Commit graph

1849 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Hess
86e5ffe34a
clean empty object directories after deleting content lock file
When dropping content, this was already done after deleting the content
file, but the lock file prevents deleting the directories. So, try the
deletion again.

This does mean there's a small added overhead of a failed rmdir().

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2022-01-13 14:22:37 -04:00
Joey Hess
e28d1d0325
fix logic that was not inverted after all
oops
2022-01-13 14:11:36 -04:00
Joey Hess
a3b6b3499b
delete content lock file safely on drop, keep after shared lock
This seems to be the best that can be done to avoid forever accumulating
the new content lock files, while being fully safe.

This is fixing code paths that have lingered unused since direct mode!
And direct mode seems to have been buggy in this area, since the content
lock file was deleted on unlock. But with a shared lock, there could be
another process that also had the lock file locked, and deleting it
invalidates that lock.

So, the lock file cannot be deleted after a shared lock. At least, not
wihout taking an exclusive lock first.. which I have not pursued yet but may.

After an exclusive lock, the lock file can be deleted. But there is
still a potential race, where the exclusive lock is held, and another
process gets the file open, just as the exclusive lock is dropped and
the lock file is deleted. That other process would be left with a file
handle it can take a shared lock of, but with no effect since the file
is deleted. Annex.Transfer also deletes lock files, and deals with this
same problem by using checkSaneLock, which is how I've dealt with it
here.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2022-01-13 13:58:58 -04:00
Joey Hess
3d7933f124
fix inverted logic
Now the content lock files are used in v9. However, I am not yet certian
they are correct. In particular, lockContentUsing deletes
the content lock file on unlock. But what if there's a shared lock
by another process? That seems like it would discard that lock too!

(Windows seems like it would not have the same problem, because as the
comment in there says, "Can't delete a locked file on Windows".
So if another process has a shared lock, removing it presumably fails.)

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2022-01-13 13:58:31 -04:00
Joey Hess
731b1ecf87
v9 upgrade implemented
Seems to work ok. Unsure yet about the actual locking changes being
correct.

This is not the end of the story with upgrades, because it is unsafe for
this upgrade as implemented to run in a repository where an old
git-annex process is already running. The old process would use the old
locking method, and not notice files locked by the new, and this could
result in data loss. This problem will need to be dealt with before this
branch is suitable for merging.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2022-01-13 13:25:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
3936599885
move code from Command.Fsck
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2022-01-13 13:24:50 -04:00
Joey Hess
3c042606c2
use separate lock from content file in v9
Windows has always used a separate lock file, but on unix, the content
file itself was locked, and in v9 that changes to also use a separate
lock file.

This needs to be tested more. Eg, what happens after dropping a file;
does the the content lock file get deleted too, or linger around?

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2022-01-11 17:03:14 -04:00
Joey Hess
43f9d967ff
shared repository content file permissions for v9
v9 will not need to write to annex content files in order to lock them,
so freezeContent removes the write bit in a shared repository, the same
as in any other repository.

checkContentWritePerm makes sure that the write perm is not set, which
will let git-annex fsck fix up the permissions. Upgrading to v9
will need to fix the permissions as well, but it seems likely there will
be situations where the user git-annex is running an upgrade as cannot,
so it will have to leave the write bit set. In such a case, git-annex
fsck can fix it later.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2022-01-11 16:50:50 -04:00
Joey Hess
ff570ad363
add v9 annex.version, not yet the default
This is the start of v9, but it's currently identical to v8, and v8 is
not upgraded to it. git-annex upgrade will upgrade to v9 with this
change.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2022-01-11 14:59:39 -04:00
Joey Hess
e95747a149
fix handling of corrupted data received from git remote
Recover from corrupted content being received from a git remote due eg to a
wire error, by deleting the temporary file when it fails to verify. This
prevents a retry from failing again.

Reversion introduced in version 8.20210903, when incremental verification
was added.

Only the git remote seems to be affected, although it is certianly
possible that other remotes could later have the same issue. This only
affects things passed to getViaTmp that return (False, UnVerified) due to
verification failing. As far as getViaTmp can tell, that could just as well
mean that the transfer failed in a way that would resume, so it cannot
delete the temp file itself. Remote.Git and P2P.Annex use getViaTmp internally,
while other remotes do not, which is why only it seems affected.

A better fix perhaps would be to improve the types of the callback
passed to getViaTmp, so that some other value could be used to indicate
the state where the transfer succeeded but verification failed.

Sponsored-by: Boyd Stephen Smith Jr.
2022-01-07 13:25:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
21c0d5be6e
comment 2022-01-07 12:27:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
e416635021
renameremote: Better handling of case where there are multiple special remotes with a name
Instead of renaming one at random, error out and ask that a uuid be
specified.

Sponsored-by: Brett Eisenberg on Patreon
2022-01-05 15:24:02 -04:00
Joey Hess
58afb00f6e
enableremote: Better handling of the unusual case where multiple special remotes have been initialized with the same name
Before it would pick one at random, though preferring ones that were not
dead over dead ones.

Now, if one is dead and the other not, it will use the non-dead one. But if
both are not dead, or both dead, it will error out, suggesting the user
clarify what they want to enable.

