Commit graph

186 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Hess
ab7b5a492c
--batch-keys
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
2021-08-25 14:21:12 -04:00
Joey Hess
3a14648142
dropping unused marks as dead
Dropping an object with drop --unused or dropunused will mark it as
dead, preventing fsck --all from complaining about it after it's been
dropped from all repositories.

If another repository still has a copy, it won't be treated as dead
until it's also dropped from there.

The drop has to use --unused, can't be --key or something else, because
this indicates that the user has recently ran git-annex unused. If it
checked the unused log on every drop, bad things would happen when the
unused log was out of date, eg a file used to be unused but then got
re-added. Marking such a file as dead could be confusing. When the user
uses --unused/dropunused, they must consider the unused information to be
up-to-date.

The particular workflow this enables is:

	git annex add foo
	git annex unannex foo
	git annex unused
	git annex drop --unused / dropunused
	git annex fsck --all # no warnings

The docs for git-annex unannex say to use git-annex unused and dropunused,
so the user should be pointed in this direction when they want to undo an
accidental add.

Sponsored-by: Brock Spratlen on Patreon
2021-06-25 15:22:26 -04:00
Joey Hess
d2be68907c
drop, move, mirror: when two files have the same content, honor the max numcopies and requiredcopies
Eg, before with a .gitattributes like:

*.2 annex.numcopies=2
*.1 annex.numcopies=1

And foo.1 and foo.2 having the same content and key, git-annex drop foo.1 foo.2
would succeed, leaving just 1 copy, despite foo.2 needing 2 copies.
It dropped foo.1 first and then skipped foo.2 since its content was gone.

Now that the keys database includes locked files, this longstanding wart
can be fixed.

Sponsored-by: Noam Kremen on Patreon
2021-06-15 11:38:44 -04:00
Joey Hess
cedc28a783
prevent dropping required content of other file using same content
When two files have the same content, and a required content expression
matches one but not the other, dropping the latter file will fail as it
would also remove the content of the required file.

This will slow down drop (w/o --auto), dropunused, mirror, and move, by one
keys db lookup per file. But I did include an optimisation to avoid a
double db lookup in the drop --auto / sync --content case. I suspect that
dropunused could also use PreferredContentChecked True, but haven't
entirely thought it through and it's rarely used with enough files for the
optimisation to matter.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-05-25 11:34:06 -04:00
Joey Hess
13c090b37a
use fastDebug everywhere it can be used
None of these are likely to yeild a noticable speedup though.
2021-04-06 15:41:24 -04:00
Joey Hess
aaba83795b
switch from hslogger to purpose-built Utility.Debug
This uses a DebugSelector, rather than debug levels, which will allow
for a later option like --debug-from=Process to only
see debuging about running processes.

The module name that contains the thing being debugged is used as the
DebugSelector (in most cases; does not need to be a hard and fast rule).
Debug calls were changed to add that. hslogger did not display
that first parameter to debugM, but the DebugSelector does get
displayed.

Also fastDebug will allow doing debugging in places that are used in
tight loops, with the DebugSelector coming from the Annex Reader
essentially for free. Not done yet.
2021-04-05 13:40:31 -04:00
Joey Hess
cc89699457
mincopies
This is conceptually very simple, just making a 1 that was hard coded be
exposed as a config option. The hard part was plumbing all that, and
dealing with complexities like reading it from git attributes at the
same time that numcopies is read.

Behavior change: When numcopies is set to 0, git-annex used to drop
content without requiring any copies. Now to get that (highly unsafe)
behavior, mincopies also needs to be set to 0. It seemed better to
remove that edge case, than complicate mincopies by ignoring it when
numcopies is 0.

This commit was sponsored by Denis Dzyubenko on Patreon.
2021-01-06 14:15:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
2abda21123
update 2020-12-15 16:35:06 -04:00
Joey Hess
f29d49d478
check Remote.hasKeyCheap again
In cd1676d604, it stopped using that to avoid surprising behavior
when the location log and remote content were out of sync.
But, it seems that may have changed some behavior users relied on as
well, and also Remote.hasKeyCheap should be faster than checking then
location log.

