. This is slightly
faster and clearer than --include=* or --exclude=*
While I can't imagine how --nothing will be used, preferred content
expressions already had anything and nothing, so might as well support both
as matching options as well.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
Make --batch mode handle unstaged annexed files consistently whether the
file is unlocked or not. Before this, a unstaged locked file
would have the symlink on disk examined and operated on in --batch mode,
while an unstaged unlocked file would be skipped.
Note that, when not in batch mode, unstaged files are skipped over too.
That is actually somewhat new behavior; as late as 7.20191114 a
command like `git-annex whereis .` would operate on unstaged locked
files and skip over unstaged unlocked files. That changed during
optimisation of CmdLine.Seek with apparently little fanfare or notice.
Turns out that rmurl still behaved that way when given an unstaged file
on the command line. It was changed to use lookupKeyStaged to
handle its --batch mode. That also affected its non-batch mode, but
since that's just catching up to the change earlier made to most
other commands, I have not mentioed that in the changelog.
It may be that other uses of lookupKey should also change to
lookupKeyStaged. But it may also be that would slow down some things,
or lead to unwanted behavior changes, so I've kept the changes minimal
for now.
An example of a place where the use of lookupKey is better than
lookupKeyStaged is in Command.AddUrl, where it looks to see if the file
already exists, and adds the url to the file when so. It does not matter
there whether the file is staged or not (when it's locked). The use of
lookupKey in Command.Unused likewise seems good (and faster).
Sponsored-by: Nicholas Golder-Manning on Patreon
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
This is much easier and less failure-prone than having the user run
git update-index --refresh themselves.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
When concurrency is enabled, there can be worker threads still running
when the time limit is checked. Exiting right there does not
give those threads time to finish what they're doing. Instead, the seeking
is wrapped up, and git-annex then shuts down cleanly.
The whole point of --time-limit existing, rather than using timeout(1)
when running git-annex is to let git-annex finish the action(s) it is
working on when the time limit is reached, and shut down cleanly.
I noticed this problem when investigating why restagePointerFile might
not have run after get/drop of an unlocked file. With --time-limit -J,
a worker thread may have finished updating a work tree file, and be killed
by the time limit check before it can run restagePointerFile. So despite
--time-limit running the shutdown actions, the work tree file didn't get
restaged.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
Fix a reversion that made dead keys not be skipped when operating on all
keys via --all or in a bare repo. (Introduced in version 8.20200720)
Also, improved the documentation of git-annex-dead, it does not only apply
to fsck --all.
Also, made git-annex fsck, when run on a file whose key is dead, display
that. Before, it displayed that only when run with --all, but with this
fix, it skips dead keys with --all. But it can still be run on a file that
uses a dead key, and displaying "This key is dead" explains to the user
why it does not consider missing content for it to be a problem.
Sponsored-by: k0ld on Patreon
Fix crash importing from a directory special remote that contains a broken
symlink.
The crash was in listImportableContentsM but some other places in
Remote.Directory also seemed like they could have the same problem.
Also audited for other places that have such a problem. Not all calls
to getFileStatus are bad, in some cases it's better to crash on something
unexpected. For example, `git-annex import path` when the path is a broken
symlink should crash, the same as when it does not exist. Many of the
getFileStatus calls are like that, particularly when they involve
.git/annex/objects which should never have a broken symlink in it.
Fixed a few other possible cases of the problem.
Sponsored-by: Lawrence Brogan on Patreon
Too big a footgun.
This does not prevent attackers who can write to the directory being
imported from racing the check. But they can cause anything to be imported
anyway, so would be limited to getting the legacy import to follow into a
directory they do not write to, and move files out of it into the annex.
(The directory special remote does not have that problem since it does not
move files.)
Sponsored-by: Jack Hill on Patreon
This is intended for users who want to see what it would output in order to
eg, check if a file would be added to git or the annex. It is not intended
as a way for scripts to get information.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
--backend is no longer a global option, and is only accepted by commands
that actually need it.
Three commands that used to support backend but don't any longer are
watch, webapp, and assistant. It would be possible to make them support it,
but I doubt anyone used the option with these. And in the case of webapp
and assistant, the option was handled inconsistently, only taking affect
when the command is run with an existing git-annex repo, not when it
creates a new one.
Also, renamed GlobalOption etc to AnnexOption. Because there are many
options of this type that are not actually global (any more) and get
added to commands that need them.
Sponsored-by: Kevin Mueller on Patreon
At this point I've checked all AnnexState values and these were all that
remained that could move.
Pity that Annex.repo can't move, but it gets modified sometimes..
A couple of AnnexState values are set by options and could be AnnexRead,
but happen to use Annex when being set.
Sponsored-by: Max Thoursie on Patreon
Ignore annex.numcopies set to 0 in gitattributes or git config, or by
git-annex numcopies or by --numcopies, since that configuration would make
git-annex easily lose data. Same for mincopies.
