Unless highRandomQuality=false (or --fast) is set, use Libgcypt's
'GCRY_VERY_STRONG_RANDOM' level by default for cipher generation, like
it's done for OpenPGP key generation.
On the assistant side, the random quality is left to the old (lower)
level, in order not to scare the user with an enless page load due to
the blocking PRNG waiting for IO actions.
* since this is a crippled filesystem anyway, git-annex doesn't use
symlinks on it
* so there's no reason to use the mixed case hash directories that we're
stuck using to avoid breaking everyone's symlinks to the content
* so we can do what is already done for all bare repos, and make non-bare
repos on crippled filesystems use the all-lower case hash directories
* which are, happily, all 3 letters long, so they cannot conflict with
mixed case hash directories
* so I was able to 100% fix this and even resuming `git annex add` in the
test case will recover and it will all just work.
There was confusion in different parts of the progress bar code about
whether an update contained the total number of bytes transferred, or the
number of bytes transferred since the last update. One way this bug
showed up was progress bars that seemed to stick at zero for a long time.
In order to fix it comprehensively, I add a new BytesProcessed data type,
that is explicitly a total quantity of bytes, not a delta.
Note that this doesn't necessarily fix every problem with progress bars.
Particularly, buffering can now cause progress bars to seem to run ahead
of transfers, reaching 100% when data is still being uploaded.
This got broken in commit e9238e9588.
I observed a key that had been copied to a remote, but the location
log was out of date, and due to this bug, git annex transferkey failed
and so the file could not be dropped when it was moved to an archive
directory.
Pass subcommand as a regular param, which allows passing git parameters
like -c before it. This was already done in the pipeing set of functions,
but not the command running set.
Pity that the library does not provide a function to extract the status
code from the StatusCodeException, so when they had to add a new field, it
breaks every single place that does it.
In general, git-annex does not try to preserve file permissions. For
example, they don't round trip through special remotes. So it's ok to not
preserve them for git remotes either.
On crippled filesystems, rsync has been observed failing after the file
was transferred because it couldn't set some permission or other.
With an encrypted rsync remote, the encrpyted file can be renamed, rather
than being copied, in crippled filesystem mode. This gets back to just as
fast as non-crippled mode for this very common case.
Cannot make a hard link, have to copy.
I did find a way to make it work without setting up a tree, just using
--include and --exclude. But it needs the same hash directories to be used
on both sides, which is normally not the case. Still, I hope one day I will
convert non-bare repos to use the same hash dirs as everything else, and
then this will get more efficient.
git annex init probes for crippled filesystems, and sets direct mode, as
well as `annex.crippledfilesystem`.
Avoid manipulating permissions of files on crippled filesystems.
That would likely cause an exception to be thrown.
Very basic support in Command.Add for cripped filesystems; avoids the lock
down entirely since doing it needs both permissions and hard links.
Will make this better soon.
However, I don't yet have a reliable way to deal with files being modified
while they're being transferred. I have code that detects it on the sending
side, but the receiver is still free to move the wrong content into its
annex, and record that it has the content. So that's not acceptable, and
I'll need to work on it some more.
However, at this point I can use a direct mode repository as a remote and
transfer files from and to it.
Higher than any other remote, this is mostly due to the long retrieval
time, so it'd make sense to get a file from nearly any other remote.
(Unless it's behind a very slow connection.)
Ensure that each file has something written to it, even if the bytestring
chunk size is greater than the configured chunksize.
This means we may write a bit larger than the configured value, but only
when the configured value is very small; ie, < 8 kb.
Files are now written to a tmp directory in the remote, and once all
chunks are written, etc, it's moved into the final place atomically.
For now, checkpresent still checks every single chunk of a file, because
the old method could leave partially transferred files with some chunks
present and others not.