Commit graph

365 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Hess
2a45b5ae9a
avoid failure to lock content of removed file causing drop etc to fail
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.
2020-07-25 11:59:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
0f26782a73
fix windows build more 2020-07-02 12:01:09 -04:00
Joey Hess
00497fd38e
fix windows build 2020-07-02 11:46:26 -04:00
Joey Hess
a76b1ba3d6
local git remote autoinit improvements
* Improve display of problems auto-initializing or upgrading local git
  remotes.
* When a local git remote cannot be initialized because it has no
  git-annex branch or a .noannex file, avoid displaying a message about it.
2020-06-16 13:24:00 -04:00
Joey Hess
2670890b17
convert to withCreateProcess for async exception safety
This handles all createProcessSuccess callers, and aside from process
pools, the complete conversion of all process running to async exception
safety should be complete now.

Also, was able to remove from Utility.Process the old API that I now
know was not a good idea. And proof it was bad: The code size went *down*,
despite there being a fair bit of boilerplate for some future API to
reduce.
2020-06-04 15:45:52 -04:00
Joey Hess
1ee5919d1e
make createProcess calls async exception safe
Using cleanupProcess because withCreateProcess cannot run an Annex
action, but the effect is the same as using it.
2020-06-03 15:30:30 -04:00
Joey Hess
4be94c67c7
make removeKey throw exceptions 2020-05-14 14:11:05 -04:00
Joey Hess
d9c7f81ba4
make retrieveKeyFile and retrieveKeyFileCheap throw exceptions
Converted retrieveKeyFileCheap to a Maybe, to avoid needing to throw a
exception when a remote doesn't support it.
2020-05-13 17:07:07 -04:00
Joey Hess
c1cd402081
make storeKey throw exceptions
When storing content on remote fails, always display a reason why.

Since the Storer used by special remotes already did, this mostly affects
git remotes, but not entirely. For example, if git-lfs failed to connect to
the endpoint, it used to silently return False.
2020-05-13 14:03:00 -04:00
Joey Hess
f9ed30de3b
avoid beware of the leopard situation
* Display a warning message when a remote uses a protocol, such as
  git://, that git-annex does not support. Silently skipping such a
  remote was confusing behavior.

  It sets annex-ignore, so the warning is only displayed once.

* Also display a warning message when a remote, without a known uuid,
  is located in a directory that does not currently exist, to avoid
  silently skipping such a remote.

  This is a bit more debatable, since git-annex get will say,
  try making repository available. And since it does not set annex-ignore,
  the warning will be displayed repeatedly. It's also an extreme edge case,
  I don't think I've ever seen it happen in real life.
2020-05-04 13:01:11 -04:00
Joey Hess
cd1676d604
fix bug involving local git remote and out of date location log
get --from, move --from: When used with a local git remote, these used to
silently skip files that the location log thought were present on the
remote, when the remote actually no longer contained them. Since that
behavior could be surprising, now instead display a warning.

I got very confused when I encountered this behavior, since it was silently
skipping a file I needed that whereis said was on the remote.

get without --from already displayed a "unable to access these remotes"
message, which while a bit misleading in that the remote is likely
accessible, but just doesn't contain the file, at least indicated something
went wrong.

Having get --from display a warning makes it in line with get
w/o --from, so seems certianly ok. It might be there are situations where
move --from is used, on eg a whole directory, and the user only wants to
move whatever is present in the remote, and is perfectly ok with files
that are not present being skipped. So I'm less sure about the new warning
being ok there. OTOH, only local git remotes avoiding displaying a warning
in that case too, so this just brings them into line with other remotes.

(Also note that this makes it a little bit faster when dealing with a lot of
files, since it avoids a redundant stat of the file.)
2020-04-21 12:36:58 -04:00
Joey Hess
529f488ec4
fix a thundering herd problem
Avoid repeatedly opening keys db when accessing a local git remote and -J
is used.

What was happening was that Remote.Git.onLocal created a new annex state
as each thread started up. The way the MVar was used did not prevent that.
And that, in turn, led to repeated opening of the keys db, as well as
probably other extra work or resource use.