Sponsored-by: Luke Shumaker on Patreon
2022-01-05 15:12:11 -04:00
Joey Hess
b1d719f9d2
handle transitions with read-only unmerged git-annex branches
Capstone to this feature. Any transitions that have been performed on an
unmerged remote ref but not on the local git-annex branch, or vice-versa
have to be applied on the fly when reading files.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-12-28 13:23:32 -04:00
Joey Hess
720baf820e
refactoring 2021-12-28 12:15:51 -04:00
Joey Hess
23a485498f
handle Annex.Branch.files with read-only unmerged git-annex branches
It would be difficult to make Annex.Branch.files query the unmerged
git-annex branches. Might be possible, similar to what was discussed in
7f6b2ca49c but again I decided to make it
not do anything in that situation to start with before adding such a
complicated thing.

git-annex info uses it when getting info about a repostory. The choices
were to make that fail with an error, or display the info it can, and
change the output slightly for the bits of info it cannot access. While
that is a behavior change, and I want to avoid any behavior changes due
to unmerged git-annex branches in a read-only repo, displaying a message
that is not a number seems unlikely to break anything that was consuming
a number, any worse than throwing an exception would. Probably.

Also git-annex unused --from origin is made to throw an error, but
it would fail later anyway when trying to write to the unused log files.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-12-27 15:28:31 -04:00
Joey Hess
7f6b2ca49c
handle overBranchFileContents with read-only unmerged git-annex branches
This makes --all error out in that situation. Which is better than
ignoring information from the branches.

To really handle the branches right, overBranchFileContents would need
to both query all the branches and union merge file contents
(or perhaps not provide any file content), as well as diffing between
branches to find files that are only present in the unmerged branches.
And also, it would need to handle transitions..

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-12-27 14:30:51 -04:00
Joey Hess
d9d0fe5fa4
disable precaching git-annex branch when there are unmerged branches in a read-only repo
The way precaching works, it can't merge in information from those
branches efficiently, so just disable it and fall back to
Annex.Branch.get in order to get the correct information.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-12-27 14:08:50 -04:00
Joey Hess
1e09cf661e
remove git-annex branch ref from unmerged refs list
It's queried separately so it was causing extra work to include it.
2021-12-27 13:33:27 -04:00
Joey Hess
6d7ecd9e5d
merge git-annex branch in memory in read-only repository
Improved support for using git-annex in a read-only repository, git-annex
branch information from remotes that cannot be merged into the git-annex
branch will now not crash it, but will be merged in memory.

To avoid this making git-annex behave one way in a read-only repository,
and another way when it can write, it's important that Annex.Branch.get
return the same thing (modulo log file compaction) in both cases.

This manages that mostly. There are some exceptions:

- When there is a transition in one of the remote git-annex branches
  that has not yet been applied to the local or other git-annex branches.
  Transitions are not handled.
- `git-annex log` runs git log on the git-annex branch, and so
  it will not be able to show information coming from the other, not yet
  merged branches.
- Annex.Branch.files only looks at files in the git-annex branch and not
  unmerged branches. This affects git-annex info output.
- Annex.Branch.hs.overBranchFileContents ditto. Affects --all and
  also importfeed (but importfeed cannot work in a read-only repo
  anyway).
- CmdLine.Seek.seekFilteredKeys when precaching location logs.
  Note use of Annex.Branch.fullname
- Database.ContentIdentifier.needsUpdateFromLog and updateFromLog

These warts make this not suitable to be merged yet.

This readonly code path is more expensive, since it has to query several
branches. The value does get cached, but still large queries will be
slower in a read-only repository when there are unmerged git-annex
branches.

When annex.merge-annex-branches=false, updateTo skips doing anything,
and so the read-only repository code does not get triggered. So a user who
is bothered by the extra work can set that.

Other writes to the repository can still result in permissions errors.
This includes the initial creation of the git-annex branch, and of course
any writes to the git-annex branch.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-12-27 13:21:15 -04:00
Joey Hess
c2e46f4707
improve git command queue flushing with time limit
So that eg, addurl of several large files that take time to download will
update the index for each file, rather than deferring the index updates to
the end.

In cases like an add of many smallish files, where a new file is being
added every few seconds. In that case, the queue will still build up a
lot of changes which are flushed at once, for best performance. Since
the default queue size is 10240, often it only gets flushed once at the
end, same as before. (Notice that updateQueue updated _lastchanged
when adding a new item to the queue without flushing it; that is
necessary to avoid it flushing the queue every 5 minutes in this case.)

But, when it takes more than a 5 minutes to add a file, the overhead of
updating the index immediately is probably small, so do it after each
file. This avoids git-annex potentially taking a very very long time
indeed to stage newly added files, which can be annoying to the user who
would like to get on with doing something with the files it's already
added, eg using git mv to rename them to a better name.

This is only likely to cause a problem if it takes say, 30 seconds to
update the index; doing an extra 30 seconds of work after every 5
minute file add would be less optimal. Normally, updating the index takes
significantly less time than that. On a SSD with 100k files it takes
less than 1 second, and the index write time is bound by disk read and
write so is not too much worse on a hard drive. So I hope this will not
impact users, although if it does turn out to, the time limit could be
made configurable.

A perhaps better way to do it would be to have a background worker
thread that wakes up every 60 seconds or so and flushes the queue.
That is made somewhat difficult because the queue can contain Annex
actions and so this would add a new source of concurrency issues.
So I'm trying to avoid that approach if possible.

Sponsored-by: Erik Bjäreholt on Patreon
2021-12-14 12:23:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
6242b35c33
fix error message
Was "failed to generate a key" when key generation did not fail
(it never does anymore) but the actual problem was it failed to stat
the source file, perhaps due to it being deleted while the key was being
generated.

