* Fix bug that could make git-annex importfeed not see recently recorded
state when configured with annex.alwayscommit=false.
* importfeed: Made "checking known urls" phase run 12 times faster.
The massive speedup is because it no longer queries for metadata
accompanying each url. Instead it processes the whole git-annex branch and
checks all metadata files for feed item ids, and uses any it finds.
This could result in a behavior change, in an unlikely situation: If a feed
id is recorded in a key's metadata, but the url gets removed, the old code
would not see that item id and would re-download it if it finds an url for
it in a feed, while the new code will see the item id. I don't think
the old behavior was intentional, and it may be that the new behavior is
better. Not gonna worry about this.
This adds a separate journal, which does not currently get committed to
an index, but is planned to be committed to .git/annex/index-private.
Changes that are regarding a UUID that is private will get written to
this journal, and so will not be published into the git-annex branch.
All log writing should have been made to indicate the UUID it's
regarding, though I've not verified this yet.
Currently, no UUIDs are treated as private yet, a way to configure that
is needed.
The implementation is careful to not add any additional IO work when
privateUUIDsKnown is False. It will skip looking at the private journal
at all. So this should be free, or nearly so, unless the feature is
used. When it is used, all branch reads will be about twice as expensive.
It is very lucky -- or very prudent design -- that Annex.Branch.change
and maybeChange are the only ways to change a file on the branch,
and Annex.Branch.set is only internal use. That let Annex.Branch.get
always yield any private information that has been recorded, without
the risk that Annex.Branch.set might be called, with a non-private UUID,
and end up leaking the private information into the git-annex branch.
And, this relies on the way git-annex union merges the git-annex branch.
When reading a file, there can be a public and a private version, and
they are just concacenated together. That will be handled the same as if
there were two diverged git-annex branches that got union merged.
When downloading content from a remote, if the content is able to be
verified during the transfer, skip checksumming it a second time.
Note that in this case, the fsck output does not include "(checksum)"
which it does when the checksumming is done separately from the download.
This commit was sponsored by Brock Spratlen on Patreon.
This uses a DebugSelector, rather than debug levels, which will allow
for a later option like --debug-from=Process to only
see debuging about running processes.
The module name that contains the thing being debugged is used as the
DebugSelector (in most cases; does not need to be a hard and fast rule).
Debug calls were changed to add that. hslogger did not display
that first parameter to debugM, but the DebugSelector does get
displayed.
Also fastDebug will allow doing debugging in places that are used in
tight loops, with the DebugSelector coming from the Annex Reader
essentially for free. Not done yet.
Values in AnnexRead can be read more efficiently, without MVar overhead.
Only a few things have been moved into there, and the performance
increase so far is not likely to be noticable.
This is groundwork for putting more stuff in there, particularly a value
that indicates if debugging is enabled.
The obvious next step is to change option parsing to not run in the
Annex monad to set values in AnnexState, and instead return a pure value
that gets stored in AnnexRead.
Not yet used, but allows getting the size of items in the tree fairly
cheaply.
I noticed that CmdLine.Seek uses ls-tree and the feeds the files into
another long-running process to check their size. That would be an
example of a place that might be sped up by using this. Although in that
particular case, it only needs to know the size of unlocked files, not
locked. And since enabling --long probably doubles the ls-tree runtime
or more, the overhead of using it there may outwweigh the benefit.
I don't think this was really intentional behavior. It may be that it was
useful to include it so it could be passed to rmurl, since without it rmurl
would not actually remove the url. Since that was changed earlier today,
now seems like a good time to clean up the display of these urls.
This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
fsck: When --from is used in combination with --all or similar options, do
not verify required content, which can't be checked properly when operating
on keys.
This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
unregisterurl: Fix a bug that caused an url to not be unregistered when it
is claimed by a special remote other than the web.
See commit f175d4cc90 for rationalle.
* rmurl: When youtube-dl was used for an url, it no longer needs to be
prefixed with "yt:" in order to be removed.
