Fix process and file descriptor leak that was exposed when git-annex was
built with ghc 8.2.1. Apparently ghc has changed its behavior of GC
of open file handles that are pipes to running processes. That
broke git-annex test on OSX due to running out of FDs.
Audited for all uses of Annex.new and made stopCoProcesses be called
once it's done with the state. Fixed several places that might have
leaked in other situations than running the test suite.
This commit was sponsored by Ewen McNeill.
Using annexeval to run probeCrippledFileSystem' caused Git.CurrentRepo.get
to be run. Fixed easily since probeCrippledFileSystem' had no need to use
the Annex monad.
This commit was sponsored by Ethan Aubin.
Remove closed bugs and todos that were last edited or commented before 2017.
Command line used:
for f in $(grep -l '|done\]\]' -- *.mdwn); do d="$(echo "$f" | sed 's/.mdwn$//')"; if [ -z "$(git log --since=01-01-2017 --pretty=oneline -- "$f")" -a -z "$(git log --since=01-01-2017 --pretty=oneline -- "$d")" ]; then git rm -- "./$f" ; git rm -rf "./$d"; fi; done
for f in $(grep -l '\[\[done\]\]' -- *.mdwn); do d="$(echo "$f" | sed 's/.mdwn$//')"; if [ -z "$(git log --since=01-01-2017 --pretty=oneline -- "$f")" -a -z "$(git log --since=01-01-2017 --pretty=oneline -- "$d")" ]; then git rm -- "./$f" ; git rm -rf "./$d"; fi; done
https://github.com/haskell/cabal/issues/4655
This means that when a module is conditionally imported via ifdef
depending on the OS or build flags, the cabal file has to mirror the
same logic there to only list the module then.
Since there are lots of OS's and lots of combinations of build flags
here, it's rather difficult to know if the cabal file has been completelty
correctly updated to match the source code.
So I am very unhappy with needing to update things in two places. I've
only tested this on linux with most build flags enables; this will
probably need significant time and testing to catch every cabal file
tweak that this change to Cabal requires. And it will be a continual
source of compile failures going forward when the code is modified and
the cabal file not also updated.
DRY DRY DRY, I repeat myself, but: DRY! Sigh..
(Also, had to remove all Build.* that are standalone programs from the
Other-Modules list, because since cabal passes those modules to ghc when
building git-annex, it complains that they use module Main. Those
modules are only used when building with the Makefile anyway, so this
change shouldn't break anything.)
This commit was sponsored by Thomas Hochstein on Patreon.
External special remotes will refuse to operate on keys with spaces in
their names. That has never worked correctly due to the design of the
external special remote protocol. Display an error message suggesting
migration.
Not super happy with this, but it's a pragmatic solution. Better than
complicating the external special remote interface and all external special
remotes.
Note that I only made it use SafeKey in Request, not Response. git-annex
does not construct a Response, so that would not add any safety. And
presumably, if git-annex avoids feeding any such keys to an external
special remote, it will never have a reason to make a Response using such a
key. If it did, it would result in a protocol error anyway.
There's still a Serializeable instance for Key; it's used by P2P.Protocol.
There, the Key is always in the final position, so it's ok if it contains
spaces.
Note that the protocol documentation has been fixed to say that the File
may contain spaces. One way that can happen, even though the Key can't,
is when using direct mode, and the work tree filename contains spaces.
When sending such a file to the external special remote the worktree
filename is used.
This commit was sponsored by Thom May on Patreon.
Don't trust OSX FSEvents's eventFlagItemModified to be called when the last
writer of a file closes it; apparently that sometimes does not happen,
which prevented files from being quickly added.
This commit was sponsored by John Peloquin on Patreon.
When setting metadata of a file that did not exist, no error message was
displayed, unlike getting metadata and most other git-annex commands. Fixed
this oversight.
Note that, if the file exists but is not annexed, there's no error.
This is the same behavior as other git-annex commands.
This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.
See my comment. This only avoids the problem for -J; two git-annex
processes started at the same time could still both try to write to
.git/config and one fail. That would be very unlikely though, and it
doesn't really seem worth adding an additional layer of locking around
.git/config.