So, try Remote.hasKeyCheap first, and only if it does not have the key,
fall back to checking the location log. If the location log still thinks
it's present, go ahead and try to get it, so the user will see a failure
rather than silently skipping a file what whereis says is on the remote.

This does make slightly slower the case where the remote does not have
the key, and location log and Remote.hasKeyCheap agree, since it now
checks both. But only 1 stat slower.
2020-12-15 14:44:00 -04:00
Joey Hess
4c47568876
refactoring
This is groundwork for using git-annex transferkeys to run transfers,
in order to allow stalled transfers to be interrupted and retried.

The new upload and download are closer to what git-annex transferkeys
does, so the plan is to make them use it.

Then things that were left using upload' and download' won't recover
from stalls. Notably, that includes import and export. But
at least get/move/copy will be able to. (Also the assistant hopefully,
but not yet.)

This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
2020-12-07 14:49:17 -04:00
Joey Hess
0896038ba7
annex.adjustedbranchrefresh
Added annex.adjustedbranchrefresh git config to update adjusted branches
set up by git-annex adjust --unlock-present/--hide-missing.

Note, in a few cases, I was not able to make the adjusted branch
be updated in calls to moveAnnex, because information about what
file corresponds to a key is not available. They are:

* If two files point to one file, then eg, `git annex get foo` will
  update the branch to unlock foo, but will not unlock bar, because it
  does not know about it. Might be fixable by making `git annex get
  bar` do something besides skipping bar?
* git-annex-shell recvkey likewise (so sends over ssh from old versions
  of git-annex)
* git-annex setkey
* git-annex transferkey if the user does not use --file
* git-annex multicast sends keys with no associated file info

Doing a single full refresh at the end, after any incremental refresh,
will deal with those edge cases.
2020-11-16 14:27:28 -04:00
Joey Hess
a30030c4a6
move: Fix a regression in the last release that made move --to not honor numcopies settings
This commit was sponsored by Svenne Krap on Patreon.
2020-11-13 14:19:32 -04:00
Joey Hess
eb42cd4d46
more RawFilePath conversion
535/645

This commit was sponsored by Brett Eisenberg on Patreon.
2020-11-03 10:11:04 -04:00
Joey Hess
0133b7e5a8
move: Improve resuming a move that was interrupted after the object was transferred
In cases where numcopies checks prevented the resumed move from dropping
the object from the source repository, it now relies on a log of recent
moves to replicate the behavior of the interrupted command.

Performance: Probably noticable impact, since it has to add to the log,
check the log, and remove from the log. Seems worth it to avoid this
annoying edge case. The log functions are pretty well optimised to avoid
unncessary work.

An performance improvement to make later would be to avoid cleanup doing
anything if it's not written to the log file, and has confirmed that the
log file does not contain the log line.

This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
2020-10-21 10:31:56 -04:00
Joey Hess
3a05d53761
add SeekInput (not yet used)
No behavior changes (hopefully), just adding SeekInput and plumbing it
through to the JSON display code for later use.

Over the course of 2 grueling days.

withFilesNotInGit reimplemented in terms of seekHelper
should be the only possible behavior change. It seems to test as
behaving the same.

Note that seekHelper dummies up the SeekInput in the case where
segmentPaths' gives up on sorting the expanded paths because there are
too many input paths. When SeekInput later gets exposed as a json field,
that will result in it being a little bit wrong in the case where
100 or more paths are passed to a git-annex command. I think this is a
subtle enough problem to not matter. If it does turn out to be a
problem, fixing it would require splitting up the input
parameters into groups of < 100, which would make git ls-files run
perhaps more than is necessary. May want to revisit this, because that
fix seems fairly low-impact.
2020-09-15 15:41:13 -04:00
Joey Hess
2a45b5ae9a
avoid failure to lock content of removed file causing drop etc to fail
This was already prevented in other ways, but as seen in commit
c30fd24d91, those were a bit fragile.
And I'm not sure races were avoided in every case before. At least a
race between two separate git-annex processes, dropping the same
content, seemed possible.

This way, if locking fails, and the content is not present, it will
always do the right thing. Also, it avoids the overhead of an unncessary
inAnnex check for every file.