* rmurl: If an url is both used by the web and also claimed by another
special remote, fix a bug that caused the url to to not be removed.
The youtube-dl change is a consequence of how the bug fix is implemented.
But I also think it's the right thing to do. Consider that, before,
git-annex addurl $url followed by git-annex rmurl $url would not remove the
url in the case where youtube-dl was used. That was surprising behavior.
In the unlikely case where a special remote claims an url, and it's been
added using OtherDownloader, but it was also added already as a web url,
it seems better for rmurl to remove both than to arbitrarily remove only one.
And in the case the bug report was filed for, when an url was added as a
web url, but a special remote now claims it, that should not prevent rmurl
removing the web url.
Calling setUrlMissing lets other callers of it behave differently.
Probably the calls to it in eg, Remote.External and Remote.BitTorrent are
fine, since they don't mangle the url and just remove what was provided,
and the OtherDownloader form of a bittorrent url, respectively.
I suspect unregisterurl needs to have a similar change made to rmurl, for
similar reasons.
Like import was using ActionItemWorkTreeFile, it's ok to use it for export,
even though it might not correspond with a file in the work tree.
And renamed it to ActionItemTreeFile to make that clearer.
Note that when an export has to rename files, it still uses
ActionItemOther, so file will still be null in that case, but as no file is
being transferred, that seems ok.
import: When the previously exported tree contained a submodule,
preserve it in the imported tree so it does not get deleted.
The export exclude log, which was used for non-preferred content,
now also includes the submodules. Since the log format is git ls-tree
output, this does not break backwards compatibility.
It's not necessary to log location of GIT keys, because these files are
not annexed files and so git-annex will never need to get them.
This corresponds to code in Annex.Import that already checked before
updating the location log when handling deleted files.
Older versions of git-annex that used SHA1 keys for non-annexed files
also unncessarily updated the location log for them.
GIT keys still appear in the git-annex branch for content identifier
logs, so kept the documentation of them in backends.mdwn
This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
This solves the problem that import of such files gets confused and
converts them back to annexed files.
The import code already used GIT keys internally when it determined a
file should not be annexed. So now when it sees a GIT key that export
used, it already does the right thing.
This also means that even older version of git-annex can import and will
do the right thing, once a fixed version has exported. Still, there may
be other complications around upgrades; still need to think it all
through.
Moved gitShaKey and keyGitSha from Key to Annex.Export since they're
only used for export/import.
Documented GIT keys in backends, since they do appear in the git-annex
branch now.
This commit was sponsored by Graham Spencer on Patreon.
Added LinkType to ProvidedInfo, and unified MatchingKey with
ProvidedInfo. They're both used in the same way, so there was no real
reason to keep separate.
Note that addLocked and addUnlocked still set matchNeedsFileName,
because to handle MatchingFile, they do need it. However, they
don't use it when MatchingInfo is provided. This should be ok,
the --branch case will be able skip checking matchNeedsFileName,
since it will provide a filename in any case.
Implemented by generalizing registerurl. Without the implicit batch mode
of registerurl since that is only a backwards compatability thing
(see commit 1d1054faa6).
unannex, uninit: When an annexed file is modified, don't overwrite the
modified version with an older version from the annex
This commit was sponsored by Mark Reidenbach on Patreon.
When a git remote is configured with an absolute path, use that path,
rather than making it relative. If it's configured with a relative path,
use that.
Git.Construct.fromPath changed to preserve the path as-is,
rather than making it absolute. And Annex.new changed to not
convert the path to relative. Instead, Git.CurrentRepo.get
generates a relative path.
A few things that used fromAbsPath unncessarily were changed in passing to
use fromPath instead. I'm seeing fromAbsPath as a security check,
while before it was being used in some cases when the path was
known absolute already. It may be that fromAbsPath is not really needed,
but only git-annex-shell uses it now, and I'm not 100% sure that there's
not some input that would cause a relative path to be used, opening a
security hole, without the security check. So left it as-is.