This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.
orElse is great, but was not the right thing to use here because
waitTakeLock could retry for other reasons than the lock being held,
which made tryTakeLock fail when it shouldn't.
Instead, move the code to tryTakeLock and implement waitTakeLock using
tryTakeLock and retry.
(Also, in runTransfer, when checkSaneLock fails, dropLock to avoid leaking a
lock handle.)
This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.
When built with concurrent-output 1.9, ssh password prompts will no longer
interfere with the -J display.
To avoid flicker, only done when ssh actually does need to prompt;
ssh is first run in batch mode and if that succeeds the connection is up
and no need to clear regions.
This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.
When ssh connection caching is enabled (and when GIT_ANNEX_USE_GIT_SSH is
not set), only one ssh password prompt will be made per host, and only one
ssh password prompt will be made at a time.
This also fixes a race in prepSocket's stale ssh connection stopping
when run with -J. It was possible for one thread to start a cached ssh
connection, and another thread to immediately stop it, resulting in excess
connections being made.
This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project.
This was never supported before. And it doesn't re-encrypt the
gcrypt repo to the new gcrypt-participants, but it does at least now not
crash, and set gcrypt-participants.
This commit was sponsored by andrea rota.
Fix bug when used with a recently cloned repository, where
"merging" messages were included in the output of configlist (and perhaps
other commands) and caused a "Failed to get annex.uuid configuration"
error.
This does not seem to have been a reversion.
I saw this with configlist, but it seems possible for other commands to be
effected, and it might not always happen only after a fresh clone. Eg, if a
foo/git-annex branch is pushed to the remote, the next git-annex-shell will
auto-merge it and display the message.
Decided to run all git-annex-shell commands with noMessages,
even ones that don't currently use stdout for structured communication.
Better to keep open the possibility for using stdout in the future.
This commit was supported by the NSF-funded DataLad project
The bug was that withFile closes the handle afterwards, but the content
of the file was not read due to laziness. Using readFile avoids it.
This commit was sponsored by Nick Daly on Patreon.
findShellCommand needs a full path to a file in order to check it for a
shebang on Windows. It was being run with only the base name of the external
special remote program, which would only work when it was in the current
directory.
This is why users in
https://github.com/DanielDent/git-annex-remote-rclone/pull/10 and elsewhere
were complaining that the previous improvements to git-annex didn't make
git-remote-rclone work on Windows.
Also, reworked checkearlytermination, which while it worked, seemed
to rely on a race condition. And, improved its error messages.
This commit was sponsored by Shane-o on Patreon.
... to avoid it consuming stdin that it shouldn't.
This fixes git-annex-checkpresentkey --batch remote, which didn't output
results for all keys passed into it.
Other git-annex commands that communicate with a remote over ssh may also
have been consuming stdin that they shouldn't have, which could have
impacted using them in eg, shell scripts. For example, a shell script
reading files from stdin and passing them to git annex drop would be
impacted by this bug, whenever git annex drop ran git-annex-shell
checkpresent, it would consume part/all of the stdin that the shell script
was supposed to consume.
Fixed by adding a ConsumeStdin parameter to Annex.Ssh.sshOptions, which
is used throughout git-annex to run ssh (in order for ssh connection
caching to work). Every call site was checked to see if it used
CreatePipe for stdin, and if not was marked NoConsumeStdin.
Refactored some common code into initDb.
This only deals with the problem when creating new databases. If a repo
got bad permissions into it, it's up to the user to deal with it.
This commit was sponsored by Ole-Morten Duesund on Patreon.
Git does not provide a switch to find out where this directory is, and
while the git-init man page says it will always be in
/usr/share/git-core/templates, that's not the case on OSX with git
installed from homebrew. So, I used a hack taking the --man-path and
constructing a path from that. Works on both Debian and OSX at least.
Wormhole pairing will start to provide an appid to wormhole on 2021-12-31.
An appid can't be provided now because Debian stable is going to ship a
older version of git-annex that does not provide an appid. Assumption is
that by 2021-12-31, this version of git-annex will be shipped in a Debian
stable release. If that turns out to not be the case, this change will need
to be cherry-picked into the git-annex in Debian stable, or its wormhole
pairing will break.
This commit was sponsored by Thomas Hochstein on Patreon.