Commit graph

31 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Hess
b68a8d8968
use conversion functions from filepath-bytestring (again)
This reverts commit 3a04af7927.
2020-01-04 20:18:40 -04:00
Joey Hess
3a04af7927
temporary revert "use conversion functions from filepath-bytestring"
This reverts commit 75c40279c1.

Debian unstable is one version too old, so this can be de-reverted in a
bit.
2019-12-27 19:29:09 -04:00
Joey Hess
75c40279c1
use conversion functions from filepath-bytestring
Behavior should be the same, but I'd hope to eventually get rid of
most of Utility.FileSystemEncoding and this is a first step.
2019-12-18 13:42:43 -04:00
Joey Hess
322c542b5c
fix ByteString conversion on windows
the encode' and decode' functions on Windows should not apply the
filesystem encoding, which does not work there. Instead, convert to and
from UTF-8.

Also, avoid exporting encodeW8 and decodeW8. Both use the filesystem
encoding, so won't work as expected on windows.
2019-12-18 13:32:56 -04:00
Joey Hess
fc21cccf1c
slight optimisation more 2019-01-11 19:56:31 -04:00
Joey Hess
ba2c0663f9
comments 2019-01-01 22:48:14 -04:00
Joey Hess
ec1b9da72f
avoid abusing from/toRawFilePath for non-FilePaths 2019-01-01 22:44:04 -04:00
Joey Hess
b3c69eaaf8
strict bytestring encoders and decoders
Only had lazy ones before.

Already sped up a few parts of the code.
2019-01-01 14:55:15 -04:00
Joey Hess
7dc28dc705
Support building with hinotify-0.3.10.
Kept backwards compat with old versions via a shim.

This commit was sponsored by mo on Patreon.
2018-05-08 14:43:06 -04:00
Joey Hess
a1730cd6af
adeiu, MissingH
Removed dependency on MissingH, instead depending on the split
library.

After laying groundwork for this since 2015, it
was mostly straightforward. Added Utility.Tuple and
Utility.Split. Eyeballed System.Path.WildMatch while implementing
the same thing.

Since MissingH's progress meter display was being used, I re-implemented
my own. Bonus: Now progress is displayed for transfers of files of
unknown size.

This commit was sponsored by Shane-o on Patreon.
2017-05-16 01:03:52 -04:00
Joey Hess
6dd806f1ad
stop using MissingH for MD5
Cryptonite is faster and allocates less, and I want to get rid of
MissingH use.

Note that the new dependency on memory is free; it's a dependency of
cryptonite.

This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.
2017-05-15 21:36:03 -04:00
Joey Hess
23d71423e1
work around ghc segfault
hSetEncoding of a closed handle segfaults.
https://ghc.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/7161

8484c0c197 introduced the crash.
In particular, stdin may get closed (by eg, getContents) and then trying
to set its encoding will crash. We didn't need to adjust stdin's
encoding anyway, but only stderr, to work around
https://github.com/yesodweb/persistent/issues/474

Thanks to Mesar Hameed for assistance related to reproducing this bug.
2016-12-30 18:14:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
8484c0c197
Always use filesystem encoding for all file and handle reads and writes.
This is a big scary change. I have convinced myself it should be safe. I
hope!
2016-12-24 14:46:31 -04:00
Joey Hess
4224fae71f
optimise read and write for Keys database (untested)
Writes are optimised by queueing up multiple writes when possible.
The queue is flushed after the Annex monad action finishes. That makes it
happen on program termination, and also whenever a nested Annex monad action
finishes.

Reads are optimised by checking once (per AnnexState) if the database
exists. If the database doesn't exist yet, all reads return mempty.

Reads also cause queued writes to be flushed, so reads will always be
consistent with writes (as long as they're made inside the same Annex monad).
A future optimisation path would be to determine when that's not necessary,
which is probably most of the time, and avoid flushing unncessarily.