This is a continuation of the work to make data only be able to be lost
when --force is used. It earlier led to the --trust option being disabled,
and similar reasoning applies here.
Most numcopies configs had docs that strongly discouraged setting it to 0
anyway. And I can't imagine a use case for setting to 0. Not that there
might not be one, but it's just so far from the intended use case of
git-annex, of managing and storing your data, that it does not seem like
it makes sense to cater to such a hypothetical use case, where any
git-annex drop can lose your data at any time.
Using a smart constructor makes sure every place avoids 0. Note that this
does mean that NumCopies is for the configured desired values, and not the
actual existing number of copies, which of course can be 0. The name
configuredNumCopies is used to make that clear.
Sponsored-by: Brock Spratlen on Patreon
Propagate nonzero exit status from git ls-files when a specified file does
not exist, or a specified directory does not contain any files checked into
git.
The recent completion of the annex.skipunknown transition exposed this
bug, that has unfortunately been lurking all along.
It is also possible that git ls-files errors out for some other reason
-- perhaps a permission problem -- and this will also fix error propagation
in such situations.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
A few places were reading the max symlink size of a pointer file,
then passing tp parseLinkTargetOrPointer. Which is fine currently, but
to support pointer files with lines of data after the pointer, enough
has to be read that parseLinkTargetOrPointer can be assured of seeing
enough of that data to know if it's correctly formatted.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
Reject combinations of --batch (or --batch-keys) with options like --all or
--key or with filenames.
Most commands ignored the non-batch items when batch mode was enabled.
For some reason, addurl and dropkey both processed first the specified
non-batch items, followed by entering batch mode. Changed them to also
error out, for consistency.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
This makes --all error out in that situation. Which is better than
ignoring information from the branches.
To really handle the branches right, overBranchFileContents would need
to both query all the branches and union merge file contents
(or perhaps not provide any file content), as well as diffing between
branches to find files that are only present in the unmerged branches.
And also, it would need to handle transitions..
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
The way precaching works, it can't merge in information from those
branches efficiently, so just disable it and fall back to
Annex.Branch.get in order to get the correct information.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
filter-process: New command that can make git add/checkout faster when
there are a lot of unlocked annexed files or non-annexed files, but that
also makes git add of large annexed files slower.
Use it by running: git
config filter.annex.process 'git-annex filter-process'
Fully tested and working, but I have not benchmarked it at all.
And, incremental hashing is not done when git add uses it, so extra work is
done in that case.
Sponsored-by: Mark Reidenbach on Patreon
* Removed support for accessing git remotes that use versions of
git-annex older than 6.20180312.
* git-annex-shell: Removed several commands that were only needed to
support git-annex versions older than 6.20180312.
(lockcontent, recvkey, sendkey, transferinfo, commit)
The P2P protocol was added in that version, and used ever since, so
this code was only needed for interop with older versions.
"git-annex-shell commit" is used by newer git-annex versions, though
unnecessarily so, because the p2pstdio command makes a single commit at
shutdown. Luckily, it was run with stderr and stdout sent to /dev/null,
and non-zero exit status or other exceptions are caught and ignored. So,
that was able to be removed from git-annex-shell too.
git-annex-shell inannex, recvkey, sendkey, and dropkey are still used by
gcrypt special remotes accessed over ssh, so those had to be kept.
It would probably be possible to convert that to using the P2P protocol,
but it would be another multi-year transition.
Some git-annex-shell fields were able to be removed. I hoped to remove
all of them, and the very concept of them, but unfortunately autoinit
is used by git-annex sync, and gcrypt uses remoteuuid.
The main win here is really in Remote.Git, removing piles of hairy fallback
code.
Sponsored-by: Luke Shumaker
New --batch-keys option added to these commands: get, drop, move, copy, whereis
git-annex-matching-options had to be reworded since some of its options
can be used to match on keys, not only files.
Sponsored-by: Luke Shumaker on Patreon
This eliminates the distinction between decodeBS and decodeBS', encodeBS
and encodeBS', etc. The old implementation truncated at NUL, and the
primed versions had to do extra work to avoid that problem. The new
implementation does not truncate at NUL, and is also a lot faster.
(Benchmarked at 2x faster for decodeBS and 3x for encodeBS; more for the
primed versions.)
Note that filepath-bytestring 1.4.2.1.8 contains the same optimisation,
and upgrading to it will speed up to/fromRawFilePath.
AFAIK, nothing relied on the old behavior of truncating at NUL. Some
code used the faster versions in places where I was sure there would not
be a NUL. So this change is unlikely to break anything.
Also, moved s2w8 and w82s out of the module, as they do not involve
filesystem encoding really.
Sponsored-by: Shae Erisson on Patreon
When this option is not used, there should be effectively no added
overhead, thanks to the optimisation in
b3cd0cc6ba.
