This fixes fsck of a remote that uses chunking displaying
(checking remotename) (checking remotename)" for every chunk.
Also, some remotes displayed the message, and others did not, with no
consistency. It was originally displayed only when accessing remotes
that were expensive or might involve a password prompt, I think, but
nothing in the API said when to do it so it became an inconsistent mess.
Originally I thought fsck should always display it. But it only displays
in fsck --from remote, so the user knows the remote is being accessed,
so there is no reason to tell them it's accessing it over and over.
It was also possible for git-annex move to sometimes display it twice,
due to checking if content is present twice. But, the user of move
specifies --from/--to, so it does not need to display when it's
accessing the remote, as the user expects it to access the remote.
git-annex get might display it, but only if the remote also supports
hasKeyCheap, which is really only local git remotes, which didn't
display it always; and in any case nothing displayed it before hasKeyCheap,
which is checked first, so I don't think this needs to display it ever.
mirror is like move. And that's all the main places it would have been
displayed.
This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
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".
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..
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.
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.
When autoenabling special remotes of type S3, weddav, or glacier, do not
take login credentials from environment variables, as the user may not be
expecting the autoenable to happen, and may have those set for other
purposes.
Avoiding using a callback simplifies this and should make it easier to
implement incremental checksumming, which will need to happen partly in
writeRetrievedContent and partly in retrieveChunks.
Checksum as content is received from a remote git-annex repository, rather
than doing it in a second pass.
Not tested at all yet, but I imagine it will work!
Not implemented for any special remotes, and also not implemented for
copies from local remotes. It may be that, for local remotes, it will
suffice to use rsync, rely on its checksumming, and simply return Verified.
(It would still make a checksumming pass when cp is used for COW, I guess.)
This code I'm reverting works. But it has a problem: The export db and
log and the ContentIdentifier db and log still list the content as being
stored in the remote. So when I ran borg create again and stored the
content in borg again in a new archive, git-annex sync noticed that, but
since it didn't update the tree for the old archives, it then thought
the content that had been removed from them was still in them, and so
git-annex get failed in an ugly way:
Include pattern 'tmp/x/.git/annex/objects/pX/ZJ/SHA256E-s0--e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855/SHA256E-s0--e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855' never matched.
[2020-12-28 16:40:44.878952393] process [933616] done ExitFailure 1
user error (borg ["extract","/tmp/b::abs4","tmp/x/.git/annex/objects/pX/ZJ/SHA256E-s0--e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855/SHA256E-s0--e3b0c44298fc1c149afbf4c8996fb92427ae41e4649b934ca495991b7852b855"] exited 1)
It does not seem worth it to update the git tree for the export when dropping
content, that would make drop of many files very expensive in git tree objects
created. So, let's not support this I suppose..
Still some issues to deal with, see TODO and XXX.
Here's what gets logged, for each key:
cid log:
1608582045.832799227s 6720ebad-b20e-4460-a8f2-2477361aea75 !MjAyMC0xMi0yMVQxMTozMzoxNw==:!MjAyMC0xMi0yMVQxMzowNzoyNg==
The "!Mj" are base64 encoded borg archive names, since mine were
dates and contained some characters not allowed in cid logs unescaped.
There were archives that each contained the key. This list will grow as
more borg backups are done and learned about.
tree generated:
120000 blob 5ef6a4615c084819b44cd4e3a31657664ddf643b x/dotgit/annex/objects/06/mv/SHA256E-s30--a5d8532e64ec28f5491e25e7a6c1cb68f80507c1be6c1b35f8ec53d25413e5da/SHA256E-s30--a5d8532e64ec28f5491e25e7a6c1cb68f80507c1be6c1b35f8ec53d25413e5da
120000 blob 063a139d3021c8db60f5c576d29fada2b824d91c x/dotgit/annex/objects/72/PP/SHA256E-s30--e80b09a854b4e4d99a76caaa6983b34272480e0b4fdb95d04234a54b4849b893/SHA256E-s30--e80b09a854b4e4d99a76caaa6983b34272480e0b4fdb95d04234a54b4849b893
120000 blob b53b54916fd6abf21fedf796deca08d5ac7a75af x/dotgit/annex/objects/Ww/pk/SHA256E-s30--6aac072a8ebf02a5807c4f15e77ed585a6c87b3b333ba625a3c8d6b4dc50a9f2/SHA256E-s30--6aac072a8ebf02a5807c4f15e77ed585a6c87b3b333ba625a3c8d6b4dc50a9f2
This commit was sponsored by Denis Dzyubenko on Patreon.
May actually work now.
Note that, importKey now has to add the size to the key if it's supposed
to have size. Remote.Directory relied on the importer adding the size,
which is no longer done, so it was changed; it was the only one.
