Commit graph

24 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Hess
4ed71b34de
migrate --apply
And avoid migrate --update/--aply migrating when the new key was already
present in the repository, and got dropped. Luckily, the location log
allows distinguishing from the new key never having been present!

That is mostly useful for --apply because otherwise dropped files would
keep coming back until the old objects were reaped as unused. But it
seemed to make sense to also do it for --update. for consistency in edge
cases if nothing else. One case where --update can use it is when one
branch got migrated earlier, and we dropped the file, and now another
branch has migrated the same file.

Sponsored-by: Jack Hill on Patreon
2023-12-08 13:23:46 -04:00
Joey Hess
ce455223df
split out appending to journal from writing, high level only
Currently this is not an improvement, but it allows for optimising
appendJournalFile later. With an optimised appendJournalFile, this will
greatly speed up access patterns like git-annex addurl of a lot of urls
to the same key, where the log file can grow rather large. Appending
rather than re-writing the journal file for each line can save a lot of
disk writes.

It still has to read the current journal or branch file, to check
if it can append to it, and so when the journal file does not exist yet,
it can write the old content from the branch to it. Probably the re-reads
are better cached by the filesystem than repeated writes. (If the
re-reads turn out to keep performance bad, they could be eliminated, at
the cost of not being able to compact the log when replacing old
information in it. That could be enabled by a switch.)

While the immediate need is to affect addurl writes, it was implemented
at the level of presence logs, so will also perhaps speed up location logs.
The only added overhead is the call to isNewInfo, which only needs to
compare ByteStrings. Helping to balance that out, it avoids compactLog
when it's able to append.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2022-07-18 13:22:50 -04:00
Joey Hess
d3d5d2b4ec
fix test suite failure when run with LANG=C 2021-08-18 17:36:00 -04:00
Joey Hess
1acdd18ea8
deal better with clock skew situations, using vector clocks
* Deal with clock skew, both forwards and backwards, when logging
  information to the git-annex branch.
* GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK can now be set to a fixed value (eg 1)
  rather than needing to be advanced each time a new change is made.
* Misuse of GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK will no longer confuse git-annex.

When changing a file in the git-annex branch, the vector clock to use is now
determined by first looking at the current time (or GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK
when set), and comparing it to the newest vector clock already in use in
that file. If a newer time stamp was already in use, advance it forward by
a second instead.

When the clock is set to a time in the past, this avoids logging with
an old timestamp, which would risk that log line later being ignored in favor
of "newer" line that is really not newer.

When a log entry has been made with a clock that was set far ahead in the
future, this avoids newer information being logged with an older timestamp
and so being ignored in favor of that future-timestamped information.
Once all clocks get fixed, this will result in the vector clocks being
incremented, until finally enough time has passed that time gets back ahead
of the vector clock value, and then it will return to usual operation.

(This latter situation is not ideal, but it seems the best that can be done.
The issue with it is, since all writers will be incrementing the last
vector clock they saw, there's no way to tell when one writer made a write
significantly later in time than another, so the earlier write might
arbitrarily be picked when merging. This problem is why git-annex uses
timestamps in the first place, rather than pure vector clocks.)

Advancing forward by 1 second is somewhat arbitrary. setDead
advances a timestamp by just 1 picosecond, and the vector clock could
too. But then it would interfere with setDead, which wants to be
overrulled by any change. So it could use 2 picoseconds or something,
but that seems weird. It could just as well advance it forward by a
minute or whatever, but then it would be harder for real time to catch
up with the vector clock when forward clock slew had happened.

A complication is that many log files contain several different peices of
information, and it may be best to only use vector clocks for the same peice
of information. For example, a key's location log file contains
InfoPresent/InfoMissing for each UUID, and it only looks at the vector
clocks for the UUID that is being changed, and not other UUIDs.