Also managed to get rid of Annex.remoteannexstate, and it turned out there
was an unncessary Maybe in the keysdbhandle, since the handle starts out
closed.
2020-04-17 17:09:29 -04:00
Joey Hess
ca9c6c5f60
Fix a potential failure to parse git config
Git has an obnoxious special case in git config, a line "foo" is the same
as "foo = true". That means there is no way to examine the output of
git config and tell if it was run with --null or not, since a "foo"
in the first line could be such a boolean, or could be followed by its
value on the next line if --null were used.

So, rather than trying to do such a detection, track the style of config
at all the points where it's generated.
2020-04-13 13:05:41 -04:00
Joey Hess
81e3faf810
Merge branch 'v7' 2020-02-26 18:15:18 -04:00
Joey Hess
8af6d2c3c5
fix encryption of content to gcrypt and git-lfs
Fix serious regression in gcrypt and encrypted git-lfs remotes.
Since version 7.20200202.7, git-annex incorrectly stored content
on those remotes without encrypting it.

Problem was, Remote.Git enumerates all git remotes, including git-lfs
and gcrypt. It then dispatches to those. So, Remote.List used the
RemoteConfigParser from Remote.Git, instead of from git-lfs or gcrypt,
and that parser does not know about encryption fields, so did not
include them in the ParsedRemoteConfig. (Also didn't include other
fields specific to those remotes, perhaps chunking etc also didn't
get through.)

To fix, had to move RemoteConfig parsing down into the generate methods
of each remote, rather than doing it in Remote.List.

And a consequence of that was that ParsedRemoteConfig had to change to
include the RemoteConfig that got parsed, so that testremote can
generate a new remote based on an existing remote.

(I would have rather fixed this just inside Remote.Git, but that was not
practical, at least not w/o re-doing work that Remote.List already did.
Big ugly mostly mechanical patch seemed preferable to making git-annex
slower.)
2020-02-26 18:05:36 -04:00
Joey Hess
69f2d1dd43
remoteConfig rework
remoteAnnexConfig will avoid bugs like
a3a674d15b

Use now more generic remoteConfig in a couple places that built
non-annex config settings manually before.
2020-02-19 13:45:11 -04:00
Joey Hess
399319ccbc
Avoid throwing fatal errors when asked to write to a readonly git remote on http
Test suite found one of them, looking for giveup turned up several more.
2020-02-14 14:38:13 -04:00
Joey Hess
1883f7ef8f
support git remotes that need http basic auth
using git credential to get the password

One thing this doesn't do is wrap the password prompting inside the prompt
action. So with -J, the output can be a bit garbled.
2020-01-22 16:16:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
75059c9f3b
better error message when git config fails to parse remote config
Rather than leaking the name of the temp file, just say the config parse
failed, and where the config was downloaded from.

Not closing the bug report because two issues were reported in the same
bug report, because the universe wants me to continually re-read old
unclosed bug reports to waste my time determining what still needs to be
done.
2020-01-22 13:35:54 -04:00
Joey Hess
d227093002
avoid ugly error message
Http remotes that do expose a git config file, but are not initialized
resulted in an ugly and unncessary error message, now sqelched.

When git-annex-shell configlist is run w/o the autoinit field, it may
not generate a uuid for the repository. So in that case, it's not
unexpected for the config it does list to not include a UUID, and
dumping out the config in a warning message is not needed.

If configlist is asked to autoinit and we don't get back a config with a
UUID in it, that suggests some problem, and what we got back may not be
a config at all but some diagnostic message, so it does make sense to
output it then.
2020-01-22 11:57:20 -04:00
Joey Hess
7038acf96c
add descriptions for all remote config fields
not yet used
2020-01-20 15:20:04 -04:00
Joey Hess
c498269a88
convert configParser to Annex action and add passthrough option
Needed so Remote.External can query the external program for its
configs. When the external program does not support the query,
the passthrough option will make all input fields be available.
2020-01-14 13:52:03 -04:00
Joey Hess
963239da5c
separate RemoteConfig parsing basically working
Many special remotes are not updated yet and are commented out.
2020-01-14 12:35:08 -04:00
Joey Hess
71ecfbfccf
be stricter about rejecting invalid configurations for remotes
This is a first step toward that goal, using the ProposedAccepted type
in RemoteConfig lets initremote/enableremote reject bad parameters that
were passed in a remote's configuration, while avoiding enableremote
rejecting bad parameters that have already been stored in remote.log

This does not eliminate every place where a remote config is parsed and a
default value is used if the parse false. But, I did fix several
things that expected foo=yes/no and so confusingly accepted foo=true but
treated it like foo=no. There are still some fields that are parsed with
yesNo but not not checked when initializing a remote, and there are other
fields that are parsed in other ways and not checked when initializing a
remote.