This way, importKey does not need to behave differently between regular
and thirdpartypopulated imports.
This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is
populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then
git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are
annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote.
So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While
normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not,
because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not
user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated,
of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used
by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export
remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted
into the git-annex branch.
importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an
ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from
being included in the tree.
It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since
from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only
git-annex sync does it.
Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such
remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with
content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all
objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these
remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs
to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now.
(Untested and unused as of yet.)
This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
This is better than using the equivilant actions for export remotes,
especially for getting content, since the ContentIdentifier checking
means we can be sure (enough) that the content is valid to not force
verification of content. Which allows getting keys of types that cannot
be verified.
Also, reorganized the internals of adjustExportImport which was becoming
very hard to follow. Now it's clear what each method does in each case.
Ah, it seemed too easy before when I was implementing importrree only,
and it was because all the key-based actions needed to be handled too.
Mostly copied from isexport, and this works. It does seem that
an import remote could use retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier
rather than retrieveExport, and checkPresentExportWithContentIdentifier
rather than checkPresentExport, which would both be more accurate.
I do think this was a reversion, but I have not tracked back to what
version. While involving the remote config, it's not the same class of
problems that I kept having to chase down for a while after the remote
config parser reworking.
Done on unix, could not implement it on windows quite.
The signal library gets part of the way needed for windows.
But I had to open https://github.com/pmlodawski/signal/issues/1 because
it lacks raiseSignal.
Also, I don't know what the equivilant of getProcessGroupIDOf is on
windows. And System.Process does not provide a way to send any signal to
a process group except for SIGINT.
This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
There was no particular reason not to support this, other than maybe a lack
of a use case. One use case would of course be a remote that you want to
avoid overwriting content on. A new use case is the idea of importing from
backups, eg borg, where exporting is not necessarily supported at all.
This commit was sponsored by Brock Spratlen on Patreon.
It's not concurrent-output safe, and doesn't support
--json-error-messages.
Using Annex.makeRunner is a bit scary, because what if it's run in a
different thread from an active annex action? Normally the same Annex
state is not used concurrently in several threads, and it's not designed
to be fully concurrency safe. (Annex.Concurrent exists to deal with
that.) I think it will be ok in these simple cases though. Eg,
when buffering a warning message to json, Annex.changeState is used,
and it modifies the MVar in a concurrency safe way.
The only warningIO remaining is not a problem.
9cb250f7be got the ones in RawFilePath,
but there were others that used the one from unix-compat, which fails at
runtime on windows. To avoid this,
import System.PosixCompat.Files hiding removeLink
This commit was sponsored by Ethan Aubin.
It looks to me like the old code would have already dealt with the case
of ssh starting a ssh daemon that inherits stderr and keeps it open.
The ender thread closed the handle, which would unblock the other thread
and let it exit. Using hGetLineUntilExitOrEOF makes this more explicit
that it's dealt with and simplifies the code.
Lots of nice wins from this in avoiding unncessary work, and I think
nothing got slower.
This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
nukeFile replaced with removeWhenExistsWith removeLink, which allows
using RawFilePath. Utility.Directory cannot use RawFilePath since setup
does not depend on posix.
This commit was sponsored by Graham Spencer on Patreon.
Only done in checkPresentChunks, although retrieveChunks could also do
it. Does not seem necessary though, because git-annex never retrives
content without first checking if it's present AFAICR. And really this will
only be needed when using fsck. Puttting it here, rather than in fsck
avoids breaking an abstraction boundary, and is nice and inexpensive.
When a special remote has chunking enabled, but no chunk sizes are
recorded (or the recorded ones are not found), speculatively try chunks
using the configured chunk size.
This makes eg, git-annex fsck --from remote be able to fix up the
location log of a file that the git-annex branch does not indicate is
stored on the remote.
Note that fsck does *not* fix up the chunk log to indicate the chunk
size. So, changing the chunk config of the remote after that will still
prevent accessing the chunks stored on it. Maybe fsck should, but I
wanted to start with this and see if it's needed.
Only supported by some special remotes: directory
I need to check the rest and they're currently missing methods until I do.
git-annex sync --no-content does not yet use this to do imports
Fix bug that made creds not be stored in git when a special remote was
initialized with gpg encryption, but without an explicit embedcreds=yes.
(Yet nother regression introduced in version 7.20200202.7. 5th so far.)
Some recent changes to use mask missed that async exceptions can still
be thrown inside it. The goal is to make sure a block of cleanup code
runs entirely, w/o being interrupted by an async exception, so use
uninterruptibleMask.
Also, converted a few to bracket, which is nicer.
Except for the assistant, which I think may use them between threads?
Most of the uses of SomeException were already catching only async exceptions.
But I did find a few places that were accidentially catching them.