Fix an oddity in matching options and preferred content expressions such as
"foo (bar or baz)", which was incorrectly handled as if it were "(foo or
bar) and baz)" rather than the intended "foo and (bar or baz)"
Seemed like a change to consume should be able to handle this case
better, but I was having trouble writing it that way, so instead added
a separate pass that inserts the implicit ands explicitly. Also added
several test cases to make sure versions with and without explicit ands
generate the same.
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.
Fixed that, and made parserLsTree accept the space as well as tab.
Fixes a reversion that made import of a tree from a special remote result in
a merge that deleted files that were not preferred content of that special
remote.
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.
Don't accept the cid of the temp file that the content has just been
written to as something we will accept if another file has that same
content. There's no reason to, and on FAT, due to mtime resolution,
the test suite hit just such a case.
This fixes a reversion from 73df633a62
which removed inode from the ContentIdentifier.
Seems that dropDrive on windows only drops eg c:/ but not a leading /
while on linux, it does drop a leading / (which is what it considers
to be equivilant to a drive letter. I had been relying on it to drop
both. So need to drop leading directory separators.
Also, if the quickcheck generated input is eg "c:c:c:c:foo",
dropDrive will only drop the first one, leaving a path that's
still not relative. So instead of using dropDrive, just remove the
colons from the path.
This is probably a reversion, but not sure what caused it. By the time
Annex.Init runs fixupUnusualReposAfterInit, another git-annex process has
at least sometimes already done the necessary fixups. (Eg, one run
indirectly by a git command.) But since the Repo is cached, it doesn't
realize and does them again. So, avoid crashing when git config --unset
fails.
This commit was sponsored by Jack Hill on Patreon.
Directory special remotes with importtree=yes now avoid unncessary overhead
when inodes of files have changed, as happens whenever a FAT filesystem
gets remounted.
A few unusual edge cases of modifications won't be detected and
imported. I think they're unusual enough not to be a concern. It would
be possible to add a config setting that controls whether to compare
inodes too, but does not seem worth bothering the user about currently.
I chose to continue to use the InodeCache serialization, just with the
inode zeroed. This way, if I later change my mind or make it
configurable, can parse it back to an InodeCache and operate on it. The
overhead of storing a 0 in the content identifier log seems worth it.
There is a one-time cost to this change; all directory special remotes
with importtree=yes will re-hash all files once, and will update the
content identifier logs with zeroed inodes.
This commit was sponsored by Brett Eisenberg on Patreon.
Including the non-standard URI form that git-remote-gcrypt uses for rsync.
Eg, "ook://foo:bar" cannot be parsed because "bar" is not a valid port
number. But git could have a remote with that, it would try to run
git-remote-ook to handle it. So, git-annex has to allow for such things,
rather than crashing.
This commit was sponsored by Luke Shumaker on Patreon.
It was just slapping on a path separator to the front of the path to
make it absolute, but on windows, a path like "//foo/bar" actually
has a network "drive" of "//foo" and so that broke the test case.
Since "a:foo" is a somehow relative path on windows
(who knows how), drop any drive from the input. But dropDrive also drops
any leading path separator, making the input path relative. So now
it should be safe to slapp on a leading path separator.