Commit graph

17 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Hess
f92eaf6315 rsync special remotes: When sending from a crippled filesystem, use the destination's default file permissions, as the local ones can be arbitrarily broken. (Ie, ----rwxr-x for files on Android) 2013-05-09 13:55:18 -04:00
Joey Hess
8a2d1988d3 expose Control.Monad.join
I think I've been looking for that function for some time.
Ie, I remember wanting to collapse Just Nothing to Nothing.
2013-04-22 20:24:53 -04:00
Joey Hess
acd6a150e5 minor refactoring 2013-03-30 19:05:51 -04:00
Joey Hess
5ed67562f6 don't refer to git-annex, as this is a generic utility library 2013-03-30 18:54:09 -04:00
guilhem
3bfe011867 Make git-annex-shell call the command with its (safe) options. 2013-03-30 18:49:43 -04:00
Joey Hess
cf07a2c412 webapp: Progess bar fixes for many types of special remotes.
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.
2013-03-28 17:04:37 -04:00
Joey Hess
a7a1bcd1d6 Avoid passing -p to rsync, to interoperate with crippled filesystems.
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.
2013-02-22 15:23:29 -04:00
Joey Hess
f87a781aa6 finished where indentation changes 2012-12-13 00:24:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
919fec85cd better fix for zombie problem, which turns out to be a zombie ssh started by rsync
When rsyncProgress pipes rsync's stdout, this turns out to cause a ssh
process started by rsync to be left behind as a zombie. I don't know why,
but my recent zombie reaping cleanup was correct, it's just that this other
zombie, that's not directly started by git-annex, was no longer reaped
due to changes in the cleanup. Make rsyncProgress reap the zombie started
by rsync, as a workaround.

FWIW, the process tree looks like this. It seems like the rsync child
is for some reason starting but not waiting on this extra ssh process.
Ssh connection caching may be involved -- disabling it seemed to change
the shape of the tree, but did not eliminate the zombie.

 9378 pts/14   S+     0:00  |           \_ rsync -p --progress --inplace -4 -e 'ssh' '-S' ...
 9379 pts/14   S+     0:00  |           |   \_ ssh ...
 9380 pts/14   S+     0:00  |           |   \_ rsync -p --progress --inplace -4 -e 'ssh' '-S' ...
 9381 pts/14   Z+     0:00  |           \_ [ssh] <defunct>
2012-10-17 00:47:52 -04:00
Joey Hess
613e747d91 bring back default SIGINT handler
This seems to fix a problem I've recently seen where ctrl-c during rsync
leads to `git annex get` moving on to the next thing rather than exiting.

Seems likely that started happening with the switch to System.Process
(d1da9cf221), as the old code took care
to install a default SIGINT handler.

Note that since the bug was only occurring sometimes, I am not 100% sure
I've squashed it, although I seem to have.
2012-10-01 23:01:29 -04:00
Joey Hess
99e62f2bb8 avoid calling the progress callback when the bytes sent have not changed
Does rsync stall and update its progress display? Dunno, but this was an
easy optimisation to throw in.
2012-09-20 17:30:38 -04:00
Joey Hess
a6504e4192 optimised rsync output reader to read whole blocks at a time 2012-09-20 16:01:31 -04:00
Joey Hess
66d092dc7c update 2012-09-20 13:46:07 -04:00
Joey Hess
77938a7d62 better parameter name 2012-09-19 17:10:13 -04:00
Joey Hess
e1037adebc rsync progress interception
Current implementation parses rsync's output a character a time, which
is hardly efficient. It could be sped up a lot by using hGetBufSome,
but that would require going really lowlevel, down to raw C style buffers
(good example of that here: http://users.aber.ac.uk/afc/stricthaskell.html)
But rsync doesn't output very much, so currently it seems ok.
2012-09-19 16:55:08 -04:00
Joey Hess
3c81d70c1b parser for rsync progress output 2012-09-19 15:23:59 -04:00
Joey Hess
45a26175d6 renamed RsyncFile -> Rsync 2012-09-19 14:28:32 -04:00
Renamed from Utility/RsyncFile.hs (Browse further)