This commit was sponsored by Denis Dzyubenko on Patreon.
2020-07-25 11:59:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
d732ef1a89
move, copy: Sped up seeking for annexed files to operate on by a factor of nearly 2x. 2020-07-24 12:56:02 -04:00
Joey Hess
00865cdae8
Fix a bug in find --branch in the previous version
inAnnex check was lost for that code path. To avoid more such mistakes,
made withKeyOptions check it when the AnnexedFileSeeker specifies.
2020-07-24 12:05:28 -04:00
Joey Hess
1be92381ec
unify batch mode with non-batch by using AnnexedFileSeeker 2020-07-22 14:23:28 -04:00
Joey Hess
75aab72d23
mostly done with location log precaching
Some nice wins.
2020-07-13 17:04:02 -04:00
Joey Hess
88a7fb5cbb
convert all applicable commands to new 2x faster annexed file seeking
This removes all calls to inAnnex, except for some involving --batch.
It may be that the batch code could get a similar speedup, but I don't
know if people habitually pass a huge number of files through --batch
that git-annex does not need to do anything to process, so I skipped it
for now.

A few calls to ifAnnexed remain, and might be worth doing more to
convert. In particular, Command.Sync has one that would probably speed
it up by a good amount.

(also removed some dead code from Command.Lock)
2020-07-10 15:45:38 -04:00
Joey Hess
89b2542d3c
annex.skipunknown with transition plan
Added annex.skipunknown git config, that can be set to false to change the
behavior of commands like `git annex get foo*`, to not skip over files/dirs
that are not checked into git and are explicitly listed in the command
line.

Significant complexity was needed to handle git-annex add, which uses some
git ls-files calls, but needs to not use --error-unmatch because of course
the files are not known to git.

annex.skipunknown is planned to change to default to false in a
git-annex release in early 2022. There's a todo for that.
2020-05-28 15:55:17 -04:00
Joey Hess
e04a931439
improve transfer stages for some commands
move --to, copy --to, mirror --to: When concurrency is enabled, run cleanup
actions in separate job pool from uploads.

transferStages was confusingly named, it's only useful when doing downloads
as then the verify actions can be run concurrently with other downloads.
For commands that upload, there will be more concurrency from running
cleanup actions in a separate job pool.

As for sync, I left it using downloadStages although that's not optimal
for the part of a sync that uploads. Perhaps it should use the union of
both?
2020-05-26 11:55:50 -04:00
Joey Hess
dc7dc1e179
refactor 2020-05-14 14:21:58 -04:00
Joey Hess
4be94c67c7
make removeKey throw exceptions 2020-05-14 14:11:05 -04:00
Joey Hess
d9c7f81ba4
make retrieveKeyFile and retrieveKeyFileCheap throw exceptions
Converted retrieveKeyFileCheap to a Maybe, to avoid needing to throw a
exception when a remote doesn't support it.
2020-05-13 17:07:07 -04:00
Joey Hess
c1cd402081
make storeKey throw exceptions
When storing content on remote fails, always display a reason why.

Since the Storer used by special remotes already did, this mostly affects
git remotes, but not entirely. For example, if git-lfs failed to connect to
the endpoint, it used to silently return False.
2020-05-13 14:03:00 -04:00
Joey Hess
cd1676d604
fix bug involving local git remote and out of date location log
get --from, move --from: When used with a local git remote, these used to
silently skip files that the location log thought were present on the
remote, when the remote actually no longer contained them. Since that
behavior could be surprising, now instead display a warning.

I got very confused when I encountered this behavior, since it was silently
skipping a file I needed that whereis said was on the remote.

get without --from already displayed a "unable to access these remotes"
message, which while a bit misleading in that the remote is likely
accessible, but just doesn't contain the file, at least indicated something
went wrong.

Having get --from display a warning makes it in line with get
w/o --from, so seems certianly ok. It might be there are situations where
move --from is used, on eg a whole directory, and the user only wants to
move whatever is present in the remote, and is perfectly ok with files
that are not present being skipped. So I'm less sure about the new warning
being ok there. OTOH, only local git remotes avoiding displaying a warning
in that case too, so this just brings them into line with other remotes.