A user reported this, in a comment I followed up on in
262400fe04, although I don't know
what they did to trigger the error message.
2021-12-09 15:25:59 -04:00
Joey Hess
dbba231e06
Improve error message display when autoinit fails
Due to eg, a permissions problem.
2021-12-09 14:38:12 -04:00
Joey Hess
ef3ab0769e
close pid lock only once no threads use it
This fixes a FD leak when annex.pidlock is set and -J is used. Also, it
fixes bugs where the pid lock file got deleted because one thread was
done with it, while another thread was still holding it open.

The LockPool now has two distinct types of resources,
one is per-LockHandle and is used for file Handles, which get closed
when the associated LockHandle is closed. The other one is per lock
file, and gets closed when no more LockHandles use that lock file,
including other shared locks of the same file.

That latter kind is used for the pid lock file, so it's opened by the
first thread to use a lock, and closed when the last thread closes a lock.

In practice, this means that eg git-annex get of several files opens and
closes the pidlock file a few times per file. While with -J5 it will open
the pidlock file, process a number of files, until all the threads happen to
finish together, at which point the pidlock file gets closed, and then
that repeats. So in either case, another process still gets a chance to
take the pidlock.

registerPostRelease has a rather intricate dance, there are fine-grained
STM locks, a STM lock of the pidfile itself, and the actual pidlock file
on disk that are all resolved in stages by it.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-12-06 15:01:39 -04:00
Joey Hess
e5ca67ea1c
fine-grained locking when annex.pidlock is enabled
This locking has been missing from the beginning of annex.pidlock.
It used to be possble, when two threads are doing conflicting things,
for both to run at the same time despite using locking. Seems likely
that nothing actually had a problem, but it was possible, and this
eliminates that possible source of failure.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-12-03 17:20:21 -04:00
Joey Hess
4703ad3e7f
remove unused import 2021-11-23 16:15:57 -04:00
Joey Hess
5a7f253974
support git 2.34.0's handling of merge conflict between annexed and non-annexed file
This version of git -- or its new default "ort" resolver -- handles such
a conflict by staging two files, one with the original name and the other
named file~ref. Use unmergedSiblingFile when the latter is detected.

(It doesn't do that when the conflict is between a directory and a file
or symlink though, so see previous commit for how that case is handled.)

The sibling file has to be deleted separately, because cleanConflictCruft
may not delete it -- that only handles files that are annex links,
but the sibling file may be the non-annexed file side of the conflict.

The graftin code had assumed that, when the other side of a conclict
is a symlink, the file in the work tree will contain the non-annexed
content that we want it to contain. But that is not the case with the new
git; the file may be the annex link and needs to be replaced with the
content, while the annex link will be written as a -variant file.

(The weird doesDirectoryExist check in graftin turns out to still be
needed, test suite failed when I tried to remove it.)

Test suite passes with new git with ort resolver default. Have not tried it
with old git or other defaults.

Sponsored-by: Noam Kremen on Patreon
2021-11-22 16:10:24 -04:00
Joey Hess
623a775609
fix cat-file leak in get with -J
Bugfix: When -J was enabled, getting files leaked a ever-growing number of
git cat-file processes.

(Since commit dd39e9e255)

The leak happened when mergeState called stopNonConcurrentSafeCoProcesses.
While stopNonConcurrentSafeCoProcesses usually manages to stop everything,
there was a race condition where cat-file processes were leaked. Because
catFileStop modifies Annex.catfilehandles in a non-concurrency safe way,
and could clobber modifications made in between. Which should have been ok,
since originally catFileStop was only used at shutdown.

Note the comment on catFileStop saying it should only be used when nothing
else is using the handles. It would be possible to make catFileStop
race-safe, but it should just not be used in a situation where a race is
possible. So I didn't bother.

Instead, the fix is just not to stop any processes in mergeState. Because
in order for mergeState to be called, dupState must have been run, and it
enables concurrency mode, stops any non-concurrent processes, and so all
processes that are running are concurrency safea. So there is no need to
stop them when merging state. Indeed, stopping them would be extra work,
even if there was not this bug.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-11-19 12:51:08 -04:00
Joey Hess
15d617f7e1
have setConcurrency stop any running git coprocesses
When non-concurrent git coprocesses have been started, setConcurrency
used to not stop them, and so could leak processes when enabling
concurrency, eg when forkState is called.

I do not think that ever actually happened, given where setConcurrency
is called. And it probably would only leak one of each process, since it
never downgrades from concurrent to non-concurrent.
2021-11-19 12:00:39 -04:00
Joey Hess
8c756d5a27
fix comment typo 2021-11-17 13:03:37 -04:00
Joey Hess
aa6e54ac6e
Fix a typo in the name of youtube-dl (reversion introduced in version 8.20210903) 2021-11-13 08:58:36 -04:00
Joey Hess
8034f2e9bb
factor out IncrementalHasher from IncrementalVerifier 2021-11-09 12:33:22 -04:00
Joey Hess
a0758bdd10
dynamically disable filter-process in restagePointerFile when it would be slower
Based on my earlier benchmark, I have a rough cost model for how
expensive it is for git-annex smudge to be run on a file, vs
how expensive it is for a gigabyte of a file's content to be read and
piped through to filter-process.

So, using that cost model, it can decide if using filter-process will
be more or less expensive than running the smudge filter on the files to
be restaged.