Although exactly where the dividing line is can be hard to determine.
Consider metadata logs, where a field "tag" can have multiple values set
at different times. Should it advance forward past the last tag?
Probably. What about when a different field is set, should it look at
the clocks of other fields? Perhaps not, but currently it does, and
this does not seems like it will cause any problems.

Another one I'm not entirely sure about is the export log, which is
keyed by (fromuuid, touuid). So if multiple repos are exporting to the
same remote, different vector clocks can be used for that remote.
It looks like that's probably ok, because it does not try to determine
what order things occurred when there was an export conflict.

Sponsored-by: Jochen Bartl on Patreon
2021-08-04 12:33:46 -04:00
Joey Hess
40ecf58d4b
update licenses from GPL to AGPL
This does not change the overall license of the git-annex program, which
was already AGPL due to a number of sources files being AGPL already.

Legally speaking, I'm adding a new license under which these files are
now available; I already released their current contents under the GPL
license. Now they're dual licensed GPL and AGPL. However, I intend
for all my future changes to these files to only be released under the
AGPL license, and I won't be tracking the dual licensing status, so I'm
simply changing the license statement to say it's AGPL.

(In some cases, others wrote parts of the code of a file and released it
under the GPL; but in all cases I have contributed a significant portion
of the code in each file and it's that code that is getting the AGPL
license; the GPL license of other contributors allows combining with
AGPL code.)
2019-03-13 15:48:14 -04:00
Joey Hess
936aee6a60
quickcheck property for parsing of content identifier logs 2019-02-21 13:17:43 -04:00
Joey Hess
928e08904d
avoid two test failures with LANG=C
Log.Remote.prop_parse_show_Config failed on an input of fromList [("\28162","")]
in LANG=C, encodeBS "\28162" == "\STX=", while in UTF-8 locale,
encodeBS "\28162" == "\230\184\130". So in the C locale, the String
that's the parsed Map key ends up being encoded differently than it was
in the input Map.

Logs.Presence.Pure.prop_parse_build_log was failing in LANG=C because
the Arbitrary LogLine for some reason sometimes generated LogInfo values
containing \n or \r, despite using suchThat to prevent that. I don't
understand why at all, but switching the suchThat to filter the
ByteString instead of the String before conversion with encodeBS
somehow avoids the problem.

Both of these suggest something wonky with encodeBS in LANG=C, but
I *think* it's not a problem except for with test data generated by
Arbitrary.
2019-01-18 13:33:48 -04:00
Joey Hess
7e54c215b4
Remove redundant endOfInput
parseLogLines consumes till endOfInput
2019-01-10 12:42:59 -04:00
Joey Hess
de4980ef85
simplify Show instance by deriving 2019-01-09 13:13:31 -04:00
Joey Hess
11f4d993b5
fix format of show instance
It's only used to show test suite failures..
2019-01-09 13:12:25 -04:00
Joey Hess
2d46038754
converting more log files to use Builder
Probably not any particular speedup in this, since most of these logs
are not written to often. Possibly chunk log writing is sped up, but
writes to chunk logs are interleaved with expensive data transfers to
remotes, so unlikely to be a noticiable speedup.
2019-01-09 13:06:37 -04:00
Joey Hess
ef8ddaa713
attoparsec parser for presence logs 2019-01-03 15:27:29 -04:00
Joey Hess
bfc9039ead
convert git-annex branch access to ByteStrings and Builders
Most of the individual logs are not converted yet, only presense logs
have an efficient ByteString Builder implemented so far. The rest
convert to and from String.
2019-01-03 13:21:48 -04:00
Joey Hess
0b307f43e1
avoid accidental Show of VectorClock
Removed its Show instance.
2017-08-14 14:51:54 -04:00
Joey Hess
2cecc8d2a3
Added GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK environment variable
Can be used to override the default timestamps used in log files in the
git-annex branch. This is a dangerous environment variable; use with
caution.