Test suite passes and strace shows the configured remote url is used
unchanged in the path into it. I can't be 100% sure there's not some code
somewhere that takes an absolute path to the repo and converts it to
relative and uses it, but it seems pretty unlikely that the code paths used
for a git remote would call such code. One place I know of is gitAnnexLink,
but I'm pretty sure that git remotes never deal with annex symlinks. If
that did get called, it generates a path relative to cwd, which would have
been wrong before this change as well, when operating on a remote.
When annex.stalldetection is not enabled, and a likely stall is detected,
display a suggestion to enable it.
Note that the progress meter display is not taken down when displaying
the message, so it will display like this:
0% 8 B 0 B/s
Transfer seems to have stalled. To handle stalling transfers, configure annex.stalldetection
0% 10 B 0 B/s
Although of course if it's really stalled, it will never update
again after the message. Taking down the progress meter and starting
a new one doesn't seem too necessary given how unusual this is,
also this does help show the state it was at when it stalled.
Use of uninterruptibleCancel here is ok, the thread it's canceling
only does STM transactions and sleeps. The annex thread that gets
forked off is separate to avoid it being canceled, so that it
can be joined back at the end.
A module cycle required moving from dupState the precaching of the
remote list. Doing it at startConcurrency should cover all the cases
where the remote list is used in concurrent actions.
This commit was sponsored by Kevin Mueller on Patreon.
Missed this when implementing it because of the default case catching
the new constructor. So, removed that default case to make sure
future types of adjusted branches don't make the same mistake.
Complicated by git-annex addurl --fast which adds the file whose content
is not present, so it needs to stay unlocked when on such a branch.
This commit was sponsored by Brock Spratlen on Patreon.
34a535ebea broke the test suite.
Getting a file started failing in one case, because the annex object did
not have its inode cached, so was not trusted to be unmodified.
This adds something very similar to what was added to linkAnnex
in commit 2e9341a47d -- if there are not
yet any inodes cached for a key, add the inode of the annex object when
adding the inode of the unlocked file.
Feels like this should be handled in a more principled way. How
do we know the addInodeCaches call in getMoveRaceRecovery just above
this change is currently correct? It doesn't add the annex object inode
cache. Ah well, maybe sometime when I've not had my entire evening eaten
by a reversion that the test suite caught as I was cooking dinner.
Avoids the smudge --clean filter failing because URL keys do not support
genKey. Instead the modified content will be added using the default
backend.
This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
This avoids the smudge --clean filter failing on the URL keys.
git checkout runs the post-checkout hook, which runs smudge --update.
That populates all the pointer files, but it neglected to store their inode
caches in the keys db. With that done, and the keys db flushed before
smudge --clean gets run (by restagePointerFile), the isUnmodifiedCheap
check can tell the file is not modified, so will not try to re-ingest it,
which does not work with URL keys because they do not support genKey.
It also seems possible that the isUnmodifiedCheap was also failing for
non-URL keys, which would cause them to be re-ingested, leading to a lot of
extra work. I have not verified that, but don't see why it wouldn't have
happened. So this probably also speeds up checking out adjusted branches.
This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
Configuring chunking and encryption for a git remote has no effect, so
skip testing those variants in the TestRemote call.
It would be better if TestRemote itself could do this, but it
doesn't seem possible there. There is no way to look at a Remote and
tell if it supports chunking or encryption.
Note that, while the test suite displays output as it it's testing
exporting, it actually skips doing anything for the tests when run on
the git remote. So at least does not waste time even though the output
is not ideal.
This commit was sponsored by Noam Kremen on Patreon.
Since unconsidered use of trusted repositories can lead to data loss.
Trusted has always been this way, but it used to be acceptable for
git-annex to be set up so that data could be lost without using --force,
and most or all other ways that can happen have already been eliminated.
This commit was sponsored by Mark Reidenbach on Patreon.
This is conceptually very simple, just making a 1 that was hard coded be
exposed as a config option. The hard part was plumbing all that, and
dealing with complexities like reading it from git attributes at the
same time that numcopies is read.