It turned out to be *really* annoying to temporarily disable
filter-process. I did find a way, but urk, this is horrible. Notice
that, if it's interrupted with it disabled, it will remain disabled
until the next time restagePointerFile runs. Which could be some time
later. If the user runs `git add` or `git checkout` on a lot of small
files before that, they will see slower than expected performance.

(This commit also deletes where I wrote down the benchmark results
earlier.)

Sponsored-by: Noam Kremen on Patreon
2021-11-08 16:20:34 -04:00
Joey Hess
837025b14f
Revert "disable filter.annex.process in restagePointerFile"
This reverts commit afe327ac49.

Unfortunately, disabling it by setting it to "" does not work, git
then ignores filter.annex.smudge/clean, and does not pass files through
git-annex at all.

I don't think there is a way to temporarily disable this git config
from the git command line. Which seems like a bug in git.

So, it may be more expensive than anticipated to enable
filter.annex.process, since git checkout etc will pipe all annexed files
being checked out through it.
2021-11-05 12:43:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
afe327ac49
disable filter.annex.process in restagePointerFile
This means git will run git-annex smudge --clean once per file that is
restaged, which can be slow. But probably *not* as slow as git feeding
all the content of annexed files you've gotten through a pipe to
git-annex filter-process.

The only time this is probably not ideal is after a drop of a bunch of
files, when filter-process would be faster.
2021-11-04 15:20:26 -04:00
Joey Hess
a3cdff3fd5
add a comment about checkSaneLock
See commit 8c2dd7d8ee for original
introduction of it, but needing to spelunk that far back to understand
the code is not good.
2021-10-27 14:55:30 -04:00
Joey Hess
55bfa414b3
move transfer already in progress message to warning
This makes it be displayed in the error-messages field with
--json-error-messages. And with --quiet, it will let it be displayed,
which makes sense because it's telling the user why what they requested
to do has failed to happen.
2021-10-27 14:46:21 -04:00
Joey Hess
669037862a
avoid redundant freezeContent call
This opens the potential for the object file to be in place but
git-annex is interrupted before it can freeze it. git-annex fsck already
fixes that situation, which can also occur when lockContentForRemoval
thaws content.

Also improve comment to not be Windows-specific.
2021-10-27 14:18:10 -04:00
Reiko Asakura
0db7297f00
Call freezeContent after move into annex
This change better supports Windows ACL management using
annex.freezecontent-command and annex.thawcontent-command and matches
the behaviour of adding an unlocked file.

By calling freezeContent after the file has moved into the annex,
the file's delete permission can be denied. If the file's delete
permission is denied before moving into the annex, the file cannot
be moved or deleted. If the file's delete permission is not denied after
moving into the annex, it will likely inherit a grant for the delete
permission which allows it to be deleted irrespective of the permissions
of the parent directory.
2021-10-27 14:05:57 -04:00
Joey Hess
5a9e6b1fd4
when private journal file exists, still read from git-annex branch
Fix bug that caused stale git-annex branch information to read when
annex.private or remote.name.annex-private is set.

The private journal file should not prevent reading more current
information from the git-annex branch, but used to.

Note that, overBranchFileContents has to do additional work now, when
there's a private journal file, it reads from the branch redundantly
and more slowly.

Sponsored-by: Jack Hill on Patreon
2021-10-26 13:43:50 -04:00
Joey Hess
0f38ad9a69
close keys db to possibly work around WSL1 issue 2021-10-19 13:07:49 -04:00
Joey Hess
887edeb1ad
avoid warning when built with unix-compat 0.5.3
It re-exports modificationTimeHiRes, and provides a windows version.

Might be worth using that windows version eventually, but I have not
tested it.
2021-10-18 16:25:28 -04:00
Joey Hess
69f8e6c7c0
ImportableContentsChunkable
This improves the borg special remote memory usage, by
letting it only load one archive's worth of filenames into memory at a
time, and building up a larger tree out of the chunks.

When a borg repository has many archives, git-annex could easily OOM
before. Now, it will use only memory proportional to the number of
annexed keys in an archive.

Minor implementation wart: Each new chunk re-opens the content
identifier database, and also a new vector clock is used for each chunk.
This is a minor innefficiency only; the use of continuations makes
it hard to avoid, although putting the database handle into a Reader
monad would be one way to fix it.

It may later be possible to extend the ImportableContentsChunkable
interface to remotes that are not third-party populated. However, that
would perhaps need an interface that does not use continuations.

The ImportableContentsChunkable interface currently does not allow
populating the top of the tree with anything other than subtrees. It
would be easy to extend it to allow putting files in that tree, but borg
doesn't need that so I left it out for now.

Sponsored-by: Noam Kremen on Patreon
2021-10-08 13:15:22 -04:00
Joey Hess
19e78816f0
convert Key to ShortByteString
This adds the overhead of a copy when serializing and deserializing keys.
I have not benchmarked much, but runtimes seem barely changed at all by that.

When a lot of keys are in memory, it improves memory use.

And, it prevents keys sometimes getting PINNED in memory and failing to GC,
which is a problem ByteString has sometimes. In particular, git-annex sync
from a borg special remote had that problem and this improved its memory
use by a large amount.