When an action fails on a file, the size of the file still counts toward
the size limit. This was necessary to support concurrency, but also
generally seems like the right choice.
Most commands that operate on annexed files support the option.
export and import do not, and I don't know if it would make sense for
export to.. Why would you want an incomplete export? sync doesn't, and
while it would be easy to make it support it for transferring files,
it's not clear if dropping files should also take the size limit into
account. Commands like add that don't operate on annexed files don't
support the option either.
Exiting 101 not yet implemented.
Sponsored-by: Denis Dzyubenko on Patreon
The normalisation of filenames turns out to be the tricky part here,
because the associated files coming out of the keys db may look like
"./foo/bar" or "../bar". For the former to match a glob like "foo/*",
it needs to be normalised.
Note that, on windows, normalise "./foo/bar" = "foo\\bar"
which a glob like "foo/*" won't match. So the glob is matched a second
time, on the toInternalGitPath, so allowing the user to provide a glob
with the slashes in either direction. However, this still won't support
some wacky edge cases like the user providing a glob of "foo/bar\\*"
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
If it's passed a ConfigKey such as annex.version, avoid returning
an empty remote name and return Nothing instead. Also, foo.bar.baz is
not treated as a remote named "bar".
Fix bug caused by recent optimisations that could make git-annex not see
recently recorded status information when configured with
annex.alwayscommit=false.
This does mean that --all can end up processing the same key more than once,
but before the optimisations that introduced this bug, it used to also behave
that way. So I didn't try to fix that; it's an edge case and anyway git-annex
behaves well when run on the same key repeatedly.
I am not too happy with the use of a MVar to buffer the list of files in the
journal. I guess it doesn't defeat lazy streaming of the list, if that
list is actually generated lazily, and anyway the size of the journal is
normally capped and small, so if configs are changed to make it huge and
this code path fire, git-annex using enough memory to buffer it all is not a
large problem.
Fix bug caused by recent optimisations that could make git-annex not see
recently recorded status information when configured with
annex.alwayscommit=false.
When not using --all, precaching only gets triggered when the
command actually needs location logs, and so there's no speed hit there.
This is a minor speed hit for --all, because it precaches even when the
location log is not actually going to be used, and so checking the journal
is not necessary. It would have been possible to defer checking the journal
until the cache gets used. But that would complicate the usual Branch.get
code path with two different kinds of caches, and the speed hit is really
minimal. A better way to speed up --all, later, would be to avoid
precaching at all when the location log is not going to be used.
Had to add to AnnexRead an indication of whether debugging is enabled.
Could have just made setupConsole not install a debug output action that
outputs, and have enableDebug be what installs that, but then in the
common case where there is no debug selector, and so all debug output is
selected, it would run the debug output action every time, which entails
an IORef access. Which would make fastDebug too slow..
Most of the changes here involve global option parsing: GlobalSetter
changed so it can both run an Annex action to set state, but can also
change the AnnexRead value, which is immutable once the Annex monad is
running.
That allowed a debugselector value to be added to AnnexRead, seeded
from the git config. The --debugfilter option's GlobalSetter then updates
the AnnexRead.
This improved GlobalSetter can later be used to move more stuff to
AnnexRead. Things that don't involve a git config will be easier to
move, and probably a *lot* of things can be moved eventually.
fastDebug, while implemented, is not used anywhere yet. But it should be
fast..
Values in AnnexRead can be read more efficiently, without MVar overhead.
Only a few things have been moved into there, and the performance
increase so far is not likely to be noticable.
This is groundwork for putting more stuff in there, particularly a value
that indicates if debugging is enabled.
The obvious next step is to change option parsing to not run in the
Annex monad to set values in AnnexState, and instead return a pure value
that gets stored in AnnexRead.
Not yet used, but allows getting the size of items in the tree fairly
cheaply.
I noticed that CmdLine.Seek uses ls-tree and the feeds the files into
another long-running process to check their size. That would be an
example of a place that might be sped up by using this. Although in that
particular case, it only needs to know the size of unlocked files, not
locked. And since enabling --long probably doubles the ls-tree runtime
or more, the overhead of using it there may outwweigh the benefit.
Added LinkType to ProvidedInfo, and unified MatchingKey with
ProvidedInfo. They're both used in the same way, so there was no real
reason to keep separate.
Note that addLocked and addUnlocked still set matchNeedsFileName,
because to handle MatchingFile, they do need it. However, they
don't use it when MatchingInfo is provided. This should be ok,
the --branch case will be able skip checking matchNeedsFileName,
since it will provide a filename in any case.
Previously such nonsensical combinations always treated the matching option
as if it didn't match.
For now, made find --branch refuse matching options that need a
filename, because one is not provided to them in a way they'll use.
There's an open bug report to support it, but making it error out is
better than the old behavior of not finding what it was asked to.
Also, made --mimetype combined with eg --all work, by looking at the
object file when operating on keys.