* New annex.hardlink setting. Closes: #758593
* init: Automatically detect when a repository was cloned with --shared,
and set annex.hardlink=true, as well as marking the repository as
untrusted.
Had to reorganize Logs.Trust a bit to avoid a cycle between it and
Annex.Init.
It seems that all other uses of <div .col-sm-9> occur outside of
<div .content-box>. This one occurred inside it, when xmpp pairing.
This was introduced in the bootstrap 3 conversion.
This avoids cp -a overriding the default mode acls that the user might have
set in a git repository.
With GNU cp, this behavior change should not be a breaking change, because
git-anex also uses rsync sometimes in the same situation, and has only ever
preserved timestamps when using rsync.
Systems without GNU cp will no longer use cp -a, but instead just cp.
So, timestamps will no longer be preserved. Preserving timestamps when
copying between repos is not guaranteed anyway.
Closes: #729757
Old behavior was to take the first fuzzy match. Now, it checks the globa
git config, and runs the normal fuzzy handling, including failing to run a
semi-random command by default.
This does mean that eg, copying multiple files to a local remote will
become slightly slower, since it now restarts git-cat-file after each copy.
Should not be significant slowdown.
The reason git-cat-file is run on the remote at all is to update its
location log. In order to add an item to it, it needs to get the current
content of the log. Finding a way to avoid needing to do that would be a
good path to avoiding this slowdown if it does become a problem somehow.
This commit was sponsored by Evan Deaubl.
(With the exception of daemon pid locking.)
This fixes at part of #758630. I reproduced the assistant locking eg, a
removable drive's annex journal lock file and forking a long-running
git-cat-file process that inherited that lock.
This did not affect Windows.
Considered doing a portable Utility.LockFile layer, but git-annex uses
posix locks in several special ways that have no direct Windows equivilant,
and it seems like it would mostly be a complication.
This commit was sponsored by Protonet.
Note that this means getopt parsing is done even when not in a git
repository, even though currently cmdnorepo is not passed the results of
it. I'd like to move to cmdnorepo not doing its own ad-hoc option parsing,
so this is really a good thing. (But as long as eg, getOptionFlag needs an
Annex monad, it cannot be used in cmdnorepo handling.)
There is a potential for problems if any cmdnorepo branch of a command
handles options that are not in its regular getopt, but that would be a bug
anyway.
The hoary old HTTP library was only used when checking if an url exists,
when curl was not available. It had many problems, including not supporting
https at all.
Now, this is done using http-conduit for all urls that it supports. Falls
back to curl for any url that http-conduit doesn't like (probably ftp etc,
but could also be an url that its parser chokes on for whatever reason).
This adds a new dependency on http-conduit, but webdav support already
indirectly depended on that, and the s3-aws branch also uses it.
This opens up the possibility of using http-conduit for large file
downloads, but for now I've left it using wget/curl.
This commit was sponsored by Paul Tötterman.
Since encryption=shared, the encryption key is stored in the git repo, so
there is no point at all in encrypting the creds, also stored in the git
repo with that key. So `initremote` doesn't. The creds are simply stored
base-64 encoded.
However, it then tried to always decrypt creds when encryption was used..
replaceFileOr was broken and ran the rollback action always.
Luckily, for replaceFile, the rollback action was safe to run, since it
just nuked a temp file that had already been moved into place.
However, when `git annex direct` used replaeFileOr, its rollback printed a
scary message:
/home/joey/tmp/rrrr/.git/annex/misctmp/tmp32268: rename: does not exist (No such file or directory)
There was actually no bad result though.
This speeds up the webdav special remote somewhat, since it often now
groups actions together in a single http connection when eg, storing a
file.
Legacy chunks are still supported, but have not been sped up.
This depends on a as-yet unreleased version of DAV.
This commit was sponsored by Thomas Hochstein.
Reusing http connection when operating on chunks is not done yet,
I had to submit some patches to DAV to support that. However, this is no
slower than old-style chunking was.
Note that it's a fileRetriever and a fileStorer, despite DAV using
bytestrings that would allow streaming. As a result, upload/download of
encrypted files is made a bit more expensive, since it spools them to temp
files. This was needed to get the progress meters to work.