Behavior change: When numcopies is set to 0, git-annex used to drop
content without requiring any copies. Now to get that (highly unsafe)
behavior, mincopies also needs to be set to 0. It seemed better to
remove that edge case, than complicate mincopies by ignoring it when
numcopies is 0.
This commit was sponsored by Denis Dzyubenko on Patreon.
* add: Significantly speed up adding lots of non-large files to git,
by disabling the annex smudge filter when running git add.
* add --force-small: Run git add rather than updating the index itself,
so any other smudge filters than the annex one that may be enabled will
be used.
Especially from borg, where the content identifier logs
all end up being the same identical file!
But also, for other imports, the location tracking logs can,
in some cases, be identical files.
Bonus optimisation: Avoid looking up (and parsing when set)
GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK env var every time a log is written to.
Although the lookup does happen at startup even when no
log will be written now.
May actually work now.
Note that, importKey now has to add the size to the key if it's supposed
to have size. Remote.Directory relied on the importer adding the size,
which is no longer done, so it was changed; it was the only one.
This way, importKey does not need to behave differently between regular
and thirdpartypopulated imports.
These don't have importTree in their config, because they don't support
tree import, but they do still support import, and do not support export
or key/value modification.
This is to support, eg a borg repo as a special remote, which is
populated not by running git-annex commands, but by using borg. Then
git-annex sync lists the content of the remote, learns which files are
annex objects, and treats those as present in the remote.
So, most of the import machinery is reused, to a new purpose. While
normally importtree maintains a remote tracking branch, this does not,
because the files stored in the remote are annex object files, not
user-visible filenames. But, internally, a git tree is still generated,
of the files on the remote that are annex objects. This tree is used
by retrieveExportWithContentIdentifier, etc. As with other import/export
remotes, that the tree is recorded in the export log, and gets grafted
into the git-annex branch.
importKey changed to be able to return Nothing, to indicate when an
ImportLocation is not an annex object and so should be skipped from
being included in the tree.
It did not seem to make sense to have git-annex import do this, since
from the user's perspective, it's not like other imports. So only
git-annex sync does it.
Note that, git-annex sync does not yet download objects from such
remotes that are preferred content. importKeys is run with
content downloading disabled, to avoid getting the content of all
objects. Perhaps what's needed is for seekSyncContent to be run with these
remotes, but I don't know if it will just work (in particular, it needs
to avoid trying to transfer objects to them), so I skipped that for now.
(Untested and unused as of yet.)
This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
Don't want to try to use these remotes as key/value remotes, which will
surely fail. It only recently became possible for importtree to be set
w/o exporttree, so before this code was ok.
(cherry picked from commit 97599cb0f7f4115aa5a3e81a91ee3d1d6c52dc84)
In cd1676d604, it stopped using that to avoid surprising behavior
when the location log and remote content were out of sync.
But, it seems that may have changed some behavior users relied on as
well, and also Remote.hasKeyCheap should be faster than checking then
location log.
So, try Remote.hasKeyCheap first, and only if it does not have the key,
fall back to checking the location log. If the location log still thinks
it's present, go ahead and try to get it, so the user will see a failure
rather than silently skipping a file what whereis says is on the remote.
This does make slightly slower the case where the remote does not have
the key, and location log and Remote.hasKeyCheap agree, since it now
checks both. But only 1 stat slower.
This is common in some feeds, which might mix some items with enclosures,
with others that link to posts or whatever. Before this, it would try to
use youtube-dl and fail, or if youtube-dl was not allowed, it would
incorrectly complain that an url was supported by youtube-dl.
MatchingKey is not the thing to use when matching on actual worktreee
files.
Fix reversion in 8.20201116 that made include= and exclude= in
preferred/required content expressions match a path relative to the current
directory, rather than the path from the top of the repository.
Done on unix, could not implement it on windows quite.
The signal library gets part of the way needed for windows.
But I had to open https://github.com/pmlodawski/signal/issues/1 because
it lacks raiseSignal.
