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33 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Joey Hess
96dc423e39 When accessing a local remote, shut down git-cat-file processes afterwards, to ensure that remotes on removable media can be unmounted. Closes: #758630
This does mean that eg, copying multiple files to a local remote will
become slightly slower, since it now restarts git-cat-file after each copy.
Should not be significant slowdown.

The reason git-cat-file is run on the remote at all is to update its
location log. In order to add an item to it, it needs to get the current
content of the log. Finding a way to avoid needing to do that would be a
good path to avoiding this slowdown if it does become a problem somehow.

This commit was sponsored by Evan Deaubl.
2014-08-20 12:07:57 -04:00
Joey Hess
ba42b67c70 Fix bug in automatic merge conflict resolution
When one side is an annexed symlink, and the other side is a non-annexed symlink.

In this case, git-merge does not replace the annexed symlink in the work
tree with the non-annexed symlink, which is different from it's handling of
conflicts between annexed symlinks and regular files or directories.
So, while git-annex generated the correct merge commit, the work tree
didn't get updated to reflect it.
See comments on bug for additional analysis.

Did not add this to the test suite yet; just unloaded a truckload of firewood
and am feeling lazy.

This commit was sponsored by Adam Spiers.
2014-07-08 13:55:11 -04:00
Joey Hess
1052eeface Windows: Fix some filename encoding bugs.
http://git-annex.branchable.com/bugs/Unicode_file_names_ignored_on_Windows/

Not a complete fix yet.
2014-03-19 15:57:56 -04:00
Joey Hess
1192d98721 sync: Fix bug in direct mode that caused a file not checked into git to be deleted when merging with a remote that added a file by the same name. (Thanks, jkt) 2014-03-03 14:57:16 -04:00
Joey Hess
8d5158fa31 Preserve metadata when staging a new version of an annexed file.
Performance impact: When adding a large tree of new files, this needs
to do some git cat-file queries to check if any of the files already
existed and might need a metadata copy. I tried a benchmark in a copy
of my sound repository (so there was already a significant git tree
to check against.

Adding 10000 small files, with a cold cache:
  before: 1m48.539s
  after:  1m52.791s

So, impact is 0.0004 seconds per file added. Which seems acceptable, so did
not add some kind of configuration to enable/disable this.

This commit was sponsored by Lisa Feilen.
2014-02-24 14:41:33 -04:00
Joey Hess
7d5b25515c Add plumbing-level lookupkey command. 2013-12-15 14:02:23 -04:00
Joey Hess
59ecc804cd add new status command
This works for both direct and indirect mode.

It may need some performance tuning.

Note that unlike git status, it only shows the status of the work tree, not
the status of the index. So only one status letter, not two .. and since
files that have been added and not yet committed do not differ between the
work tree and the index, they are not shown. Might want to add display of
the index vs the last commit eventually.

This commit was sponsored by an unknown bitcoin contributor, whose
contribution as been going up lately! ;)
2013-11-07 14:07:25 -04:00
Joey Hess
4f871f89ba git-recover-repository 1/2 done 2013-10-20 17:50:51 -04:00
Joey Hess
3588729f0d completely solve catKey memory leak
Since 006cf7976f was incomplete, not being
able to get the right mode of the file when the index differs from HEAD,
this is a final workaround. Only buffering the start of the file
in this case avoids leaking memory.

This does not prevent git-cat-file being asked to output the whole file,
which needs to be consumed, and can be slow. But this only happens in a
rare edge case.
2013-09-19 20:09:03 -04:00
Joey Hess
006cf7976f more completely solve catKey memory leak
Done using a mode witness, which ensures it's fixed everywhere.

Fixing catFileKey was a bear, because git cat-file does not provide a
nice way to query for the mode of a file and there is no other efficient
way to do it. Oh, for libgit2..

Note that I am looking at tree objects from HEAD, rather than the index.
Because I cat-file cannot show a tree object for the index.
So this fix is technically incomplete. The only cases where it matters
are:

1. A new large file has been directly staged in git, but not committed.
2. A file that was committed to HEAD as a symlink has been staged
   directly in the index.

This could be fixed a lot better using libgit2.
2013-09-19 16:41:21 -04:00
Joey Hess
412dcb8017 Fix bug that caused typechanged symlinks to be assumed to be unlocked files, so they were added to the annex by the pre-commit hook. 2013-08-22 13:57:07 -04:00
Joey Hess
729eab1f89 assistant: Work around git-cat-file's not reloading the index after files are staged.
Argh.
2013-05-25 00:37:41 -04:00
Joey Hess
aba49995b6 Merge branch 'master' into windows 2013-05-15 19:18:04 -04:00
Joey Hess
c62b54d80d start one git-cat-file per index file
This reverts 1c83b6c439 and properly fixes
the issue discussed there.

This makes git-annex behave much nicer in direct mode.
2013-05-15 18:46:38 -04:00
Joey Hess
03e8594369 fix the day's windows permissions damage 2013-05-12 19:09:48 -04:00
Joey Hess
73d2f8b280 deal with git using / internally, even on DOS 2013-05-12 17:29:49 -05:00
Joey Hess
1c83b6c439 work around a very strange git-cat-file behavior
Sometimes it seems that git-cat-file --batch stops getting info for
files in the current repo, when ":file" is fed to it. I have not reproduced
this at the command line, but only when using git annex whereis and git
annex move inside a direct mode repo. Those failed, because cat-file
returned "file missing". OTOH, git annex find works fine, despite passing
the same file to cat-file. It seems that the failing commands first asked
cat-file to show a file on the git-annex branch. Perhaps it got "stuck" on
that branch? But I cannot repoduce it running cat-file by hand. Most
strange. HEAD is a workaround for this extreme weirdness, since I spent a
good 2 hours struggling with it already.
2013-01-05 17:06:24 -04:00
Joey Hess
1cdf2b923d assistant: Make expensive transfer scan work fully in direct mode.
The expensive scan uses lookupFile, but in direct mode, that doesn't work
for files that are present. So the scan was not finding things that are
present that need to be uploaded. (It did find things not present that
needed to be downloaded.)

