I only added this to the presense messages that are really intended for
presence. The ones used for tunneling git etc don't have the tag, because
that would waste bandwidth.
In direct mode, it's best to whenever possible not move direct mode files
out of the way, and so I made unannex avoid touching the direct mode file at
all.
That actually turns out to be easy, because in direct mode, unlike indirect
mode, the pre-commit hook won't get confused if the unannexed file later
gets added back by git add. So there's no need to commit the unannex right
away; it can be staged for the user to commit later. This also means that
unannex in direct mode is a lot faster than in indirect mode!
Another subtle bit is the bookkeeping that is done when unannexing a direct
mode file. The inode cache needs to be removed so that when uninit runs
getKeysPresent, it doesn't see the cache and think the key is still
present and crash when it's not.
This commit is sponsored by Douglas Butts. Thanks!
This is ok to do now that the socket filename never needs to be mapped back
to a hostname.
Short hostnames will still appear in the clear, which is less obfuscated.
So this cannot possibly make ssh connection caching fail for a hostname it
used to work for.
gmail.com has some XMPP SRV records, but does not itself respond to XMPP
traffic, although it does accept connections on port 5222. So if a user
entered the wrong password, it would try all the SRVs and fall back to
trying gmail, and hang at that point.
This seems the right thing to do, not just a workaround.
I wanted to try to guard against it in Command.Add too, but it's a case of
garbage in, garbage out. Once Command.Add has been told it's dealing with a
dummy symlink, it goes and deletes it, and even though the object it
thinks it points to is not present in the annex, it's Command.Add is still
doing the right thing to go ahead and add the broken symlink. So the two
fixes I was able to put in will have to do.
I thought at first this was a Windows specific problem, but it's not;
this affects checking any non-bare repository exported via http. Which is
a potentially important use case!
The actual bug was the case where Right False was returned by the first url
short-curcuited later checks. But the whole method used felt like code
I'd no longer write, and the use of undefined was particularly disgusting.
So I rewrote it.
Also added an action display.
This commit was sponsored by Eric Hanchrow. Thanks!
Cabal does not seem to have a way to check if flag A is set and then, if
flag B is set, add a dep. Instead, it makes flag B get unset if the
dep is not available.
Note that've told me:
We'll see how it goes, but I think this could be a permanent offer for
your userbase. People using git-annex are clueful and won't be a big
support burden for us, so it's a win-win.
The icon files will be installed when running make install or cabal
install. Did not try to run update-icon-caches, since I think it's debian
specific, and dh_icons will take care of that for the Debian package.
Using the favicon as a 16x16 icon. At 24x24 the svg displays pretty well,
although the dotted lines are rather faint. The svg is ok at all higher
resolutions.
The standalone linux build auto-installs the desktop and autostart files
when run. I have not made it auto-install the icon file too, because
a) that would take more work to include them in the tarball and find them
b) it would need to be an install to ~/.icons/, and I don't know if that
really works!
annexLocations uses OS-native directory separators, but for an url,
it needs to use / even on Windows.
This is an ugly workaround. Could parameterize a lot of stuff in
annexLocations to fix it better. I suspect this is probably the only place
it's needed though.
migrate wants to know the associated filename, in order to look up
the new backend. Can't do that with --all
migrate --all --backend=newvalue could be useful to support, in the future.
I spent a long time worrying about this problem with --all, that it cannot
check .gitattributes files for numcopies settings, and so would not be
entirely safe to use. The solution turns out to be simple, just don't
implement `git annex drop --all`. drop is the only command that needs to
check numcopies (move can also reduce the number of copies, but explicitly
bypasses numcopies settings).
Use cases that might need a drop --all are probably better served by using
unused and dropunused, which already work in a bare repository.
The ssh setup first runs ssh to the real hostname, to probe if a ssh key is
needed. If one is, it generates a mangled hostname that uses a key. This
mangled hostname was being used to ssh into the server to set up the key.
But if the server already had the key set up, and it was locked down, the
setup would fail. This changes it to use the real hostname when sshing in
to set up the key, which avoids the problem.
Note that it will redundantly set up the key on the ssh server. But it's
the same key; the ssh key generation code uses the key if it already
exists.
A common failure mode for direct mode has been for files to end up still
stored in indirect mode. While I hope that doesn't happen anymore, fsck
should deal with it.