Also, I don't know what the equivilant of getProcessGroupIDOf is on
windows. And System.Process does not provide a way to send any signal to
a process group except for SIGINT.
This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
All callers adjusted to update it themselves.
In Command.ReKey, and Command.SetKey, the cleanup action already did,
so it was updating the log twice before.
This fixes a bug when annex.stalldetection is set, as now
Command.Transferrer can skip updating the location log, and let it be
updated by the calling process.
Rather than using Read/Show, which would force me to preserve data types
into the future.
I considered just deriving json and sending that, but I don't much like
deriving json with data types that have named constructors (like Key
does) because again it locks in data type details.
So instead, used SimpleProtocol, with a fairly complex and unreadable
protocol. But it is as efficient as the p2p protocol at least, and as
future proof.
(Writing my own custom json instances would have worked but I thought
of it too late and don't want to do all the work twice. The only real
benefit might be that aeson could be faster.)
Note that, when a new protocol request type is added later, git-annex
trying to use it will cause the git-annex transferrer to display a
protocol error message. That seems ok; it would only happen if a new
git-annex found an old version of itself in PATH or the program
file. So it's unlikely, and all it can do anyway is display an error.
(The error message could perhaps be improved..)
This commit was sponsored by Jack Hill on Patreon.
This is to avoid breakage when upgrading or downgrading git-annex with a
process running that uses the interface. It's better to keep the
compatability code for a few years than worry about such breakage.
This commit was sponsored by Brett Eisenberg on Patreon.
Seems to work! Even progress bars. Have not tested prompting or various
error message displays yet.
transferkeys had to be made to operate in different modes for the
Assistant and Annex monads. A bit ugly, but it did relegate that
really ugly Database.Keys.closeDb in transferkeys to only the assistant
code path.
This commit was sponsored by Noam Kremen.
This is groundwork for using git-annex transferkeys to run transfers,
in order to allow stalled transfers to be interrupted and retried.
The new upload and download are closer to what git-annex transferkeys
does, so the plan is to make them use it.
Then things that were left using upload' and download' won't recover
from stalls. Notably, that includes import and export. But
at least get/move/copy will be able to. (Also the assistant hopefully,
but not yet.)
This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
That seems to be the last thing needed for message serialization.
Although it's only used in the assistant currently, so hard to tell if I
forgot something.
At this point, it should be possible to start using transferkeys
when performing transfers, which will allow killing a transferkeys
process if a transfer times out or stalls. But that's for another day.
This commit was sponsored by Ethan Aubin.
Necessarily threw out the old protocol, so if an old git-annex assistant
is running, and starts a transferkeys from the new git-annex, it would
fail. But, that seems unlikely; the assistant starts up transferkeys
processes and then keeps them running. Still, may need to test that
scenario.
The new protocol is simple read/show and looks like this:
TransferRequest Download (Right "origin") (Key {keyName = "f8f8766a836fb6120abf4d5328ce8761404e437529e997aaa0363bdd4fecd7bb", keyVariety = SHA2Key (HashSize 256) (HasExt True), keySize = Just 30, keyMtime = Nothing, keyChunkSize = Nothing, keyChunkNum = Nothing}) (AssociatedFile (Just "foo"))
TransferOutput (ProgressMeter (Just 30) (MeterState {meterBytesProcessed = BytesProcessed 0, meterTimeStamp = 1.6070268727892535e9}) (MeterState {meterBytesProcessed = BytesProcessed 30, meterTimeStamp = 1.6070268728043e9}))
TransferOutput (OutputMessage "(checksum...) ")
TransferResult True
Granted, this is not optimally fast, but it seems good enough, and is
probably nearly as fast as the old protocol anyhow.
emitSerializedOutput for ProgressMeter is not yet implemented. It needs
to somehow start or update a progress meter. There may need to be a new
message that allocates a progress meter, and then have ProgressMeter
update it.
