Added files don't have to be committed before they can be unannexed.
unannex no longer commits existing staged changes
unannex of the last file in a directory now works, before it failed because
git rm deleted the directory out from under it,
Supporting multiple directory hash types will allow converting to a
different one, without a flag day.
gitAnnexLocation now checks which of the possible locations have a file.
This means more statting of files. Several places currently use
gitAnnexLocation and immediately check if the returned file exists;
those need to be optimised.
The only fully supported thing is to have the main repository on one disk,
and .git/annex on another. Only commands that move data in/out of the annex
will need to copy it across devices.
There is only partial support for putting arbitrary subdirectories of
.git/annex on different devices. For one thing, but this can require more
copies to be done. For example, when .git/annex/tmp is on one device, and
.git/annex/journal on another, every journal write involves a call to
mv(1). Also, there are a few places that make hard links between various
subdirectories of .git/annex with createLink, that are not handled.
In the common case without cross-device, the new moveFile is actually
faster than renameFile, avoiding an unncessary stat to check that a file
(not a directory) is being moved. Of course if a cross-device move is
needed, it is as slow as mv(1) of the data.
It would be nice if command-specific options were supported. The first
difficulty is that which command is being called is not known until after
getopt; but that could be worked around by finding the first non-dashed
parameter. Storing the settings without putting them in the annex monad is
the next difficulty; it could perhaps be handled by making the seek stage
pass applicable settings into the start stage (and from there on to perform
as needed). But that still leaves a problem, what data type to use to
represent the options between getopt and seek?
Left out the backend usage graph for now, and bad/temp directory sizes
are only displayed when present. Also, disk usage is returned as a string
with units, which I can see changing later.
In git, a Ref can be a Sha, or a Branch, or a Tag. I added type aliases for
those. Note that this does not prevent mixing up of eg, refs and branches
at the type level. Since git really doesn't care, except rare cases like
git update-ref, or git tag -d, that seems ok for now.
There's also a tree-ish, but let's just use Ref for it. A given Sha or Ref
may or may not be a tree-ish, depending on the object type, so there seems
no point in trying to represent it at the type level.
semitrusted uuids rarely are listed in trust.log, so a special case
is needed to get a list of them. Take the difference of all known uuids
with non-semitrusted uuids.
More accurately, it was supported already when map uses git-annex-shell,
but not when it does not.
Note that the user name cannot be shell escaped using git-annex's current
approach for shell escaping. I tried and some shells like dash cannot
cd ~'joey'. Rest of directory is still shell escaped, not for security but
in case a directory has a space or other weird character.
git-annex-shell inannex now returns always 0, 1, or 100 (the last when
it's unclear if content is currently in the index due to it currently being
moved or dropped).
(Actual locking code still not yet written.)
The lock will only persist during the perform stage, so the content must
be removed from the annex then, rather than in the cleanup stage.
(No lock is actually taken yet.)
Many functions took the repo as their first parameter. Changing it
consistently to be the last parameter allows doing some useful things with
currying, that reduce boilerplate.
In particular, g <- gitRepo is almost never needed now, instead
use inRepo to run an IO action in the repo, and fromRepo to get
a value from the repo.
This also provides more opportunities to use monadic and applicative
combinators.
Avoid ever using read to parse a non-haskell formatted input string.
show :: Key is arguably still show abuse, but displaying Keys as filenames
is just too useful to give up.
This is my own damn fault for not making UUID a real type, and then relying
on the type checker to ensure my refactoring was correct -- which it wasn't!
I should probably add code to clean up bogus entries in the uuid.log, but
right now I want to get the fix out there to prevent people experiencing
this bug.
I should also make UUID a real data type.
The backend usage graph shows present keys as well as keys found in the
repository tree, so it will also be populated for bare repositories.
Changed wording to "visible annex keys", which explains why it's 0 in
a bare repository (no keys visible as no tree), and also why it varies
depending on which branch is checked out. This seemed better than doing
something expensive to look up keys from the git-annex branch.
Checks location log information, and file contents.
Does not check that numcopies is satisfied, as .gitattributes information
about numcopies is not available in a bare repository. In practice, that
should not be a problem, since fsck is also run in a checkout and will
check numcopies there.
This new approach allows filtering out checks from the default set that are
not appropriate for a command, rather than having to list every check
that is appropriate. It also reduces some boilerplate.
Haskell does not define Eq for functions, so I had to go a long way around
with each check having a unique id. Meh.
This yields a second or so speedup in unused, find, etc. Seems that even
when the ByteString is immediately split and then converted to Strings,
it's faster.
I may try to push ByteStrings out into more of git-annex gradually,
although I suspect most of the time-critical parts are already covered
now, and many of the rest rely on libraries that only support Strings.
Fixed the laziness space leak, so it runs in 60 mb or so again. Slightly
faster due to using Data.Set.difference now, although this also makes it
use slightly more memory.
Also added display of the refs being checked, and made unused --from
also check all refs for things in the remote.