Sponsored-by: Shae Erisson on Patreon
2021-10-05 20:20:08 -04:00
Joey Hess
9012fa0187
reinject: Fix crash when reinjecting a file from outside the repository
Commit 4bf7940d6b introduced this
problem, but was otherwise doing a good thing. Problem being
that fileRef "/foo" used to return ":./foo", which was actually wrong,
but as long as there was no foo in the local repository, catKey
could operate on it without crashing. After that fix though, fileRef
would return eg "../../foo", resulting in fileRef returning
":./../../foo", which will make git cat-file crash since that's
not a valid path in the repo.

Fix is simply to make fileRef detect paths outside the repo and return
Nothing. Then catKey can be skipped. This needed several bugfixes to
dirContains as well, in previous commits.

In Command.Smudge, this led to needing to check for Nothing. That case
should actually never happen, because the fileoutsiderepo check will
detect it earlier.

Sponsored-by: Brock Spratlen on Patreon
2021-10-01 14:06:34 -04:00
Joey Hess
b9aa2ce8d1
resume properly when copying a file to/from a local git remote is interrupted (take 2)
This method avoids breaking test_readonly. Just check if the dest file
exists, and avoid CoW probing when it does, so when CoW probing fails,
it can resume where the previous non-CoW copy left off.

If CoW has been probed already to work, delete the dest file
since a CoW copy will presumably work. It seems like it would be almost
as good to just skip CoW copying in this case too, but consider that the
dest file might have started to be copied from some other remote, not
using CoW, but CoW has been probed to work to copy from the current
place.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-09-27 16:03:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
7ccf642863
revert change that broke test_readonly
commit 63d508e885 broke test_readonly.
When a local git remote is readonly, tryCopyCoW run to copy a file
from it failed at withOtherTmp.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-09-27 16:02:41 -04:00
Joey Hess
e47b4badb3
separate handles for cat-file and cat-file --batch-check
This avoids starting one process when only the other one is needed.
Eg in git-annex smudge --clean, this reduces the total number of
cat-file processes that are started from 4 to 2.

The only performance penalty is that when both are needed, it has to do
twice as much work to maintain the two Maps. But both are very small,
consisting of 1 or 2 items, so that work is negligible.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-09-24 13:16:13 -04:00
Joey Hess
798b33ba3d
simplify annex.bwlimit handling
RemoteGitConfig parsing looks for annex.bwlimit when a remote
does not have a per-remote config for it, so no need for a separate
gobal config.

Sponsored-by: Svenne Krap on Patreon
2021-09-22 10:52:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
05a097cde8
Merge branch 'master' into bwlimit 2021-09-22 10:48:27 -04:00
Joey Hess
4fef94d764
simplify annex.stalldetection handling
RemoteGitConfig parsing looks for annex.stalldetection when a remote
does not have a per-remote config for it, so no need for a separate
gobal config.

Sponsored-by: Noam Kremen on Patreon
2021-09-22 10:46:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
63d508e885
resume properly when copying a file to/from a local git remote is interrupted
Probably this fixes a reversion, but I don't know what version broke it.

This does use withOtherTmp for a temp file that could be quite large.
Though albeit a reflink copy that will not actually take up any space
as long as the file it was copied from still exists. So if the copy cow
succeeds but git-annex is interrupted just before that temp file gets
renamed into the usual .git/annex/tmp/ location, there is a risk that
the other temp directory ends up cluttered with a larger temp file than
later. It will eventually be cleaned up, and the changes of this being
a problem are small, so this seems like an acceptable thing to do.

Sponsored-by: Shae Erisson on Patreon
2021-09-21 17:43:35 -04:00
Joey Hess
18e00500ce
bwlimit
Added annex.bwlimit and remote.name.annex-bwlimit config that works for git
remotes and many but not all special remotes.

This nearly works, at least for a git remote on the same disk. With it set
to 100kb/1s, the meter displays an actual bandwidth of 128 kb/s, with
occasional spikes to 160 kb/s. So it needs to delay just a bit longer...
I'm unsure why.

However, at the beginning a lot of data flows before it determines the
right bandwidth limit. A granularity of less than 1s would probably improve
that.

And, I don't know yet if it makes sense to have it be 100ks/1s rather than
100kb/s. Is there a situation where the user would want a larger
granularity? Does granulatity need to be configurable at all? I only used that
format for the config really in order to reuse an existing parser.

This can't support for external special remotes, or for ones that
themselves shell out to an external command. (Well, it could, but it
would involve pausing and resuming the child process tree, which seems
very hard to implement and very strange besides.) There could also be some
built-in special remotes that it still doesn't work for, due to them not
having a progress meter whose displays blocks the bandwidth using thread.
But I don't think there are actually any that run a separate thread for
downloads than the thread that displays the progress meter.

Sponsored-by: Graham Spencer on Patreon
2021-09-21 16:58:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
ec12537774
defer write permissions checking in import until after copy to repo
This should complete the fix started in
6329997ac4, fixing the actual cause of the
test suite failure this time.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-09-02 13:45:21 -04:00
Joey Hess
bd5494bb9c
fix windows build 2021-09-02 12:21:25 -04:00
Joey Hess
4f42292b13
improve url download failure display
* When downloading urls fail, explain which urls failed for which
  reasons.
* web: Avoid displaying a warning when downloading one url failed
  but another url later succeeded.

Some other uses of downloadUrl use urls that are effectively internal use,
and should not all be displayed to the user on failure. Eg, Remote.Git
tries different urls where content could be located depending on how the
remote repo is set up. Exposing those urls to the user would lead to wild
goose chases. So had to parameterize it to control whether it displays urls
or not.