There are probably ways to avoid that.. But it turns out that the current
DAV interface buffers the whole file content in memory, and I have
sent in a patch to DAV to improve its interfaces. Using the new interfaces,
it's certainly going to need to be a fileStorer, in order to read the file
size from the file (getting the size of a bytestring would destroy
laziness). It should be possible to use the new interface to make it be a
byteRetriever, so I'll change that when I get to it.
This commit was sponsored by Andreas Olsson.
When files are stored using rsync, they have their write bit removed;
so does the directory they're put in. The local repo code did not turn
these bits back on, so failed to remove.
bup already splits files and does rolling deltas, so there is no reason to
use chunking here.
The new API made it easier to add progress support for storeKey, so that's
done. Unfortunately, bup-split still outputs its own progress with -q,
so a little ugly, but not too bad.
Made dropping remove the branch for an object, for two reasons:
1. The new API calls removeKey to roll back a storeKey when the content
changed unexpectedly.
2. So that testremote will be happy.
Also, fixed a bug that caused a crash when removing the branch for an
object in rollback.
This only performs some basic tests so far; no testing of chunking or
resuming. Also, the existing encryption type of the remote is used; it
would be good later to derive an encrypted and a non-encrypted version of
the remote and test them both.
This commit was sponsored by Joseph Liu.
For example, I had a copy to a remote that was failing for an unknown
reason. This let me see the exception was createDirectory: permission
denied; the underlying problem being a permissions issue.
Leverage the new chunked remotes to automatically resume downloads.
Sort of like rsync, although of course not as efficient since this
needs to start at a chunk boundry.
But, unlike rsync, this method will work for S3, WebDAV, external
special remotes, etc, etc. Only directory special remotes so far,
but many more soon!
This implementation will also properly handle starting a download
from one remote, interrupting, and resuming from another one, and so on.
(Resuming interrupted chunked uploads is similarly doable, although
slightly more expensive.)
This commit was sponsored by Thomas Djärv.
The repair code assumed that if fsck found no broken objects, after
removing bad objects and possibly pulling replacements from remote, all was
well.. but this is not really true. Removing bad objects could leave some
branches broken. fsck doesn't report any missing objects in this case,
and its messages about broken branches are ignored by the fsck output
parser.
To deal with this, added a separate scan of all refs to find broken ones
and remove them when --forced. This will also let anyone who ran into this
bug run repair again to fix up the incomplete repair done before.
This commit was sponsored by Aaron Whitehouse.
Based on the example from the tip, but modified to cd into the repo before
running git-annex, since konqueror does not. Also, at least on my system,
the directory is ~/.kde, not ~/.kde4. (konqueror 4.12.4)
This commit was sponsored by Jürgen Peters.
This is a security/usability tradeoff. To avoid exposing the gpg key ids
who can decrypt the repository, users can unset
gcrypt-publish-participants.
The gcrypt-publish-participants option is available in my fork of
git-remote-gcrypt.
This commit was sponsored by Christopher Kernahan.
Catch an exception when ensureInitialized is run in a non-initted
repository. In this case, just read the git config, so that the Git.Repo
object is not LocalUnknown, which is what is used to represent remotes
on eg, drives that are not connected.
The assistant already got this right, and like with the assistant, this
causes an implicit git-annex init of the local remote on the second sync,
once the git-annex branch has been pushed to it.
See this comment for more analysis:
http://git-annex.branchable.com/todo/Recovering_from_a_bad_sync/#comment-64e469a2c1969829ee149cbb41b1c138
This commit was sponsored by jscit.
I think this is a git behavior change, but have not checked to be sure.
Conflict cruft used to look like $foo~HEAD, but now just $foo is left
behind as conflict cruft.
With test case.
Running `git annex direct` would cause loss of data, because the object
was moved to a temp file, which it then tried to replace the work tree file
with, and on failure, the temp file got deleted. Now it's instead moved
back into the annex object location.
Minor because normally only 1 FD is leaked per git-annex run. However,
the test suite leaks a few hundred FDs, and this broke it on the Debian
autobuilders, which seem to have a tigher than usual ulimit.