Using Sets is the right thing; they have constant size lookup like my
SizeList, and logn insertation, which beats nub to death.
Runs faster than --fast mode did before, and gives accurate counts.
13 seconds total runtime with a warm cache in a repository with 40 thousand
keys.
find: Rather than only showing files whose contents are present, when used
with --exclude --copies or --in, displays all files that match the
specified conditions.
Note that this is a behavior change for find --exclude! Old behavior
can be gotten with find --in . --exclude=...
These were a mistake, they make the type signatures harder to read and
less flexible. The CommandSeek, CommandStart, CommandPerform, and
CommandCleanup types were a good idea, but composing them with the
parameters expected is going too far.
It probably does not make sense to enable auto mode for move. I cannot
think of a situation where it would make sense to try to use it.
A hypothetical auto mode for move would only differ from a normal
move in one case -- when both repositories have a file, move deletes it
from one, and this reduces the number of copies. So an auto mode would
either only let move work in that situation, or avoid removing the file
in that situation, depending on the number of copies. This would be
complex to implement, and is perhaps not a very obvious behavior.
The error is a good thing to have, so users don't expect it to do something
it does not.
get, drop: Added --auto option, which decides whether to get/drop content
as needed to work toward the configured numcopies.
The problem with bundling it up in optimize was that I then found I wanted
to run an optmize that did not drop files, only got them. Considered adding
a --only-get switch to it, but that seemed wrong. Instead, let's make
existing subcommands optionally smarter.
Note that the only actual difference between drop and drop --auto is that
the latter does not even try to drop a file if it knows of not enough
copies, and does not print any error messages about files it was unable to
drop.
It might be nice to make get avoid asking git for attributes when not in
auto mode. For now it always asks for attributes.
Adds a missing newline when a longnote is followed by a endresult.
Multiple longnotes in a row will now be separated by a blank line, which
could be a bug or a feature depending on taste.
Removed several places where newlines were explicitly displayed after
longnotes.
First, this ensures that git annex addurl, when run repeatedly with the
same url, doesn't create duplicate files, which it did before when it
fell back to the longer filename.
Secondly, the file part of an url is frequently not very descriptive on its
own.
The uri scheme, auth, and port is intentionally left out, as clutter.
Using a single strictness annotation, in just the right place.
Tried several others, none of which helped and some of which potentially
hurt. This is only the second time I've really had to deal with this in
a year of using haskell, which is, I suppose not that bad.
when a git repository is first being created. Clones will automatically
notice that git-annex is in use and automatically perform a basic
initalization. It's still recommended to run "git annex init" in any
clones, to describe them.
The tricky part about this is that to generate a key, the file must be
present already. Worked around by adding (back) an URL key type, which
is used for addurl --fast.
This was more complex than would be expected. unannex has to use git commit -a
since it's removing files from git; git commit filelist won't do.
Allow commands to be added to the Git queue that have no associated files,
and run such commands once.
The only remaining vestiage of backends is different types of keys. These
are still called "backends", mostly to avoid needing to change user interface
and configuration. But everything to do with storing keys in different
backends was gone; instead different types of remotes are used.
In the refactoring, lots of code was moved out of odd corners like
Backend.File, to closer to where it's used, like Command.Drop and
Command.Fsck. Quite a lot of dead code was removed. Several data structures
became simpler, which may result in better runtime efficiency. There should
be no user-visible changes.
That sucking sound is a whole page of code vanishing to be replaced with
return . catMaybes . map (logFileKey . takeFileName) =<< Branch.files
What can I say, git is my database, and haskell my copilot.
Do not set annex.version whenever any command is run. Just do it in init.
This ensures that, if a repo has annex.version=3, it has a git-annex
branch, so we don't have to run a command every time to check for the
branch.
Remove the old ad-hoc logic for v0 and v1, to simplify version checking.
stop changing gitattributes on init
create git-annex branch on init
ugly special case for init in a bare repository goes away, yay!
git annex init is also faster, at least in a large existing repo, as
it does not need to run the slow 'git add'
get not honoring --from has surprised me a few times, so least surprise
suggests it should just behave like copy --from. This leaves the difference
between get and copy being that copy always requires the remote to copy
from, while get will decide whether to get a file from a key/value store or
a remote.
Avoid git reset here too, so I no longer need to care that it's much more
expensive than seems wise (but I asked the git list about that anyway).
It's not necessary to reset the staged file content from the index, as
the `git add` of the the symlink will replace it anyway.
`git commit` of unlocked files is still slow, since git still has to shove
their entire content into the index, only to have it be thrown away. So it's
still better to use `git annex add`
This was a real PITA to fix, since location logs can be staged in
both the current repo, as well as in local remote's repos, in
which case the cwd will not be in the repo. And git add needs different
params in both cases, when absolute paths are not used.
In passing, git annex fsck now stages location log fixes.
Since the queue is flushed in between subcommand actions being run,
there should be no issues with actions that expect to queue up some stuff
and have it run after they do other stuff. So I didn't have to audit for
such assumptions.