(Also note that this makes it a little bit faster when dealing with a lot of
files, since it avoids a redundant stat of the file.)
2020-04-21 12:36:58 -04:00
Joey Hess
b88f89c1ef
get the most commonly used commands building again
A quick benchmark of whereis shows not much speed improvement, maybe a
few percent. Profiling it found a hotspot, adds to todo.
2019-12-04 13:45:18 -04:00
Joey Hess
9d36c826c0
use fine-grained WorkerStages when transferring and verifying
This means that Command.Move and Command.Get don't need to
manually set the stage, and is a lot cleaner conceptually.

Also, this makes Command.Sync.syncFile use the worker pool better.
In the scenario where it first downloads content and then uploads it to
some other remotes, it will start in TransferStage, then enter VerifyStage
and then go back to TransferStage for each transfer to the remotes.
Before, it entered CleanupStage after the download, and stayed in it for
the upload, so too many transfer jobs could run at the same time.

Note that, in Remote.Git, it uses runTransfer and also verifyKeyContent
inside onLocal. That has a Annex state for the remote, with no worker pool.
So the resulting calls to enteringStage won't block in there.

While Remote.Git.copyToRemote does do checksum verification, I
realized that should not use a verification slot in the WorkerPool
to do it. Because, it's reading back from eg, a removable disk to checksum.
That will contend with other writes to that disk. It's best to treat
that checksum verification as just part of the transer. So, removed the todo
item about that, as there's nothing needing to be done.
2019-06-19 13:24:20 -04:00
Joey Hess
53882ab4a7
make WorkerStage an open type
Rather than limiting it to PerformStage and CleanupStage, this opens it
up so any number of stages can be added as needed by commands.

Each concurrent command has a set of stages that it uses, and only
transitions between those can block waiting for a free slot in the
worker pool. Calling enteringStage for some other stage does not block,
and has very little overhead.

Note that while before the Annex state was duplicated on the first call
to commandAction, this now happens earlier, in startConcurrency.
That means that seek stage actions should that use startConcurrency
and then modify Annex state won't modify the state of worker threads
they then start. I audited all of them, and only Command.Seek
did so; prepMerge changes the working directory and so has to come
before startConcurrency.

Also, the remote list is built before duplicating the state, which means
that it gets built earlier now than it used to. This would only have an
effect of making commands that end up not needing to perform any actions
unncessary build the remote list (only when they're run with concurrency
enable), but that's a minor overhead compared to commands seeking
through the work tree and determining they don't need to do anything.
2019-06-19 13:05:03 -04:00
Joey Hess
04cc470201
run download checksum verification in separate job pool
get, move, copy, sync: When -J or annex.jobs has enabled concurrency,
checksum verification uses a separate job pool than is used for
downloads, to keep bandwidth saturated.

Not yet done for upload checksum verification, but that only affects
remotes on local disks.
2019-06-17 14:58:02 -04:00
Joey Hess
ba2551da6f
add startingNoMessage
Fixes the last wart in the StartMessage transition. A few commands
include other CommandStart actions that generate output, and
do not themselves need to display a start/end message.
2019-06-12 14:11:23 -04:00
Joey Hess
8e5ea28c26
finish CommandStart transition
The hoped for optimisation of CommandStart with -J did not materialize.
In fact, not runnign CommandStart in parallel is slower than -J3.
So, CommandStart are still run in parallel.

(The actual bad performance I've been seeing with -J in my big repo
has to do with building the remoteList.)

But, this is still progress toward making -J faster, because it gets rid
of the onlyActionOn roadblock in the way of making CommandCleanup jobs
run separate from CommandPerform jobs.

Added OnlyActionOn constructor for ActionItem which fixes the
onlyActionOn breakage in the last commit.

Made CustomOutput include an ActionItem, so even things using it can
specify OnlyActionOn.

In Command.Move and Command.Sync, there were CommandStarts that used
includeCommandAction, so output messages, which is no longer allowed.
Fixed by using startingCustomOutput, but that's still not quite right,
since it prevents message display for the includeCommandAction run
inside it too.
2019-06-12 13:24:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
436f107715
make CommandStart return a StartMessage
The goal is to be able to run CommandStart in the main thread when -J is
used, rather than unncessarily passing it off to a worker thread, which
incurs overhead that is signficant when the CommandStart is going to
quickly decide to stop.

