When exporttree=yes is also set. Probably it would also be possible to
support ones with only importtree=yes, by enabling exporttree=yes for
the remote only when using git-remote-annex, but let's keep this
simple... I'm not sure what gets recorded in .git/annex/ state
differently in the two cases that might cause a problem when doing that.
Note that the full annex:: urls generated and displayed for such a
remote omit the importree=yes. Which is ok, cloning from such an url
uses an exporttree=remote, but the git-annex branch doesn't get written
by this program, so once the real config is available from the git-annex
branch, it will still function as an importree=yes remote.
This git bug also broke git-lfs, and I am confident it will be reverted
in the next release.
For now, cloning from an annex:: url wastes some bandwidth on the next
pull by not caching bundles locally.
If git doesn't fix this in the next version, I'd be tempted to rethink
whether bundle objects need to be cached locally. It would be possible to
instead remember which bundles have been seen and their heads, and
respond to the list command with the heads, and avoid unbundling them
agian in fetch. This might even be a useful performance improvement in
the latter case. It would be quite a complication to a currently simple
implementation though.
This fixes pushing a new ref that is the same as something already
pushed. In findotherprereq, it compares two shas, which didn't work when
one is actually not a sha but a ref.
This is one of those cases where Sha being an alias for Ref makes it
hard to catch mistakes. One of these days those need to be
differentiated at the type level, but not today..
Check explicitly for an annex:: url, not just any url. While no built-in
special remotes set an url, except ones that can be synced with, it
seems possible that some external special remote sets an url for its own
use, but did not expect it to be used by git-annex sync et al.
The assistant also syncs with them.
Locally record the manifest before uploading it or any bundles,
and read it on the next push. Any bundles from the push that are
not included in the currently being pushed manifest will get added
to the outManifest, and so eventually get deleted.
This deals with an interrupted push that is not resumed and instead
something else is pushed. And it deals with a push race that overwrites
the manifest.
Of course, this can't help if one of those situations is followed by
the local repo being deleted. But that's equivilant to doing a git-annex
copy of a new annexed file to a special remote and then deleting the
special repo w/o pushing. In either case the special remote ends up with
a object in it that git-annex doesn't know about.
This avoids some apparently otherwise unsolveable problems involving
races that resulted in the manifest listing bundles that were deleted.
Removed the annex-max-git-bundles config because it can't actually
result in deleting old bundles. It would still be possible to have a
config that controls how often to do a full push, which would avoid
needing to download too many bundles on clone, as well as needing to
checkpresent too many bundles in verifyManifest. But it would need a
different name and description.