A side effect of this change is that when there are some youtube urls
and some regular urls, it will try regular urls first, even if the
youtube urls are listed first. This seems like an improvement if
anything, but in any case there's no defined order of urls that it's
supposed to use.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-09-01 15:33:38 -04:00
Joey Hess
6329997ac4
init: check for filesystem where write bit cannot be removed
This fixes a reversion caused by a99a84f342,
when git-annex init is run as root on a FAT filesystem mounted with
hdiutil on OSX. Such a mount point has file mode 777 for everything and
it cannot be changed. The existing crippled filesystem test tried to
write to a file after removing write bit, but that test does not run as
root (since root can write to unwritable files). So added a check of the
write permissions of the file, after attempting to remove them.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-09-01 10:27:28 -04:00
Joey Hess
e853ef3095
decorate openTempFile errors with the template name
This is to track down what file in .git/annex/ is being written to via a
temp file when the repository is read-only.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-08-30 13:05:02 -04:00
Joey Hess
a99a84f342
add: Detect when xattrs or perhaps ACLs prevent locking down a file's content
And fail with an informative message.

I don't think ACLs can prevent removing the write bit, but I'm not sure,
so kept it mentioning them as a possibility.

Should git-annex lock also check if the write bits are able to be removed?
Maybe, but the case I know about with xattrs involves cp -a copying NFS
xattrs, and it's the copy of the file that is the problem. So when locking
a file, I guess it will not be the copy.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-08-27 14:33:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
6d4a728455
Added annex.youtube-dl-command config
This can be used to run some forks of youtube-dl.

Sponsored-by: Brett Eisenberg on Patreon
2021-08-27 09:44:23 -04:00
Joey Hess
4ed36b2634
Fix test suite failure on Windows
It would be better if the Arbitrary instance avoided generating impossible
filenames like "foo/c:bar", but proably this is the only place that splits
the file from the directory and then uses the file without the directory..
At least on the quickcheck properties.

Sponsored-by: Svenne Krap on Patreon
2021-08-24 14:03:29 -04:00
Joey Hess
492036622a
fix OSX build 2021-08-18 16:35:26 -04:00
Joey Hess
d154e7022e
incremental verification for web special remote
Except when configuration makes curl be used. It did not seem worth
trying to tail the file when curl is downloading.

But when an interrupted download is resumed, it does not read the whole
existing file to hash it. Same reason discussed in
commit 7eb3742e4b76d1d7a487c2c53bf25cda4ee5df43; that could take a long
time with no progress being displayed. And also there's an open http
request, which needs to be consumed; taking a long time to hash the file
might cause it to time out.

Also in passing implemented it for git and external special remotes when
downloading from the web. Several others like S3 are within striking
distance now as well.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-18 15:02:22 -04:00
Joey Hess
88b63a43fa
distinguish between incremental verification failing and not being done
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-18 14:38:02 -04:00
Joey Hess
325bfda12d
refactor 2021-08-18 13:37:00 -04:00
Joey Hess
449851225a
refactor
IncrementalVerifier moved to Utility.Hash, which will let Utility.Url
use it later.

It's perhaps not really specific to hashing, but making a separate
module just for the data type seemed unncessary.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-18 13:19:02 -04:00
Joey Hess
f0754a61f5
plumb VerifyConfig into retrieveKeyFile
This fixes the recent reversion that annex.verify is not honored,
because retrieveChunks was passed RemoteVerify baser, but baser
did not have export/import set up.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-17 12:43:13 -04:00
Joey Hess
b1622eb932
incremental verify for directory special remote
Added fileRetriever', which will let the remaining special remotes
eventually also support incremental verify.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-16 16:51:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
a644f729ce
refactor fileCopier
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-16 15:56:24 -04:00
Joey Hess
d889ae0c01
move comment 2021-08-16 15:25:06 -04:00
Joey Hess
aac0654ff4
handle AlreadyInUseError
As happens when using the directory special remote, gitlfs, webdav, and
S3. But not external, adb, gcrypt, hook, or rsync.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-16 15:03:48 -04:00
Joey Hess
c4aba8e032
better handling of finishing up incomplete incremental verify
Now it's run in VerifyStage.

I thought about keeping the file handle open, and resuming reading where
tailVerify left off. But that risks leaking open file handles, until the
GC closes them, if the deferred verification does not get resumed. Since
that could perhaps happen if there's an exception somewhere, I decided
that was too unsafe.

Instead, re-open the file, seek, and resume.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-16 14:52:59 -04:00
Joey Hess
e0b7f391bd
improve tailVerify
Wait for the file to get modified, not only opened. This way, if a
remote does not support resuming, and opens a new file over top of the
existing file, it will wait until that remote starts writing, and open
the file it's writing to, not the old file.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-16 14:47:37 -04:00
Joey Hess
e46a7dff6f
fix windows build 2021-08-13 16:36:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
16dd3dd4ca
catch more exceptions
I saw this:

