Commit graph

13 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Hess
9887a378fe
renamings to make clean when old-format logs are being used 2019-02-21 13:43:44 -04:00
Joey Hess
591e4b145f
convert old uuid-based log parsers to attoparsec
This preserves the workaround for the old bug that caused NoUUID items
to be stored in the log, prefixing log lines with " ". It's now handled
implicitly, by using takeWhile1 (/= ' ') to get the uuid.

There is a behavior change from the old parser, which split the value
into words and then recombined it. That meant that "foo  bar" and "foo\tbar"
came out as "foo bar". That behavior was not documented, and seems
surprising; it meant that after a git-annex describe here "foo  bar",
you wouldn't get that same string back out when git-annex displayed repo
descriptions.

Otoh, some other parsers relied on the old behavior, and the attoparsec
rewrites had to deal with the issue themselves...

For group.log, there are some edge cases around the user providing a
group name with a leading or trailing space. The old parser would ignore
such excess whitespace. The new parser does too, because the alternative
is to refuse to parse something like " group1  group2 " due to excess
whitespace, which would be even more confusing behavior.

The only git-annex branch log file that is not converted to attoparsec
and bytestring-builder now is transitions.log.
2019-01-10 16:34:20 -04:00
Joey Hess
66603d6f75
attoparsec parsers for all new-format uuid-based logs
There should be some speed gains here, especially for chunk and remote
state logs, which are queried once per key.

Now only old-format uuid-based logs still need to be converted to attoparsec.
2019-01-10 13:30:36 -04:00
Joey Hess
6f66b53a30
newtype Group to ByteString
This may speed up queries for things in groups, due to Eq and Ord being faster.
2019-01-09 15:05:49 -04:00
Joey Hess
2fef43dd71
convert all per-uuid log files to use Builder
Mostly didn't push the ByteStrings down very deep, but all of these log
files are not written to frequently at all, so slight remaining
innefficiency doesn't matter.

In Logs.UUID, removed the fixBadUUID code that cleaned up after a bug in
git-annex versions 3.20111105-3.20111110. In the unlikely event that a repo was
last touched by that ancient git-annex version, the descriptions of remotes
would appear missing when used with this version of git-annex. That is such minor
breakage, and so unlikely to still be a problem for any repos, that it was not
worth forward-porting that code to ByteString.
2019-01-09 14:00:35 -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
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
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
737e45156e
remove 163 lines of code without changing anything except imports 2016-01-20 16:36:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
afc5153157 update my email address and homepage url 2015-01-21 12:50:09 -04:00
Joey Hess
065248f3d2 Added required content configuration.
This includes checking when dropping files that any required content
configuration is satisfied. However, it does not yet include an active
check on the required content; the location log is trusted when checking
the required content expression.
2014-03-29 16:03:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
417aea25be vicfg: Allows editing preferred content expressions for groups.
This is stored in the git-annex branch, but not yet actually hooked up and
used.
2014-03-15 16:17:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
8e3032df2d added GETWANTED, SETWANTED for Tobias's flickr remote
This was unexpectedly difficult because of a depdenency cycle. To parse a
preferred content expression involves several things that need to operate
on the list of remotes. Which needs Remote.External. The only way to avoid
this cycle (I tried breaking it at several points) was to skip parsing the
expression in SETWANTED.

That's sorta ok, because git-annex already has to deal with unparsable
preferred content expressions being stored, in order to handle eg,
upgrades. But I'm still not very happy that I cannot check it.

I feel this is a strong indication that I need to beware of further
bloating the special remote protocol interface.
2014-01-01 20:12:20 -04:00