Design notes for this commit:

- separate reads from writes
- reuse a handle which is left open until program
  exit or until the MVar goes out of scope (and autoclosed then)
- writes are queued
  - queue is flushed periodically
  - immediate queue flush before any read
  - auto-flush queue when database handle is garbage collected
  - flush queue on exit from Annex monad
    (Note that this may happen repeatedly for a single database connection;
    or a connection may be reused for multiple Annex monad actions,
    possibly even concurrent ones.)
- if database does not exist (or is empty) the handle
  is not opened by reads; reads instead return empty results
- writes open the handle if it was not open previously
2015-12-23 19:18:52 -04:00
Joey Hess
04e150abb3
use intercalate instead of MissingH's join
The two functions are identical.
2015-11-17 17:27:24 -04:00
Joey Hess
e953be11af avoid throwing exception when String is not encoded using the filesystem encoding
Since _encodeFilePath generates a String that doesn't use the filesystem
encoding, when this exception is caught, we know we already have such a
String, and can just return it as-is.
2015-08-12 10:57:48 -04:00
Joey Hess
4e4e11849a fix test suite fail in LANG=C
This was caused by 23e9d3bb77

an Arbitrary String is not necessarily encoded using the filesystem
encoding, and in a non-utf8 locale, encodeBS throws an exception on such a
string. All I could think to do is limit test data to ascii.

This shouldn't be a problem in practice, because the all Strings in
git-annex that are not generated by Arbitrary should be loaded in a way
that does apply the filesystem encoding.
2015-08-12 10:36:51 -04:00
Joey Hess
23e9d3bb77 Fix setting/setting/viewing metadata that contains unicode or other special characters, when in a non-unicode locale.
Oh boy, not again. So, another place that the filesystem encoding needs to
be applied. Yay.

In passing, I changed decodeBS so if a NUL is embedded in the input, the
resulting FilePath doesn't get truncated at that NUL. This was needed to
make prop_b64_roundtrips pass, and on reviewing the callers of decodeBS, I
didn't see any where this wouldn't make sense. When a FilePath is used to
operate on the filesystem, it'll get truncated at a NUL anyway, whereas if
a String is being used for something else, it might conceivably have a NUL
in it, and we wouldn't want it to get truncated when going through
decodeBS.
(NB: There may be a speed impact from this change.)
2015-08-11 18:40:59 -04:00
Joey Hess
ed4fe02896 disable horrible tab warning, needed in every file that Setup.hs pulls in
This is certianly a cabal bug for not passing the build options in the
cabal file when building Setup.hs.

And, why oh why did ghc enable this warning by default? So unhappy with
this choice.
2015-05-10 16:31:50 -04:00
Joey Hess
9b93278e8a metadata: Fix encoding problem that led to mojibake when storing metadata strings that contained both unicode characters and a space (or '!') character.
The fix is to stop using w82s, which does not properly reconstitute unicode
strings. Instrad, use utf8 bytestring to get the [Word8] to base64. This
passes unicode through perfectly, including any invalid filesystem encoded
characters.

Note that toB64 / fromB64 are also used for creds and cipher
embedding. It would be unfortunate if this change broke those uses.

For cipher embedding, note that ciphers can contain arbitrary bytes (should
really be using ByteString.Char8 there). Testing indicated it's not safe to
use the new fromB64 there; I think that characters were incorrectly
combined.

For credpair embedding, the username or password could contain unicode.
Before, that unicode would fail to round-trip through the b64.
So, I guess this is not going to break any embedded creds that worked
before.

This bug may have affected some creds before, and if so,
this change will not fix old ones, but should fix new ones at least.
2015-03-04 12:54:30 -04:00
Joey Hess
afc5153157 update my email address and homepage url 2015-01-21 12:50:09 -04:00
Joey Hess
7b50b3c057 fix some mixed space+tab indentation
This fixes all instances of " \t" in the code base. Most common case
seems to be after a "where" line; probably vim copied the two space layout
of that line.