To do that, the message it displays needs to be displayed in the worker
thread, after the CommandStart has run.

Also, the change will mean that CommandStart will no longer necessarily
run with the same Annex state as CommandPerform. While its docs already
said it should avoid modifying Annex state, I audited all the
CommandStart code as part of the conversion. (Note that CommandSeek
already sometimes runs with a different Annex state, and that has not been
a source of any problems, so I am not too worried that this change will
lead to breakage going forward.)

The only modification of Annex state I found was it calling
allowMessages in some Commands that default to noMessages. Dealt with
that by adding a startCustomOutput and a startingUsualMessages.
This lets a command start with noMessages and then select the output it
wants for each CommandStart.

One bit of breakage: onlyActionOn has been removed from commands that used it.
The plan is that, since a StartMessage contains an ActionItem,
when a Key can be extracted from that, the parallel job runner can
run onlyActionOn' automatically. Then commands won't need to worry about
this detail. Future work.

Otherwise, this was a fairly straightforward process of making each
CommandStart compile again. Hopefully other behavior changes were mostly
avoided.

In a few cases, a command had a CommandStart that called a CommandPerform
that then called showStart multiple times. I have collapsed those
down to a single start action. The main command to perhaps suffer from it
is Command.Direct, which used to show a start for each file, and no
longer does.

Another minor behavior change is that some commands used showStart
before, but had an associated file and a Key available, so were changed
to ShowStart with an ActionItemAssociatedFile. That will not change the
normal output or behavior, but --json output will now include the key.
This should not break it for anyone using a real json parser.
2019-06-06 17:13:54 -04:00
Joey Hess
258a7c5cd1
add Key to all ActionItem constructors 2019-06-06 12:53:24 -04:00
Joey Hess
40ecf58d4b
update licenses from GPL to AGPL
This does not change the overall license of the git-annex program, which
was already AGPL due to a number of sources files being AGPL already.

Legally speaking, I'm adding a new license under which these files are
now available; I already released their current contents under the GPL
license. Now they're dual licensed GPL and AGPL. However, I intend
for all my future changes to these files to only be released under the
AGPL license, and I won't be tracking the dual licensing status, so I'm
simply changing the license statement to say it's AGPL.

(In some cases, others wrote parts of the code of a file and released it
under the GPL; but in all cases I have contributed a significant portion
of the code in each file and it's that code that is getting the AGPL
license; the GPL license of other contributors allows combining with
AGPL code.)
2019-03-13 15:48:14 -04:00
Joey Hess
53526136e8
move commandAction out of CmdLine.Seek
This is groundwork for nested seek loops, eg seeking over all files and
then performing commandActions on a list of remotes, which can be done
concurrently.

This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
2018-10-01 14:12:06 -04:00
Joey Hess
1d1054faa6
added -z
Added -z option to git-annex commands that use --batch, useful for
supporting filenames containing newlines.

It only controls input to --batch, the output will still be line delimited
unless --json or etc is used to get some other output. While git often
makes -z affect both input and output, I don't like trying them together,
and making it affect output would have been a significant complication,
and also git-annex output is generally not intended to be machine parsed,
unless using --json or a format option.

Commands that take pairs like "file key" still separate them with a space
in --batch mode. All such commands take care to support filenames with
spaces when parsing that, so there was no need to change it, and it would
have needed significant changes to the batch machinery to separate tose
with a null.

To make fromkey and registerurl support -z, I had to give them a --batch
option. The implicit batch mode they enter when not provided with input
parameters does not support -z as that would have complicated option
parsing. Seemed better to move these toward using the same --batch as
everything else, though the implicit batch mode can still be used.

This commit was sponsored by Ole-Morten Duesund on Patreon.
2018-09-20 16:11:47 -04:00
Joey Hess
12460fcea6
make --batch honor matching options
When --batch is used with matching options like --in, --metadata, etc, only
operate on the provided files when they match those options. Otherwise, a
blank line is output in the batch protocol.