Note that this only affects writing to the logs on the git-annex branch.
It is not used for metadata in git commits (other env vars can be set for
that).

There are many other places where timestamps are still used, that don't
get committed to git, but do touch disk. Including regular timestamps
of files, and timestamps embedded in some files in .git/annex/, including
the last fsck timestamp and timestamps in transfer log files.

A good way to find such things in git-annex is to get for getPOSIXTime and
getCurrentTime, although some of the results are of course false positives
that never hit disk (unless git-annex gets swapped out..)

So this commit does NOT necessarily make git-annex comply with some HIPPA
privacy regulations; it's up to the user to determine if they can use it in
a way compliant with such regulations.

Benchmarking: It takes 0.00114 milliseconds to call getEnv
"GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK" when that env var is not set. So, 100 thousand log
files can be written with an added overhead of only 0.114 seconds. That
should be by far swamped by the actual overhead of writing the log files
and making the commit containing them.

This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.
2017-08-14 14:19:58 -04:00
Joey Hess
176cd98293
remove \r from Arbitrary for log tests 2016-05-27 12:04:49 -04:00
Joey Hess
eba68572dc
Split lines in the git-annex branch on \r as well as \n, to deal with \r\n terminated lines written by some versions of git-annex on Windows.
This fixes strange displays in some cases, including whereis showing
many duplicate locations, and showing more total copies than actually
exist.

It's unknown if that lead to data loss when eg, dropping. At the moment,
it seems unlikely it could, since the UUID with \r's appended is not the
same as a UUID without, and so no remote matches it.

It's also unknown if \r's can leak in on windows, perhaps when merging the
git-annex branch.
2016-05-27 11:45:13 -04:00
Joey Hess
737e45156e
remove 163 lines of code without changing anything except imports 2016-01-20 16:36:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
f9adb905fc
Avoid unncessary write to the location log when a file is unlocked and then added back with unchanged content.
Implemented with no additional overhead of compares etc.

This is safe to do for presence logs because of their locality of change;
a given repo's presence logs are only ever changed in that repo, or in a
repo that has just been actively changing the content of that repo.

So, we don't need to worry about a split-brain situation where there'd
be disagreement about the location of a key in a repo. And so, it's ok to
not update the timestamp when that's the only change that would be made
due to logging presence info.
2015-10-12 14:46:47 -04:00
Joey Hess
53ede1a10e parse X in location log file as indicating a dead key
A dead key is both not present at the location that thinks it has a copy,
and also is assumed to probably not be present anywhere else. Although
there may be lurking disconnected repos that somehow still have a copy.

Suprisingly few changes needed for this! This is because the presence log
code only really concerns itself with keys that are present, and dead keys
are not present.

Note that both the location and web log can be parsed as having a dead key.
I don't see any value to having keys listed as dead in the web log, but
since it doesn't change any behavior, there was no point in not parsing it.
2015-06-09 13:28:30 -04:00
Joey Hess
6cf62a9bde support time-1.5.0
This no longer uses old-locale's defaultTimeLocale, but provides one
of its own.

Factored out a Logs.TimeStamp.
2015-05-10 15:21:35 -04:00
Joey Hess
afc5153157 update my email address and homepage url 2015-01-21 12:50:09 -04:00
Joey Hess
43dc7f678f setpresentkey: A new plumbing-level command. 2014-12-29 15:16:40 -04:00
Joey Hess
0831e18372 forget --drop-dead: Completely removes mentions of repositories that have been marked as dead from the git-annex branch.
Wrote nice pure transition calculator, and ugly code to stage its results
into the git-annex branch. Also had to split up several Log modules
that Annex.Branch needed to use, but that themselves used Annex.Branch.

The transition calculator is limited to looking at and changing one file at
a time. While this made the implementation relatively easy, it precludes
transitions that do stuff like deleting old url log files for keys that are
being removed because they are no longer present anywhere.
2013-08-31 17:51:13 -04:00