Done as a background task while listening to episode 2 of the Type Theory
podcast.
2014-10-09 15:09:11 -04:00
Joey Hess
2427832bed relicense general utility library code to BSD
Omitted a couple of files what have had significant contributions from
others.
2014-05-10 11:01:27 -03:00
Joey Hess
1052eeface Windows: Fix some filename encoding bugs.
http://git-annex.branchable.com/bugs/Unicode_file_names_ignored_on_Windows/

Not a complete fix yet.
2014-03-19 15:57:56 -04:00
Joey Hess
ddd46db09a Fix a few bugs involving filenames that are at or near the filesystem's maximum filename length limit.
Started with a problem when running addurl on a really long url,
because the whole url is munged into the filename. Ended up doing
a fairly extensive review for places where filenames could get too large,
although it's hard to say I'm not missed any..

Backend.Url had a 128 character limit, which is fine when the limit is 255,
but not if it's a lot shorter on some systems. So check the pathconf()
limit. Note that this could result in fromUrl creating different keys
for the same url, if run on systems with different limits. I don't see
this is likely to cause any problems. That can already happen when using
addurl --fast, or if the content of an url changes.

Both Command.AddUrl and Backend.Url assumed that urls don't contain a
lot of multi-byte unicode, and would fail to truncate an url that did
properly.

A few places use a filename as the template to make a temp file.
While that's nice in that the temp file name can be easily related back to
the original filename, it could lead to `git annex add` failing to add a
filename that was at or close to the maximum length.

Note that in Command.Add.lockdown, the template is still derived from the
filename, just with enough space left to turn it into a temp file.
This is an important optimisation, because the assistant may lock down
a bunch of files all at once, and using the same template for all of them
would cause openTempFile to iterate through the same set of names,
looking for an unused temp file. I'm not very happy with the relatedTemplate
hack, but it avoids that slowdown.

Backend.WORM does not limit the filename stored in the key.
I have not tried to change that; so git annex add will fail on really long
filenames when using the WORM backend. It seems better to preserve the
invariant that a WORM key always contains the complete filename, since
the filename is the only unique material in the key, other than mtime and
size. Since nobody has complained about add failing (I think I saw it
once?) on WORM, probably it's ok, or nobody but me uses it.

There may be compatability problems if using git annex addurl --fast
or the WORM backend on a system with the 255 limit and then trying to use
that repo in a system with a smaller limit. I have not tried to deal with
those.

This commit was sponsored by Alexander Brem. Thanks!
2013-07-30 19:18:29 -04:00
Joey Hess
60c31afc38 add decodeW8 2012-09-13 19:14:29 -04:00
Joey Hess
ee2acd474f [Word8] to filesystem encoded String
My, GHC makes this hard.
2012-06-20 12:51:25 -04:00
Joey Hess
f9d44cccd9 perhaps more clear type 2012-03-10 11:38:38 -04:00
Joey Hess
bca3fd65b9 fix key directory hash calculation code
Fix Key directory hash calculation code to behave as it did before version
3.20120227 when a key contains non-ascii.

The hash directories for a given Key are based on its md5sum.
Prior to ghc 7.4, Keys contained raw, undecoded bytes, so the md5sum was
taken of each byte in turn. With the ghc 7.4 filename encoding change,
keys contains decoded unicode characters (possibly with surrigates for
undecodable bytes). This changes the result of the md5sum, since the md5sum
used is pure haskell and supports unicode. And that won't do, as git-annex
will start looking in a different hash directory for the content of a key.

The surrigates are particularly bad, since that's essentially a ghc
implementation detail, so could change again at any time. Also, changing
the locale changes how the bytes are decoded, which can also change
the md5sum.

Symptoms would include things like:

* git annex fsck would complain that no copies existed of a file,
  despite its symlink pointing to the content that was locally present
* git annex fix would change the symlink to use the wrong hash
  directory.

Only WORM backend is likely to have been affected, since only it tends
to include much filename data (SHA1E could in theory also be affected).

I have not tried to support the hash directories used by git-annex versions
3.20120227 to 3.20120308, so things added with those versions with WORM
will require manual fixups. Sorry for the inconvenience!
2012-03-09 20:03:51 -04:00
Joey Hess
d6e77595ba factor out Utility.FileSystemEncoding 2012-03-09 19:08:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
789254747b refactor 2012-03-09 18:52:03 -04:00