  .git/annex/tmp/SHA256E-s1234376--5ba8e06e0163b217663907482bbed57684d7188024155ddc81da0710dfd2687d: openBinaryFile: resource busy (file is locked)

 guess catching IO exceptions did not catch that one.
2021-08-13 16:16:46 -04:00
Joey Hess
ff2dc5eb18
INotify.removeWatch can crash
Unsure why, possibly if the file has been replaced by another file.
2021-08-13 15:35:18 -04:00
Joey Hess
7503b8448b
inotify reports paths relative to directory being watched
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-13 14:51:15 -04:00
Joey Hess
e07625df8a
convert tailVerify to not finalize the verification
Added failIncremental so it can force failure to verify.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-13 13:39:02 -04:00
Joey Hess
9d533b347f
tailVerify: return deferred action when it gets behind
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-13 12:32:01 -04:00
Joey Hess
b6efba8139
add tailVerify
Not yet used, but this will let all remotes verify incrementally if it's
acceptable to pay the performance price. See comment for details of when
it will perform badly. I anticipate using this for all special remotes
that use fileRetriever. Except perhaps for a few like GitLFS that could
feed the incremental verifier themselves despite using that.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's DANDI project
2021-08-12 14:38:02 -04:00
Joey Hess
fa62c98910
simplify and speed up Utility.FileSystemEncoding
This eliminates the distinction between decodeBS and decodeBS', encodeBS
and encodeBS', etc. The old implementation truncated at NUL, and the
primed versions had to do extra work to avoid that problem. The new
implementation does not truncate at NUL, and is also a lot faster.
(Benchmarked at 2x faster for decodeBS and 3x for encodeBS; more for the
primed versions.)

Note that filepath-bytestring 1.4.2.1.8 contains the same optimisation,
and upgrading to it will speed up to/fromRawFilePath.

AFAIK, nothing relied on the old behavior of truncating at NUL. Some
code used the faster versions in places where I was sure there would not
be a NUL. So this change is unlikely to break anything.

Also, moved s2w8 and w82s out of the module, as they do not involve
filesystem encoding really.

Sponsored-by: Shae Erisson on Patreon
2021-08-11 12:13:31 -04:00
Joey Hess
1acdd18ea8
deal better with clock skew situations, using vector clocks
* Deal with clock skew, both forwards and backwards, when logging
  information to the git-annex branch.
* GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK can now be set to a fixed value (eg 1)
  rather than needing to be advanced each time a new change is made.
* Misuse of GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK will no longer confuse git-annex.

When changing a file in the git-annex branch, the vector clock to use is now
determined by first looking at the current time (or GIT_ANNEX_VECTOR_CLOCK
when set), and comparing it to the newest vector clock already in use in
that file. If a newer time stamp was already in use, advance it forward by
a second instead.

When the clock is set to a time in the past, this avoids logging with
an old timestamp, which would risk that log line later being ignored in favor
of "newer" line that is really not newer.

When a log entry has been made with a clock that was set far ahead in the
future, this avoids newer information being logged with an older timestamp
and so being ignored in favor of that future-timestamped information.
Once all clocks get fixed, this will result in the vector clocks being
incremented, until finally enough time has passed that time gets back ahead
of the vector clock value, and then it will return to usual operation.

(This latter situation is not ideal, but it seems the best that can be done.
The issue with it is, since all writers will be incrementing the last
vector clock they saw, there's no way to tell when one writer made a write
significantly later in time than another, so the earlier write might
arbitrarily be picked when merging. This problem is why git-annex uses
timestamps in the first place, rather than pure vector clocks.)

Advancing forward by 1 second is somewhat arbitrary. setDead
advances a timestamp by just 1 picosecond, and the vector clock could
too. But then it would interfere with setDead, which wants to be
overrulled by any change. So it could use 2 picoseconds or something,
but that seems weird. It could just as well advance it forward by a
minute or whatever, but then it would be harder for real time to catch
up with the vector clock when forward clock slew had happened.

A complication is that many log files contain several different peices of
information, and it may be best to only use vector clocks for the same peice
of information. For example, a key's location log file contains
InfoPresent/InfoMissing for each UUID, and it only looks at the vector
clocks for the UUID that is being changed, and not other UUIDs.

Although exactly where the dividing line is can be hard to determine.
Consider metadata logs, where a field "tag" can have multiple values set
at different times. Should it advance forward past the last tag?
Probably. What about when a different field is set, should it look at
the clocks of other fields? Perhaps not, but currently it does, and
this does not seems like it will cause any problems.

Another one I'm not entirely sure about is the export log, which is
keyed by (fromuuid, touuid). So if multiple repos are exporting to the
same remote, different vector clocks can be used for that remote.
It looks like that's probably ok, because it does not try to determine
what order things occurred when there was an export conflict.

Sponsored-by: Jochen Bartl on Patreon
2021-08-04 12:33:46 -04:00
Joey Hess
6111958440
fix test suite
14683da9eb caused a test suite failure.
When the content of a key is not present, a LinkAnnexFailed is returned,
but replaceFile then tried to move the file into place, and since it was
not written, that crashed.

Sponsored-by: Boyd Stephen Smith Jr. on Patreon
2021-08-02 13:59:23 -04:00
Joey Hess
b3c4579c79
work around strange auto-init bug
git-annex get when run as the first git-annex command in a new repo did not
populate unlocked files. (Reversion in version 8.20210621)

I am not entirely happy with this, because I don't understand how
428c91606b caused the problem in the first
place, and I don't fully understand how skipping calling scanAnnexedFiles
during autoinit avoids the problem.

Kept the explicit call to scanAnnexedFiles during git-annex init,
so that when reconcileStaged is expensive, it can be made to run then,
rather than at some later point when the information is needed.