Affected commands: find, add, whereis, drop, copy, move, get

In the case of find, the documentation for --batch already said it honored
the matching options. The docs for the rest didn't, but it makes sense to
have them honor them. While this is a behavior change, why specify the
matching options with --batch if you didn't want them to apply?

Note that the batch output for all of the affected commands could
already output a blank line in other cases, so batch users should
already be prepared to deal with it.

git-annex metadata didn't seem worth making support the matching options,
since all it does is output metadata or set metadata, the use cases for
using it in combination with the martching options seem small. Made it
refuse to run when they're combined, leaving open the possibility for later
support if a use case develops.

This commit was sponsored by Brett Eisenberg on Patreon.
2018-08-08 12:07:06 -04:00
Joey Hess
b657242f5d
enforce retrievalSecurityPolicy
Leveraged the existing verification code by making it also check the
retrievalSecurityPolicy.

Also, prevented getViaTmp from running the download action at all when the
retrievalSecurityPolicy is going to prevent verifying and so storing it.

Added annex.security.allow-unverified-downloads. A per-remote version
would be nice to have too, but would need more plumbing, so KISS.
(Bill the Cat reference not too over the top I hope. The point is to
make this something the user reads the documentation for before using.)

A few calls to verifyKeyContent and getViaTmp, that don't
involve downloads from remotes, have RetrievalAllKeysSecure hard-coded.
It was also hard-coded for P2P.Annex and Command.RecvKey,
to match the values of the corresponding remotes.

A few things use retrieveKeyFile/retrieveKeyFileCheap without going
through getViaTmp.
* Command.Fsck when downloading content from a remote to verify it.
  That content does not get into the annex, so this is ok.
* Command.AddUrl when using a remote to download an url; this is new
  content being added, so this is ok.

This commit was sponsored by Fernando Jimenez on Patreon.
2018-06-21 13:37:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
2fabd7cdb5
remove the older move --force, which never behaved as documented and seems useless
* move: --force was accidentially enabling two unrelated behaviors
  since 6.20180427. The older behavior, which has never been well
  documented and seems almost entirely useless, has been removed.
* copy: --force no longer does anything.

This commit was sponsored by Øyvind Andersen Holm.
2018-05-21 13:21:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
f56594af9e
finish fixing inverted Ord for TrustLevel
Flipped all comparisons. When a TrustLevel list was wanted from Trusted
downwards, used Down to compare it in that order.

This commit was sponsored by mo on Patreon.
2018-04-13 15:17:54 -04:00
Joey Hess
a0e4b9678b
fix inverted Ord for TrustLevel (intermediate commit)
This commit removes the Ord and Enum instances, commenting out all code
that depends on them, to make sure that all code effected by the
inversion fix has been identified.

(Assuming no ifdefs involve TrustLevel.)

The next commit will fix up all the identified code.
2018-04-13 14:50:14 -04:00
Joey Hess
64980db7d9
move: Avoid drops that make bad situations worse, but otherwise allow
See the big comment at the bottom of Command.Drop for the full details.

(The --safe/--unsafe options were never released.)

This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
2018-04-13 14:36:43 -04:00
Joey Hess
af8546990d
move: --safe/--unsafe and potential drop race fix
move: Added --safe option, which makes move honor numcopies settings.
Also --unsafe enables the default behavior, anticipating that the
default may one day change.

This commit was sponsored by Ethan Aubin.
2018-04-09 16:20:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
ae530f043e
disentagle copy and move option parsing 2018-04-09 14:38:46 -04:00
Joey Hess
0106752db2
refactor FromToHereOptions 2018-04-09 14:29:28 -04:00
Joey Hess
46d4316954
implement annex.retry et al
Added annex.retry, annex.retry-delay, and per-remote versions to configure
transfer retries.

This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.
2018-03-29 13:04:07 -04:00
Joey Hess
6583448bab
add --json-error-messages (not yet implemented)
Added --json-error-messages option, which includes error messages in the
json output, rather than outputting them to stderr.

The actual rediretion of errors is not implemented yet, this is only
the docs and option plumbing.

This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.
2018-02-19 14:32:15 -04:00