Locking is used, so that, if there are multiple git-annex processes
using a remote concurrently, the stop hook is only run by the last
process that uses it.
Avoiding writing files larger than a specified size is useful on certian
things. For example, box.com has a file size limit of 100 mb. Could also
be useful on really crappy removable media.
Rather than go through the location log to see which files are present on
the remote, it simply looks at the disk contents directly.
I benchmarked this speeding up scanning 834 files, from an annex on my
phone's SSD, from 11.39 seconds to 1.31 seconds. (No files actually moved.)
Also benchmarked 8139 files, from an annex on spinning storage,
speeding up from 103.17 to 13.39 seconds.
Note that benchmarking with an encrypted annex on flash actually showed a
minor slowdown with this optimisation -- from 13.93 to 14.50 seconds. Seems
the overhead of doing the crypto needed to get the filenames to directly
check can be higher than the overhead of looking up data in the location
log. (Which says good things about how well the location log and git have
been optimised!) It *may* make sense to make encrypted local remotes not
have hasKeyCheap set; further benchmarking is called for.
Added Annex.cleanup, which is a general purpose interface for adding
actions to run at the end.
Remotes with the old git-annex-shell will commit every time, and have no
commit command, so hide stderr when running the commit command.
Now changes are staged into the branch's index, but not committed,
which avoids growing a large journal. And sync and merge always
explicitly commit, ensuring that even when they do nothing else,
they commit the staged changes.
Added a flag file to indicate that the branch's journal contains
uncommitted changes. (Could use git ls-files, but don't want to run
that every time.)
In the future, this ability to have uncommitted changes staged in the
journal might be used on remotes after a series of oneshot commands.
To avoid commits of data to the git-annex branch after each command
is run, set annex.alwayscommit=false. Its data will then be committed
less frequently, when a merge or sync is done.
I was able to reproduce this on linux using the kernel's nfs server and
mounting localhost:/. Determined that removing the directory fails when
the just-deleted file in it was locked. Considered dropping the lock
before removing the directory, but this would complicate parts of the code
that should not need to worry about locking. So instead, ignore the failure
to remove the directory in this case.
While I was at it, made it attempt to remove both levels of hash
directories, in case they're empty.
storing it in remotes/web/xx/yy/foo.log meant lots of extra directory
objects in git. Now I use xx/yy/foo.log.web, which is just as unique, but
more efficient since foo.log is there anyway.
Of course, it still looks in the old location too.
useful when adding hundreds of thousands of files on a system with plenty
of memory.
git add gets quite slow in such a large repository, so if the system has
more than the ~32 mb of memory the queue can use by default, it's a useful
optimisation to increase the queue size, in order to decrease the number
of times git add is run.
The list of files had to be retained until the end so it could be deleted.
Also, a list of update-index lines was generated and only then fed into it.
Now everything streams in constant space.
When hashing the files, the entire list of shas was read strictly.
That was entirely unnecessary, since there's a cleanup action run
after they're consumed.
Turns out that commit really made some serious improvements to memory use.
With the lazy state monad, git-annex add in a huge tree grew seemingly
without bound until it overflowed the stack. With the strict monad,
it uses 42 mb max.
It's possible another change since the 3.20120123 release fixed that,
but a964012fc3 seems most likely.
If there's no Content-Length, or the key has no size, this check is not
done, but it should happen most of the time, and protect against web
content that has changed.
Can be used to specify what file the url is added to. This can be used to
override the default filename that is used when adding an url, which is
based on the url. Or, when the file already exists, the url is recorded as
another location of the file.
Done by adding a oneshot mode, in which location log changes are written to
the journal, but not committed. Taking advantage of git-annex's existing
ability to recover in this situation.
This is used by git-annex-shell and other places where changes are made to
a remote's location log.
This drops the >>! and >>? with the nice low fixity. IfElse does have
undocumented >>=>>! and >>=>>? operators, but I deem that too fishy.
Anyway, using whenM and unlessM is easier; I sometimes mixed the operators
up.
Ssh connection caching is now enabled automatically by git-annex. Only one
ssh connection is made to each host per git-annex run, which can speed some
things up a lot, as well as avoiding repeated password prompts. Concurrent
git-annex processes also share ssh connections. Cached ssh connections are
shut down when git-annex exits.
Note: The rsync special remote does not yet participate in the ssh
connection caching.
Fscking a remote is now supported. It's done by retrieving
the contents of the specified files from the remote, and checking them,
so can be an expensive operation.
(Several optimisations are possible, to speed it up, of course.. This is
the slow and stupid remote fsck to start with.)
Still, if the remote is a special remote, or a git repository that you
cannot run fsck in locally, it's nice to have the ability to fsck it.
If you have any directory special remotes, now would be a good time to
fsck them, in case you were hit by the data loss bug fixed in the
previous release!
When moving a file to the remote failed, and partially transferred content
was left behind in the directory, re-running the same move would think it
succeeded and delete the local copy.
I reproduced data loss when moving files to a partition that was almost
full. Interrupting a transfer could have similar results.
Easily fixed by using a temp file which is then moved atomically into place
once the transfer completes.
I've audited other calls to copyFileExternal, and other special remote
file transfer code; everything else seems to use temp files correctly
(rsync, git), or otherwise use atomic transfers (bup, S3).
This way, the build log will indicate whether StatFS can be relied on.
I've tested all the failing architectures now, and on all of them,
the StatFS code now returns Nothing, rather than Just nonsense.
Also, if annex.diskreserve is set on a platform where StatFS is not
working, git-annex will complain.
Also, the Makefile was missing the sources target used when building with
cabal.
git-annex FTBFS on s390, mips, powerpc, sparc. That StatFS code is failing
on all of them. At least on s390, the failure appears as:
Just (FileSystemStats {fsStatBlockSize = 4096, fsStatBlockCount = 0,
fsStatByteCount = 0, fsStatBytesFree = 0, fsStatBytesAvailable = 0,
fsStatBytesUsed = 0})
While I don't understand why this is happening, or how to fix it,
bandaid over it by checking for obviously bad values and returning Nothing.
That disables disk free space checking, but at least git-annex will work.
Upstream bug: http://code.google.com/p/xmobar/issues/detail?id=70
This overrides the trust.log, and is overridden by the command-line trust
parameters.
It would have been nicer to have Logs.Trust.trustMap just look up the
configuration for all remotes, but a dependency loop prevented that
(Remotes depends on Logs.Trust in several ways). So instead, look up
the configuration when building remotes, storing it in the same forcetrust
field used for the command-line trust parameters.
Only set --no-tty when GPG_AGENT_INFO is set and batch mode is used.
In the test suite, set GPG_AGENT_INFO to /dev/null to avoid the test suite
relying on /dev/tty.