Sponsored-by: Brock Spratlen on Patreon
2021-07-30 18:36:03 -04:00
Joey Hess
748addbe05
remove second pass in scanAnnexedFiles
The pass was needed to populate files when annex.thin was set,
but in commit 73e0cbbb19,
reconcileStaged started to do that. So, this second pass is not needed
any longer.
2021-07-30 17:46:11 -04:00
Joey Hess
817ccbbc47
split verifyKeyContent
This avoids it calling enteringStage VerifyStage when it's used in
places that only fall back to verification rarely, and which might be
called while in TransferStage and be going to perform a transfer after
the verification.
2021-07-29 13:58:40 -04:00
Joey Hess
897fd5c104
add note 2021-07-29 13:14:03 -04:00
Joey Hess
067a9c70c7
simplify code 2021-07-29 12:28:13 -04:00
Joey Hess
3e0b210039
remove unncessary debugs
Keeping the ones in Annex.InodeSentinal
2021-07-29 12:19:37 -04:00
Joey Hess
73e0cbbb19
fix problem populating pointer files
This is a result of an audit of every use of getInodeCaches,
to find places that misbehave when the annex object is not in the inode
cache, despite pointer files for the same key being in the inode cache.

Unfortunately, that is the case for objects that were in v7 repos that
upgraded to v8. Added a note about this gotcha to getInodeCaches.

Database.Keys.reconcileStaged, then annex.thin is set, would fail to
populate pointer files in this situation. Changed it to check if the
annex object is unmodified the same way inAnnex does, falling back to a
checksum if the inode cache is not recorded.

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-07-27 14:26:49 -04:00
Joey Hess
de482c7eeb
move verifyKeyContent to Annex.Verify
The goal is that Database.Keys be able to use it; it can't use
Annex.Content.Presence due to an import loop.

Several other things also needed to be moved to Annex.Verify as a
conseqence.
2021-07-27 14:07:23 -04:00
Joey Hess
14683da9eb
fix potential race in updating inode cache
Some uses of linkFromAnnex are inside replaceWorkTreeFile, which was
already safe, but others use it directly on the work tree file, which
was race-prone. Eg, if the work tree file was first removed, then
linkFromAnnex called to populate it, the user could have re-written it in
the interim.

This came to light during an audit of all calls of addInodeCaches,
looking for such races. All the other uses of it seem ok.

Sponsored-by: Brett Eisenberg on Patreon
2021-07-27 13:08:08 -04:00
Joey Hess
e4b2a067e0
fix potential race in updating inode cache
In Annex.Content, the object file was statted after pointer files were
populated. But if annex.thin is set, once the pointer files are
populated, the object file can potentially be modified via the hard
link. So, it was possible, though seemingly very unlikely, for the inode
of the modified object file to be cached.

Command.Fix and Command.Fsck had similar problems, statting the work
tree files after they were in place. Changed them to stat the temp file
that gets moved into place. This does rely on .git/annex being on the
same filesystem. If it's not, the cached inode will not be the same as
the one that the temp file gets moved to. Result will be that git-annex
will later need to do an expensive verification of the content of the
worktree files. Note that the cross-filesystem move of the temp file
already is a larger amount of extra work, so this seems acceptable.

Sponsored-by: Luke Shumaker on Patreon
2021-07-27 12:29:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
3b5a3e168d
check if object is modified before starting to send it
Fix bug that caused some transfers to incorrectly fail with "content
changed while it was being sent", when the content was not changed.

While I don't know how to reproduce the problem that several people
reported, it is presumably due to the inode cache somehow being stale.
So check isUnmodified', and if it's not modified, include the file's
current inode cache in the set to accept, when checking for modification
after the transfer.

That seems like the right thing to do for another reason: The failure
says the file changed while it was being sent, but if the object file was
changed before the transfer started, that's wrong. So it needs to check
before allowing the transfer at all if the file is modified.

(Other calls to sameInodeCache or elemInodeCaches, when operating on inode
caches from the database, could also be problimatic if the inode cache is
somehow getting stale. This does not address such problems.)

Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
2021-07-26 17:33:49 -04:00
Joey Hess
f195f3b541
more inode cache debugging 2021-07-26 12:57:35 -04:00
Joey Hess
0073384850
add debugging in sameInodeCache 2021-07-26 10:58:07 -04:00
Joey Hess
33a80d083a
sync --quiet
* sync: When --quiet is used, run git commit, push, and pull without
  their ususual output.
* merge: When --quiet is used, run git merge without its usual output.

This might also make --quiet work better for some other commands
that make commits, like git-annex adjust.

Sponsored-by: Kevin Mueller on Patreon
2021-07-19 11:28:47 -04:00
Joey Hess
635e7f3e26
split annexLocations
To avoid mistakes like commit 0ccbed4f6f,
be explicit about the two variants of this.

Incidentially avoids a small amount of overhead in calling reverse.

Sponsored-by: Shae Erisson on Patreon
2021-07-16 14:17:56 -04:00
Joey Hess
0ccbed4f6f
fix oops
dd31fe7b9e broke non-bare repos by using
bare hash dirs first, oops
2021-07-15 21:01:07 -04:00
Joey Hess
dd31fe7b9e
fall back to checking lower case hash directories in normal repo
Fix a bug that prevented getting content from a repository that started out
as a bare repository, or had annex.crippledfilesystem set, and was
converted to a non-bare repository.

This unfortunately means that inAnnex check gets slowed down by a stat call
in normal repos when the content is not present. Oh well, such is the cost
of backwards compatability with old mistakes.

Sponsored-by: Mark Reidenbach on Patreon
2021-07-15 12:16:31 -04:00