The leak was introduced by the lazy getDirectoryContents' that was
introduced in e6330988dd in order to scale to
millions of journal files -- if the lazy list was never fully consumed, the
directory handle did not get closed.
Instead, pull in openDirectory/readDirectory/closeDirectory code that I
already developed and submitted in a patch to the haskell directory library
earlier. Using this in journalDirty avoids the place that the lazy list
caused a problem. And using it in stageJournal eliminates the need for
getDirectoryContents'.
The getJournalFiles* functions are switched back to using the regular
strict getDirectoryContents. I'm not sure if those always consume the whole
list, so this avoids any leak. And the things that call those are things
like git annex unused, which also look at every file committed to the
git-annex branch, so would need more work to scale to insane numbers of
files anyway.
When one side is an annexed symlink, and the other side is a non-annexed symlink.
In this case, git-merge does not replace the annexed symlink in the work
tree with the non-annexed symlink, which is different from it's handling of
conflicts between annexed symlinks and regular files or directories.
So, while git-annex generated the correct merge commit, the work tree
didn't get updated to reflect it.
See comments on bug for additional analysis.
Did not add this to the test suite yet; just unloaded a truckload of firewood
and am feeling lazy.
This commit was sponsored by Adam Spiers.
Eg after git-annex add has run on 2 million files in one go.
Slightly unhappy with the neeed to use a temp file here, but I cannot see
any other alternative (see comments on the bug report).
This commit was sponsored by Hamish Coleman.
Support users who have set commit.gpgsign, by disabling gpg signatures for
git-annex branch commits and commits made by the assistant.
The thinking here is that a user sets commit.gpgsign intending the commits
that they manually initiate to be gpg signed. But not commits made in the
background, whether by a deamon or implicitly to the git-annex branch.
gpg signing those would be at best a waste of CPU and at worst would fail,
or flood the user with gpg passphrase prompts, or put their signature on
changes they did not directly do.
See Debian bug #753720.
Also makes all commits done by git-annex go through a few central control
points, to make such changes easier in future.
Also disables commit.gpgsign in the test suite.
This commit was sponsored by Antoine Boegli.
When annex.genmetadata is set, metadata from the feed is added to files
that are imported from it.
Reused the same feedtitle and itemtitle, feedauthor, itemauthor, etc names
that are used in --template.
Also added title and author, which are the item title/author if available,
falling back to the feed title/author. These are more likely to be common
metadata fields.
(There is a small bit of dupication here, but once git gets
around to packing the object, it will compress it away.)
The itempubdate field is not included in the metadata as a string; instead
it is used to generate year and month fields, same as is done when adding
files with annex.genmetadata set.
This commit was sponsored by Amitai Schlair, who cooincidentially
is responsible for ikiwiki generating nice feed metadata!
I had thought that this was already done, but apparently not. There may
have been a reversion around version 5.20140606. Anna's laptop had its
desktop menu file etc having that version despite having upgraded git-annex
to a newer version. However, I could not find any commits that removed a
call to ensureInstalled.
The bug caused the size of the queue to be miscalculted; it was doubled
each time an item was added. Commands run after approx 140 items rather
than the intended 10240!
Yes, this means that git annex webapp on windows execs git-annex, which
execs itself to set env, and the execs itself again to redirect logs.
This is disgusting. This is Windows(TM).
Using the crazy but apparently best approach of a VB Script that runs
git-annex, in a hidden DOS window.
Note that currently the git-annex messages are not directed to daemon.log.
Would probably need another layer of script. Also problimatic since the
repository may not exist yet.
When in direct mode, update the master branch after committing to the
annex/direct/master branch. Also, update the synced/master branch.
This fixes a topology A->B where both A and B are in direct mode and
running the assistant, and a change is made to B. Before this fix, A pulled
the changes from B, but since they were only on the annex/direct/master
branch, it did not merge them.
Note that I considered making the assistant merge the
remotes/B/annex/direct/master, but decided to keep it simple and only merge
the sync branches as before.
Rather than calculating the TSDelta once, and caching it, this now
reads the inode sential file's InodeCache file once, and then each time a
new InodeCache is generated, looks at the sentinal file to get the current
delta.
This way, if the time zone changes while git-annex is running, it will
adapt.