This commit was sponsored by Ethan Aubin
9cb250f7be got the ones in RawFilePath,
but there were others that used the one from unix-compat, which fails at
runtime on windows. To avoid this,
import System.PosixCompat.Files hiding removeLink
This commit was sponsored by Ethan Aubin.
Added annex.adjustedbranchrefresh git config to update adjusted branches
set up by git-annex adjust --unlock-present/--hide-missing.
Note, in a few cases, I was not able to make the adjusted branch
be updated in calls to moveAnnex, because information about what
file corresponds to a key is not available. They are:
* If two files point to one file, then eg, `git annex get foo` will
update the branch to unlock foo, but will not unlock bar, because it
does not know about it. Might be fixable by making `git annex get
bar` do something besides skipping bar?
* git-annex-shell recvkey likewise (so sends over ssh from old versions
of git-annex)
* git-annex setkey
* git-annex transferkey if the user does not use --file
* git-annex multicast sends keys with no associated file info
Doing a single full refresh at the end, after any incremental refresh,
will deal with those edge cases.
An --unlock-present branch reverses back to a branch where
all files that get modified or renamed become locked, even if they were
originally unlocked. This is the same that reversing a --unlock branch
works, and the new name makes that commonality more clear.
Like --hide-missing the branch does not get updated when content
availability changes.
Seems to basically work, but sync does not update it yet.
Also, when a file is present and so unlocked, git mv followed by
git-annex sync results in the basis branch being updated to contain the
file with the new name, unlocked. This seems different than what
happens in an adjusted unlocked branch, where the commit propigates back
locked. Probably the reverse adjustment code needs to be improved to
handle this case.
Note that, the way the SeekInput parser is written to support batch mode,
it's actually possible to do git-annex examinekey
"SHA1--foo foo.tar.gz" --migrate-to-backend=SHA1E
While that might be kind of useful to support multiple migrations not using
batch mode, I have not documented it. It would be better to take pairs of
key and file in that case.
Warn when adding a annex symlink or pointer file that uses a key that is
not known to the repository, to prevent confusion if the user has copied it
from some other repository.
This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
Lots of nice wins from this in avoiding unncessary work, and I think
nothing got slower.
This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
nukeFile replaced with removeWhenExistsWith removeLink, which allows
using RawFilePath. Utility.Directory cannot use RawFilePath since setup
does not depend on posix.
This commit was sponsored by Graham Spencer on Patreon.
In cases where numcopies checks prevented the resumed move from dropping
the object from the source repository, it now relies on a log of recent
moves to replicate the behavior of the interrupted command.
Performance: Probably noticable impact, since it has to add to the log,
check the log, and remove from the log. Seems worth it to avoid this
annoying edge case. The log functions are pretty well optimised to avoid
unncessary work.
An performance improvement to make later would be to avoid cleanup doing
anything if it's not written to the log file, and has confirmed that the
log file does not contain the log line.
This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
When I put in Haskell98 this spring, I was under the mistaken
apprehension that ghc defaulted to that. But it actually its default
is a third mode, which is closer to Haskell2010 but with some differences.
The manual says "By default, GHC mainly aims to behave (mostly) like a
Haskell 2010 compiler"
Fixed two cases where the Haskell98 do indentation flexability let
wrongly indented code build. That is one of the places where
ghc does not behave like Haskell2010 by default.
The other place that I think I was concerned about, is GHC manual
section 19.1.1.3. Expressions and patterns. But that only seems to
affect code using bottoms, so would only affect pure functions throwing
an error, which I don't think git-annex does in many places as it's
pretty horrid style. And it would only affect rare cases like shown in
that section. If it did happen, it would mean that the error was not
thrown before specifying Haskell98, and then was. Haskell2010 behaves
the same as Haskell98.
This commit was sponsored by Denis Dzyubenko on Patreon.
It seemed best to do this, for consistency with every other way files can
get into a git-annex repo. Although it's just a bit strange that a local
.gitignore file affects the pseudo-commits made for the remote that's
imported from.