This also lays groundwork for rejecting unknown/typoed config keys.
2020-01-10 14:52:48 -04:00
Joey Hess
2000e9a4b8
avoid build warning on windows 2020-01-01 14:40:35 -04:00
Joey Hess
4acbb40112
git-annex config annex.largefiles
annex.largefiles can be configured by git-annex config, to more easily set
a default that will also be used by clones, without needing to shoehorn the
expression into the gitattributes file. The git config and gitattributes
override that.

Whenever something is added to git-annex config, we have to consider what
happens if a user puts a purposfully bad value in there. Or, if a new
git-annex adds some new value that an old git-annex can't parse.
In this case, a global annex.largefiles that can't be parsed currently
makes an error be thrown. That might not be ideal, but the gitattribute
behaves the same, and is almost equally repo-global.

Performance notes:

git-annex add and addurl construct a matcher once
and uses it for every file, so the added time penalty for reading the global
config log is minor. If the gitattributes annex.largefiles were deprecated,
git-annex add would get around 2% faster (excluding hashing), because
looking that up for each file is not fast. So this new way of setting
it is progress toward speeding up add.

git-annex smudge does need to load the log every time. As well as checking
the git attribute. Not ideal. Setting annex.gitaddtoannex=false avoids
both overheads.
2019-12-20 13:01:41 -04:00
Joey Hess
c19211774f
use filepath-bytestring for annex object manipulations
git-annex find is now RawFilePath end to end, no string conversions.
So is git-annex get when it does not need to get anything.
So this is a major milestone on optimisation.

Benchmarks indicate around 30% speedup in both commands.

Probably many other performance improvements. All or nearly all places
where a file is statted use RawFilePath now.
2019-12-11 15:25:07 -04:00
Joey Hess
bdec7fed9c
convert TopFilePath to use RawFilePath
Adds a dependency on filepath-bytestring, an as yet unreleased fork of
filepath that operates on RawFilePath.

Git.Repo also changed to use RawFilePath for the path to the repo.

This does eliminate some RawFilePath -> FilePath -> RawFilePath
conversions. And filepath-bytestring's </> is probably faster.
But I don't expect a major performance improvement from this.
This is mostly groundwork for making Annex.Location use RawFilePath,
which will allow for a conversion-free pipleline.
2019-12-09 15:07:21 -04:00
Joey Hess
c20f4704a7
all commands building except for assistant
also, changed ConfigValue to a newtype, and moved it into Git.Config.
2019-12-05 14:41:18 -04:00
Joey Hess
f3047d7186
include git-annex-shell back in
Also pushed ConfigKey down into the Git modules, which is the bulk of
the changes.
2019-12-02 11:51:52 -04:00
Joey Hess
d7833def66
use ByteString for git config
The parser and looking up config keys in the map should both be faster
due to using ByteString.

I had hoped this would speed up startup time, but any improvement to
that was too small to measure. Seems worth keeping though.

Note that the parser breaks up the ByteString, but a config map ends up
pointing to the config as read, which is retained in memory until every
value from it is no longer used. This can change memory usage
patterns marginally, but won't affect git-annex.
2019-11-27 17:40:09 -04:00
Joey Hess
067aabdd48
wip RawFilePath 2x git-annex find speedup
Finally builds (oh the agoncy of making it build), but still very
unmergable, only Command.Find is included and lots of stuff is badly
hacked to make it compile.

Benchmarking vs master, this git-annex find is significantly faster!
Specifically:

	num files	old	new	speedup
	48500		4.77	3.73	28%
	12500		1.36	1.02	66%
	20		0.075	0.074	0% (so startup time is unchanged)

That's without really finishing the optimization. Things still to do:

* Eliminate all the fromRawFilePath, toRawFilePath, encodeBS,
  decodeBS conversions.
* Use versions of IO actions like getFileStatus that take a RawFilePath.
* Eliminate some Data.ByteString.Lazy.toStrict, which is a slow copy.
* Use ByteString for parsing git config to speed up startup.