This adds some inneffiency, but only on Windows, and only 1 stat per new
file added. The worst innefficiency is that `git annex status` and
`git annex sync` will now (on Windows) stat the inode sentinal file once per
file in the repo.
It would be more efficient to use getCurrentTimeZone, rather than needing
to stat the sentinal file. This should be easy to do, once the time
package gets my bugfix patch.
This commit was sponsored by Jürgen Lüters.
Deal with FAT's low resolution timestamps, which in combination with
Linux's caching of higher res timestamps while a FAT is mounted, caused
direct mode repositories on FAT to seem to have modified files after they
were unmounted and remounted.
This commit was sponsored by Fabrice Rossi.
This version of wai changed the type of Middleware, so I cannot seem
to liftIO inside it. So, got rid of a lot of not really needed
complexity to use System.Log.Logger's logging stuff, and just use
the standard wai stdout logger when debug logging is enabled.
Format may change some, and it logs http to stdout instead of stderr
now. Doesn't matter for the webapp since both go to the same log anyway.
It was possible for a interrupted sync or merge in direct mode to
leave the work tree out of sync with the last recorded commit.
This would result in the next commit seeing files missing from the work
tree, and committing their removal.
Now, a direct mode merge happens not only in a throwaway work tree, but using
a temporary index file, and without any commits or index changes
being made until the real work tree has been updated. If the merge is
interrupted, the work tree may have some updated files, but worst case a
commit will redundantly commit changes that come from the merge.
This commit was sponsored by Tony Cantor.
This avoids a collision if different ssh ports are used on the same host
for some reason.
Note that it's ok to change the format of the mangled hostname; unmangling
only extracts the hostname from it, and once ssh is configured for a
mangled hostname, that config is not changed.
This avoids a potential slowdown when using lots of views.
I think that it makes sense for unused to ignore (local) view branches,
since these are by definition supposed to be views of an existing branch,
so looking at the branch should be sufficient (and if the view is out of
date and has files that have since been deleted from the branch, the user's
intent is not to preserve those from unused reaping).
Avoid stomping on existing group and preferred content settings
when enabling or combining with an already existing remote.
Two level fix. First, use defaultStandardGroup rather than
setStandardGroup, so if there is an existing configuration in the git-annex
branch, it's not overwritten.
To handle pre-existing ssh remotes (including gcrypt), a second level is
needed, because before syncing with the remote, it's configuration won't be
available locally. (And syncing could take a long time.) So, in this case,
keep track of whether the remote is being created or enabled, and only set
configs when creating it.
This commit was sponsored by Anders Lannerback.
This does mean that if the webapp is asked to add a git repository on
a removable drive that already exists, but is not yet a git-annex
repository, it will avoid putting it in any group. That unlikely edge case
is ok; the next step is the edit repository screen, which will show it's
not in any group and the user can pick one.
There was a tricky bit here, when it does combine, the edit form is shown,
and so the info needs to be committed to the new repository, but then
pulled into the current one. And caches need to be invalidated for it
to be visible in the edit form.
Allow any encoding to be used, as with filenames (but utf8 is the sane
choice). Affects metadata and repository descriptions, and preferred
content expressions.
The question of what's the right encoding for the git-annex branch is a
vexing one. utf-8 would be a nice choice, but this leaves the possibility
of bad data getting into a git-annex branch somehow, and this resulting in
git-annex crashing with encoding errors, which is a failure mode I want to
avoid.
(Also, preferred content expressions can refer to filenames, and filenames
can have any encoding, so limiting to utf-8 would not be ideal.)
The union merge code already took care to not assume any encoding for a
file. Except it assumes that any \n is a literal newline, and not part of
some encoding of a character that happens to contain a newline. (At least
utf-8 avoids using newline for anything except liternal newlines.)
Adapted the git-annex branch code to use this same approach.
Note that there is a potential interop problem with Windows, since
FileSystemEncoding doesn't work there, and instead things are always
decoded as utf-8. If someone uses non-utf8 encoding for data on the
git-annex branch, this can lead to an encoding error on windows. However,
this commit doesn't actually make that any worse, because the union merge
code would similarly fail with an encoding error on windows in that
situation.
This commit was sponsored by Kyle Meyer.