Now lookupFile also works in direct mode. Note that it still prefers
symlinks on disk to info committed to git, in direct mode. This is
necessary to make things like Assistant.Threads.Watcher.onAddSymlink
work correctly, when given a new symlink not yet checked into git (or
replacing a file checked into git).
2013-01-05 15:57:53 -04:00
Joey Hess
eb40227d15 assistant direct mode file add/change bookkeeping
When a file is changed in direct mode, the old content is probably lost
(at least from the local repo), and bookeeping needs to be updated to
reflect this.

Also, synthetic add events are generated at assistant startup, so
make it detect when the file has not really changed, and avoid re-adding
it.

This does add the overhead of querying the runing git cat-file for the
key that's recorded in git for the file, each time a file is added or
modified in direct mode.
2012-12-25 15:48:15 -04:00
Joey Hess
b080a58b76 Merge branch 'master' into desymlink
Conflicts:
	Annex/CatFile.hs
	Annex/Content.hs
	Git/LsFiles.hs
	Git/LsTree.hs
2012-12-13 00:29:06 -04:00
Joey Hess
f87a781aa6 finished where indentation changes 2012-12-13 00:24:19 -04:00
Joey Hess
e7b8cb0063 direct mode committing 2012-12-12 19:20:38 -04:00
Joey Hess
ca45cea113 Revert "add catFileIndex"
This interface is not a good idea, because a running git cat-file --batch
does not notice when existing files in the index are changed.
2012-09-15 18:30:53 -04:00
Joey Hess
e1baf48d88 add catFileIndex 2012-09-15 17:06:10 -04:00
Joey Hess
75b6ee81f9 avoid ByteString.Char8 where not needed
Its truncation behavior is a red flag, so avoid using it in these places
where only raw ByteStrings are used, without looking at the data inside.
2012-06-20 13:13:40 -04:00
Joey Hess
ca9ee21bd7 crazy optimisation
Crazy like a fox..
2012-06-10 19:58:34 -04:00
Joey Hess
c4c965d602 detect and recover from branch push/commit race
Dealing with a race without using locking is exceedingly difficult and tricky.
Fully tested, I hope.

There are three places left where the branch can be updated, that are not
covered by the race recovery code. Let's prove they're all immune to the
race:

1. tryFastForwardTo checks to see if a fast-forward can be done,
   and then does git-update-ref on the branch to fast-forward it.

   If a push comes in before the check, then either no fast-forward
   will be done (ok), or the push set the branch to a ref that can
   still be fast-forwarded (also ok)

   If a push comes in after the check, the git-update-ref will
   undo the ref change made by the push. It's as if the push did not come
   in, and the next git-push will see this, and try to re-do it.
   (acceptable)

2. When creating the branch for the very first time, an empty index
   is created, and a commit of it made to the branch. The commit's ref
   is recorded as the current state of the index. If a push came in
   during that, it will be noticed the next time a commit is made to the
   branch, since the branch will have changed. (ok)

3. Creating the branch from an existing remote branch involves making
   the branch, and then getting its ref, and recording that the index
   reflects that ref.

   If a push creates the branch first, git-branch will fail (ok).

   If the branch is created and a racing push is then able to change it
   (highly unlikely!) we're still ok, because it first records the ref into
   the index.lck, and then updating the index. The race can cause the
   index.lck to have the old branch ref, while the index has the newly pushed
   branch merged into it, but that only results in an unnecessary update of
   the index file later on.
2011-12-11 20:41:35 -04:00
Joey Hess
9290095fc2 improve type signatures with a Ref newtype
In git, a Ref can be a Sha, or a Branch, or a Tag. I added type aliases for
those. Note that this does not prevent mixing up of eg, refs and branches
at the type level. Since git really doesn't care, except rare cases like
git update-ref, or git tag -d, that seems ok for now.

There's also a tree-ish, but let's just use Ref for it. A given Sha or Ref
may or may not be a tree-ish, depending on the object type, so there seems
no point in trying to represent it at the type level.
2011-11-16 02:41:46 -04:00
Joey Hess
04edae6791 Optimised union merging; now only runs git cat-file once. 2011-11-12 17:45:12 -04:00
Joey Hess
637b5feb45 lint 2011-11-11 01:52:58 -04:00
Joey Hess
bf460a0a98 reorder repo parameters last
Many functions took the repo as their first parameter. Changing it
consistently to be the last parameter allows doing some useful things with
currying, that reduce boilerplate.

In particular, g <- gitRepo is almost never needed now, instead
use inRepo to run an IO action in the repo, and fromRepo to get
a value from the repo.

This also provides more opportunities to use monadic and applicative
combinators.
2011-11-08 16:27:20 -04:00
Joey Hess
6a6ea06cee rename 2011-10-05 16:02:51 -04:00
Joey Hess
cfe21e85e7 rename 2011-10-04 00:59:08 -04:00
Renamed from CatFile.hs (Browse further)