Note that a key with no size field that is hard linked will
result in listImportableContents reporting a file size of 0,
rather than the actual size of the file. One result is that
the progress meter when getting the file will seem to get stuck
at 100%. Another is that the remote's preferred content expression,
if it tries to match against file size, will treat it as an empty file.
I don't see a way to improve the latter behavior, and the former behavior
is a minor enough problem.
This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
Keys stored on the filesystem are mangled by keyFile to avoid problem
chars. So, that mangling has to be reversed when parsing files from a
borg backup back to a key.
The directory special remote also so mangles them. Some other special
remotes do not; eg S3 just serializes the key -- but S3 object names are
not limited to filesystem valid filenames anyway, so a S3 server must
not map them directly to files in any case. It seems unlikely that a
borg backup of some such special remote will get broken by this change.
This commit was sponsored by Graham Spencer on Patreon.
New error message:
Remote foo not usable by git-annex; setting annex-ignore
http://localhost/foo/config download failed: Configuration of annex.security.allowed-ip-addresses does not allow accessing address ::1
If git config parse fails, or the git config file is not available at the url,
a better error message for that is also shown.
This commit was sponsored by Mark Reidenbach on Patreon.
It changed parseOnly in the ByteString.Lazy module to take a lazy, not
strict ByteString. In all these cases though, we actually had a strict
ByteString, so the most efficient fix, which also happens to avoid needing
ifdefs, is to use the non-lazy module instead.
This commit was sponsored by Denis Dzyubenko on Patreon.
This was making it git checkout master when that branch was already
checked out, for apparently no good reason at all. In a 100,000 file
repo, that takes about 1 second.
Note, I'm not sure why it checks out the branch in the Nothing case, so
I left that alone.
Seems that hasOrigin was never finding origin's git-annex branch, so a new
one got created each time. And so then it later needed to merge the two
branches, which is expensive.
Added --no-track to git branch to avoid it displaying a message about
setting up tracking branches. Of course there's no reason to make the
git-annex branch a tracking branch since git-annex auto-merges it.
Can beet to false to avoid some expensive things needed to support unlocked
files.
See my comment for why this only controls what init sets up, and not other
behavior.
I didn't bother with making the v5 upgrade code path look at this, though
it easily could, because the docs say to run git-annex init after setting
it to make it take effect.
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.
I don't think this was really intentional behavior. It may be that it was
useful to include it so it could be passed to rmurl, since without it rmurl
would not actually remove the url. Since that was changed earlier today,
now seems like a good time to clean up the display of these urls.
This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
fsck: When --from is used in combination with --all or similar options, do
not verify required content, which can't be checked properly when operating
on keys.
This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
it seems to make sense to have linux and osx first since a lot of users
use those, and windows at the end because well, it's windows. but it
seemed odd to start with osx, so moved linux up.
alphabetical would maybe be better, but then android comes first, which
just feels weird since it's such a niche port. also the linux distro
sublist has a good reason not to be alphabetical, eg docker and conda
are on there as kind of last resorts