This is the capstone in making the webapp remember ssh remotes
so they can be easily enabled in other clones of the repository.
Currently, the user will need to enter a password to enable the ssh remote,
but everything else is filled in automatically.
This commit was sponsored by Peter Lloyd.
The repository must have been added using initremote.
Turned out to be much much simpler than expected, because I was able to
reuse the existing code for enabling rsync and gcrypt remotes, which
was already sufficiently general that it will also work for ssh remotes.
Total win!
This commit was sponsored by an unknown bitcoin contributor.
Note that TransferInfo does not always contain the Remote, although
any transfer added to the TransferQueue does have a Remote in its
TransferInfo. The transferkeys command still accepts a UUID, which is
useful to handle upgrades, where an old assistant version runs the new
transferkeys.
This commit was sponsored by Kalle Svensson.
Unless busybox doesn't support readlink -f, then it just uses readlink and
symlinking won't work. Also, OSX has no readlink -f so not done there.
Thanks, jlebar.
Broken by 958312885f, in November!
I missed this because there's no strong type checking across the AJAX call. :(
Need to switch to Fay to avoid such bugs..
When setting up a remote on a ssh server, prompt for a password inside the
webapp, rather than relying on ssh's own password prompting in the terminal
the webapp was started from, or ssh-askpass.
Avoids double prompting for the ssh password (and triple-prompting on
windows for rsync.net), since the entered password is cached for 10 minutes
and this cached password is reused when setting up the repository, after
the initial probe.
When the user has an existing ssh key set up, they can choose to use it,
rather than entering a password. The webapp used to probe for this case
automatically, so this is a little harder, but it's an advanced user thing.
Note that this commit is known to break enabling existing rsync
repositories. It hs not been tested with gcrypt repositories. It's not been
successfully tested yet on Windows.
This commit was sponsored by Ralph Mayer.
* webapp: Support using git-annex on a remote server, which was installed
from the standalone tarball or OSX app, and so does not have
git-annex in PATH (and may also not have git or rsync in PATH).
* standalone tarball, OSX app: Install a ~/.ssh/git-annex-wrapper, which
can be used to run git-annex, git, rsync, etc.
To do so, I slightly changed the behavior of unannex. Now in fast mode, it
only makes a hard link when the annexed file's link count is 1. This avoids
unannexing 2 files with the same content in fast mode from hard linking
them together. (One will end up hard linked to the annex, which the docs
warn about.)
With that change, uninit can simply always run unannex in fast mode. Since
.git/annex/objects is being blown away anyway, there's no worry in this
case about a hard link pointing into it causing an annexed object to be
modified.
For sync, saves 1 ssh connection per remote. For remotedaemon, the same
ssh connection that is already open to run git-annex-shell notifychanges
is reused to pull from the remote.
Only potential problem is that this also enables connection caching
when the assistant syncs with a ssh remote. Including the sync it does
when a network connection has just come up. In that case, cached ssh
connections are likely to be stale, and so using them would hang.
Until I'm sure such problems have been dealt with, this commit needs to
stay on the remotecontrol branch, and not be merged to master.
This commit was sponsored by Alexandre Dupas.
Code was still buggy, it turns out (though the recursion checker caught
it). In the case of (Schedule (Monthly Nothing) AnyTime), where the last
run was on yyyy-12-31, it looped forever.
Also, the handling of (Schedule (Yearly Nothing) AnyTime) was wacky where
the last run was yyyy-12-31. It would suggest a window starting on the 3rd
for the next run (because 31 mod 28 is 3).
I think that originally I was wanted to avoid running on 01-01 if it had
just run on 12-31. But the code didn't accomplish this, and it's not
necessary anyway. This is supposed to calculate the next window meeting the
schedule, and for (Schedule (Monthly Nothing), the window starts at 01-01
and runs through 01-31. If that causes two back-to-back runs, well the next
one will not be until 02-01 at the earliest.
Also, back-to-back runs can be avoided, if desired, by using Divisible 2.
a ssh remote, and pulls.
XMPP is no longer needed in this configuration!
Requires the remote server have git-annex-shell with notifychanges support.
(untested)
This commit was sponsored by Geog Wechslberger.