It's likely several of those will speed up git-annex find further.
And other commands will certianly benefit even more.
2019-11-26 16:01:58 -04:00
Joey Hess
81d402216d cache the serialization of a Key
This will speed up the common case where a Key is deserialized from
disk, but is then serialized to build eg, the path to the annex object.

Previously attempted in 4536c93bb2
and reverted in 96aba8eff7.
The problems mentioned in the latter commit are addressed now:

Read/Show of KeyData is backwards-compatible with Read/Show of Key from before
this change, so Types.Distribution will keep working.

The Eq instance is fixed.

Also, Key has smart constructors, avoiding needing to remember to update
the cached serialization.

Used git-annex benchmark:
  find is 7% faster
  whereis is 3% faster
  get when all files are already present is 5% faster
Generally, the benchmarks are running 0.1 seconds faster per 2000 files,
on a ram disk in my laptop.
2019-11-22 17:49:16 -04:00
Joey Hess
5877de5e80
git-lfs: remember urls, and autoenable remotes using known urls
* git-lfs: The url provided to initremote/enableremote will now be
  stored in the git-annex branch, allowing enableremote to be used without
  an url. initremote --sameas can be used to add additional urls.
* git-lfs: When there's a git remote with an url that's known to be
  used for git-lfs, automatically enable the special remote.
2019-11-18 16:09:09 -04:00
Joey Hess
cee14f147a
stop displaying rsync progress, and use git-annex's own progress display for local-to-local repo transfers
Reasons to do this include:

1. I've gotten pretty used to git-annex's own progress display, which is
   used for all transfers over ssh (except to old git-annex-shell),
   and for most special remote transfers. It's getting to seem weird to see
   the rsync progress display instead.
2. When -J was used, the rsync output could not be shown, and so there was
   no progress display. Now there will be.

Progress will also be displayed now when cp CoW is used. But I'd expect a CoW
copy to typically run so fast that the progress display will barely be
noticable.

This commit was sponsored by Peter on Patreon.
2019-11-15 13:21:06 -04:00
Joey Hess
890330f0fe
make --json-error-messages capture url download errors
Convert Utility.Url to return Either String so the error message can be
displated in the annex monad and so captured.

(When curl is used, its errors are still not caught.)
2019-11-12 13:52:38 -04:00
Joey Hess
9e8d40181f
remove some unncessary uses of warningIO
warningIO is not concurrent output safe, and it doesn't go to
--json-error-messages

There are a few more that would be too hard to remove, and there are also
several dozen direct prints to stderr still.
2019-11-12 10:07:27 -04:00
Joey Hess
9828f45d85
add RemoteStateHandle
This solves the problem of sameas remotes trampling over per-remote
state. Used for:

* per-remote state, of course
* per-remote metadata, also of course
* per-remote content identifiers, because two remote implementations
  could in theory generate the same content identifier for two different
  peices of content

While chunk logs are per-remote data, they don't use this, because the
number and size of chunks stored is a common property across sameas
remotes.

External special remote had a complication, where it was theoretically
possible for a remote to send SETSTATE or GETSTATE during INITREMOTE or
EXPORTSUPPORTED. Since the uuid of the remote is typically generate in
Remote.setup, it would only be possible to pass a Maybe
RemoteStateHandle into it, and it would otherwise have to construct its
own. Rather than go that route, I decided to send an ERROR in this case.
It seems unlikely that any existing external special remote will be
affected. They would have to make up a git-annex key, and set state for
some reason during INITREMOTE. I can imagine such a hack, but it doesn't
seem worth complicating the code in such an ugly way to support it.

Unfortunately, both TestRemote and Annex.Import needed the Remote
to have a new field added that holds its RemoteStateHandle.
2019-10-14 13:51:42 -04:00
Joey Hess
d1130ea04a
get rid of hardcoded "name" lookups
Support "sameas-name" being set instead.