This commit was sponsored by Brett Eisenberg on Patreon.
Which lets progress be displayed when doing concurrent downloads.
Amoung other things, like --json-progress etc.
The youtube-dl output is no longer displayed, except for any errors.
This commit was sponsored by Denis Dzyubenko on Patreon.
Ensure that checkCanAdd is used everywhere a file is added to git,
so git add is run with -f, presumably avoiding the work it would usually
do to check ignores.
sync: When run without --content, import without copying from
importtree=yes directory special remotes. (Other special remotes may
support this later as well.)
This commit was sponsored by Svenne Krap on Patreon.
This avoids import with --no-content and with --content potentially
generating two different trees, leading to a merge conflict when run in
two different clones of a repo. And it's necessary groundwork to make
git-annex sync --no-content import from special remotes that support
importKey.
Only the directory special remote currently supports importKey, and it
generates the same key as git-annex usually does, so there is no
behavior change for it.
Future special remotes will need to take care when adding importKey,
if it generates different keys. Added some warnings about that to
comments.
This commit was sponsored by Noam Kremen on Patreon.
The latter is for git-annex matchexpression and matching against it can
throw an exception. Splitting out the former reduces the potential for
mistakes and avoids needing to worry about matching against that
throwing an exception.
This is more groundwork for matching largefiles while importing,
without downloading content.
This commit was sponsored by Graham Spencer on Patreon.
Anything that needs to examine the file content will fail to match,
or fall back to other available information. But the intent is that the
matcher be checked for matchNeedsFileContent and only be used if it does
not, so the exact behavior doesn't much matter as it should never
happen.
The real point of this is to not need to provide a dummy content file
when matching.
This commit was sponsored by Martin D on Patreon.
This was the last one marked as a zombie. There might be others I don't
know about, but except for in the hypothetical case of a thread dying
due to an async exception before it can wait on a process it started, I
don't know of any.
It would probably be safe to remove the reapZombies now, but let's wait
and so that in its own commit in case it turns out to cause problems.
This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
Eliminate a zombie that was only cleaned up by the later zombie cleanup
code.
This is still not ideal, it would be cleaner if it used conduit or
something, and if the thread gets killed before waiting, it won't stop
the process.
Only remaining zombies are in CmdLine.Seek
Sped up seeking to around twice as fast, by avoiding a pass over the
worktree files when preferred content expressions of the local repo and
remotes don't use include=/exclude=.
Thanks to Lukey for identifying the optimisation.
This commit was sponsored by Brock Spratlen on Patreon.
Otherwise the bloom filter may not be fully populated when the second
pass starts, which could have led to incorrect behavior with --all -J,
probably in very rare circumstances.
matchNeedsFileContent is not used yet, but shows how to add information
about terminals. That one would be needed for
https://git-annex.branchable.com/todo/sync_fast_import/
Note the tricky bit in Annex.FileMatcher.call where it folds over the
included matcher to propagate the information.
This commit was sponsored by Svenne Krap on Patreon.
add, addurl, importfeed, import: Added --no-check-gitignore option
for finer grained control than using --force.
(--force is used for too many different things, and at least one
of these also uses it for something else. I would like to reduce
--force's footprint until it only forces drops or a few other data
losses. For now, --force still disables checking ignores too.)
addunused: Don't check .gitignores when adding files. This is a behavior
change, but I justify it by analogy with git add of a gitignored file
adding it, asking to add all unused files back should add them all back,
not skip some. The old behavior was surprising.
In Command.Lock and Command.ReKey, CheckGitIgnore False does not change
behavior, it only makes explicit what is done. Since these commands are run
on annexed files, the file is already checked into git, so git add won't
check ignores.
The use case of this field is mostly to support -J combined with --json.
When that is implemented, a user will be able to look at the field to
determine which of the requests they have sent it corresponds to.
The field typically has a single value in its list, but in some cases
mutliple values (eg 2 command-line params) are combined together and the
list will have more.