In RenameRemote, rename which ever of the two is set.
2019-10-10 13:25:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
53fd746705
avoid some build warnings on windows 2019-09-12 14:11:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
3f0eef4baa
v7 for all repositories
* Default to v7 for new repositories.
* Automatically upgrade v5 repositories to v7.
2019-08-30 14:09:14 -04:00
Joey Hess
e804f48f82
remove a few more isDirect tests 2019-08-28 11:53:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
16f646c9a6
don't hide message when ensureInitialized fails 2019-08-27 12:38:47 -04:00
Joey Hess
bb18bbd426
consolidate calls to ensureInitialized
tryGitConfigRead may run ensureInitialized first, but when checkuuid = false,
that is skipped. So, make sure it's run before all onLocal actions.

ensureInitialized is inexpensive, so the extra call by tryGitConfigRead
is not a big deal. But since it was easy to do, I made it only be run
once by all calls to onLocal.

A few calls to onLocal didn't call ensureInitialized before. Notably,
the checkPresent action didn't, and does now.

That means that there's a guarantee that any necessary repo upgrades
will be run before the checkPresent action runs in the repo. Which is
important especially for the direct mode conversion, because without
that upgrade, the checkPresent action would need to support direct mode
still. Now I can remove the last bits of direct mode support in
Annex.Content without worrying that it will break accessing remotes
that have not been upgraded.

This does necessarily mean that checkPresent needs to write to the disk
when performing such a repo upgrade. The other remote actions already
did, so retrieval from a readonly remote that needed to be upgraded would
fail. Having checkPresent also fail doesn't seem like a large reversion,
especially since it already failed in the default case when checkuuid = true.
2019-08-27 12:18:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
cfd0b4108e
avoid windows build warning 2019-08-13 13:10:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
f27c5db5c5
avoid rsync failing with a permissions error
The test suite was intermittently failing with rsync complaining it
could not write to dest.

get foo (from origin...)
SHA256E-s20--e394a389d787383843decc5d3d99b6d184ffa5fddeec23b911f9ee7fc8b9ea77
             20 100%    0.00kB/s    0:00:00  ^M             20 100%    0.00kB/s    0:00:00 (xfr#1, to-chk=0/1)
(from origin...)
SHA256E-s20--e394a389d787383843decc5d3d99b6d184ffa5fddeec23b911f9ee7fc8b9ea77
             20 100%    0.00kB/s    0:00:00  ^M             20 100%    0.00kB/s    0:00:00 (xfr#1, to-chk=0/1)
rsync: open "/home/joey/src/git-annex/.t/tmprepo1103/.git/annex/tmp/SHA256E-s20--e394a389d787383843decc5d3d99b6d184ffa5fddeec23b911f9ee7fc8b9ea77" failed: Permission denied (13)
rsync error: some files/attrs were not transferred (see previous errors) (code 23) at main.c(1207) [sender=3.1.3]

It seems that the first rsync actually transferred the file, but then for some
reason git-annex thinks it failed, so it retries. The second rsync then fails
because the first rsync copied the file mode over and so the file is not
writable now.

So, this fixes that problem, but leaves open the question of why git-annex
would think rsync failed when it wrote the file and didn't output any
error message. Possibly a bug in rsyncProgress that either hides an
error message, or somehow makes rsync unhappy?
2019-08-09 15:26:58 -04:00
Joey Hess
fb7d92457f
support using gcrypt with git-lfs special remote 2019-08-05 13:43:45 -04:00
Joey Hess
1cef791cf3
skeleton git-lfs special remote
This is a special remote and a git remote at the same time; git can pull
and push to it and git-annex can use it as a special remote.

Remote.Git has to check if it's configured as a git-lfs special remote
and sets it up as one if so.

Object methods not implemented yet.
2019-08-01 15:30:12 -04:00
Joey Hess
21ff5e1e5a
CoW probing
Improved probing when CoW copies can be made between files on the same
drive. Now supports CoW between BTRFS subvolumes. And, falls back to rsync
instead of using cp when CoW won't work, eg copies between repos on the
same EXT4 filesystem.

Rather than trying cp --reflink=always for each file copied to a remote,
it's tried once and if it fails it falls back to using rsync thereafter
for the lifetime of the Remote object. That avoids overhead of calling cp
which while small, will add up over a large number of files.

This commit was sponsored by Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon.
2019-07-17 14:19:08 -04:00
Joey Hess
ccc0684d21
no remotes support import yet 2019-02-20 16:59:04 -04:00