Note that json parsing was already non-strict, so old git-annex metadata
--json --batch can be fed json produced by the new git-annex and will
not stumble over the new field.
No behavior changes (hopefully), just adding SeekInput and plumbing it
through to the JSON display code for later use.
Over the course of 2 grueling days.
withFilesNotInGit reimplemented in terms of seekHelper
should be the only possible behavior change. It seems to test as
behaving the same.
Note that seekHelper dummies up the SeekInput in the case where
segmentPaths' gives up on sorting the expanded paths because there are
too many input paths. When SeekInput later gets exposed as a json field,
that will result in it being a little bit wrong in the case where
100 or more paths are passed to a git-annex command. I think this is a
subtle enough problem to not matter. If it does turn out to be a
problem, fixing it would require splitting up the input
parameters into groups of < 100, which would make git ls-files run
perhaps more than is necessary. May want to revisit this, because that
fix seems fairly low-impact.
Make all calls to git merge go through autoMergeFrom, in preparation
for fine-tuning git merge's config for automatic merge conflict
resolution.
This commit was sponsored by Ryan Newton on Patreon.
Fixes reversion in 8.20200617 that made annex.pidlock being enabled result
in some commands stalling, particularly those needing to autoinit.
Renamed runsGitAnnexChildProcess to make clearer where it should be
used.
Arguably, it would be better to have a way to make any process git-annex
runs have the env var set. But then it would need to take the pid lock
when running any and all processes, and that would be a problem when
git-annex runs two processes concurrently. So, I'm left doing it ad-hoc
in places where git-annex really does run a child process, directly
or indirectly via a particular git command.
addurl: Fix reversion in 7.20190322 that made --file not be honored when
youtube-dl was used to download media.
8758f9c561 was on the right track, but missed that | otherwise prevented
the code it added from being used.
Also, refactored out a common function.
This commit was sponsored by Graham Spencer on Patreon.
Part of workTreeItems is trying detect a case
where git porcelain refuses to process a file, and where
git ls-files silently outputs nothing. But, it's hard to perfectly
replicate git's behavior, and besides, git's behavior could change.
So it could be that we warn, but then git ls-files does not skip over
it, and so git-annex also processes it after warning about it.
So, if we think we have a problem with a parameter, display the warning,
and skip processing it at all.
Implementing this was complicated by needing to handle the case where
all command-line parameters get filtered out this way. Which is
different than the case where there are none, because we don't want to
operate on all files in this new case..
sanitizeFilePath was changed to sanitize leading '.', but ImportFeed was
running it on parts of the template. So eg the leading '.' in the extension
got sanitized.
Note the added case for sanitizeLeadingFilePathCharacter ('/':_)
-- this was added because, if the template is title/episode and the title
is not set, it would expand to "/episode". So this is another potential
security fix.
This was already prevented in other ways, but as seen in commit
c30fd24d91, those were a bit fragile.
And I'm not sure races were avoided in every case before. At least a
race between two separate git-annex processes, dropping the same
content, seemed possible.
This way, if locking fails, and the content is not present, it will
always do the right thing. Also, it avoids the overhead of an unncessary
inAnnex check for every file.
This commit was sponsored by Denis Dzyubenko on Patreon.
The test suite noticed this case, where two files with the same key are
dropped, and the seek stage sees both have content due to the way files
stream through it. But then locking the content to drop fails on the
second file, because the first file has already been dropped.
So, add back otherwise redundant inAnnex check.
Sped up seeking files to drop by 2x, and also some performance
improvements to checking numcopies.
Interestingly, the seek speedup is not due to precaching, but I think is
due to calling getParsed earlier.
Annex.Drop had to be changed to check inAnnex there, since it was removed
from Command.Drop. All other users of Command.Drop already checked inAnnex
themselves.
This commit was sponsored by Ryan Newton on Patreon.
This is groundwork for external backends, but also makes sense to keep
this information with the rest of a Backend's implementation.
Also, removed isVerifiable. I noticed that the same information is
encoded by whether a Backend implements verifyKeyContent or not.