The new "ort" resolver uses different filenames than what the test suite
accepted when resolving a conflict between a directory an an annexed
file. Make the test looser in what it accepts, so it will work with old
and new git.
Other tests still look for "conflictor.variant" as a prefix,
because when eg resolving a conflicted merge of 2 annexed files,
the filename is not changed by the ort resolver, and I didn't want to
unncessarily loosen the test.
Also I'm not entirely happy with the filenames used by the ort resolver,
see comment.
There's still another test failure caused by that resolver that is not
fixed yet.
Caused by dirContains ".." "foo" being incorrectly False.
Also added a test of dirContains, which includes all the previous bug fixes
I could find and some obvious cases.
Reversion in version 8.20211011
Sponsored-by: Brett Eisenberg on Patreon
test: Put gpg temp home directory in system temp directory, not filesystem
being tested.
Since I've found indications gpg can fail talking to the agent when the
socket ends up on eg, fat. And to hopefully fix this bug report I've
followed up on.
The main risk in using the system temp dir is that TMPDIR could be set to a
long directory path, which is too long to put a unix socket in. To
partially amelorate that risk, it uses either an absolute or a relative
path, whichever is shorter. (Hopefully gpg will not convert it to a longer
form of the path..)
If the user sets TMPDIR to something so long a path to it +
"S.gpg-agent" is too long, I suppose that's their issue to deal with.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
drop vs readonly repo failed (transcript follows)
drop foo
failed
git-annex: .git\annex\objects\6cd\e82\SHA256E-s20--e394a389d787383843decc5d3d99b6d184ffa5fddeec23b911f9ee7fc8b9ea77\SHA256E-s20--e394a389d787383843decc5d3d99b6d184ffa5fddeec23b911f9ee7fc8b9ea77: DeleteFile "\\\\?\\C:\\Users\\runneradmin\\.t\\tmprepo3\\.git\\annex\\objects\\6cd\\e82\\SHA256E-s20--e394a389d787383843decc5d3d99b6d184ffa5fddeec23b911f9ee7fc8b9ea77\\SHA256E-s20--e394a389d787383843decc5d3d99b6d184ffa5fddeec23b911f9ee7fc8b9ea77": permission denied (Access is denied.)
This is a bit surprising, it seems that chmod -R -w on windows actually
had some effect. But also, on Windows lockContentShared
has to write to a lock file, so it cannot work in a readonly repo.
So git-annex cannot support readonly repos on Windows.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
Which is the same as the git merge option.
After last commit, this turns out to be needed in the test suite, and when
doing git-annex import from special remote, followed by a git-annex merge.
Sponsored-by: Svenne Krap on Patreon
Freeze first sets the file perms, and then runs
freezecontent-command. Thaw runs thawcontent-command before
restoring file permissions. This is in case the freeze command
prevents changing file perms, as eg setting a file immutable does.
Also, changing file perms tends to mess up previously set ACLs.
git-annex init's probe for crippled filesystem uses them, so if file perms
don't work, but freezecontent-command manages to prevent write to a file,
it won't treat the filesystem as crippled.
When the the filesystem has been probed as crippled, the hooks are not
used, because there seems to be no point then; git-annex won't be relying
on locking annex objects down. Also, this avoids them being run when the
file perms have not been changed, in case they somehow rely on
git-annex's setting of the file perms in order to work.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
When two files have the same content, and a required content expression
matches one but not the other, dropping the latter file will fail as it
would also remove the content of the required file.
This will slow down drop (w/o --auto), dropunused, mirror, and move, by one
keys db lookup per file. But I did include an optimisation to avoid a
double db lookup in the drop --auto / sync --content case. I suspect that
dropunused could also use PreferredContentChecked True, but haven't
entirely thought it through and it's rarely used with enough files for the
optimisation to matter.
Sponsored-by: Dartmouth College's Datalad project
Make sure that tip keeps working.
I tried to go futher and touch the file and make sure it stayed what it
was converted to, but struggled with some weird and not entirely
reproducable behavior, so kept the tests simple for now.
Not yet used, but allows getting the size of items in the tree fairly
cheaply.
I noticed that CmdLine.Seek uses ls-tree and the feeds the files into
another long-running process to check their size. That would be an
example of a place that might be sped up by using this. Although in that
particular case, it only needs to know the size of unlocked files, not
locked. And since enabling --long probably doubles the ls-tree runtime
or more, the overhead of using it there may outwweigh the benefit.
Configuring chunking and encryption for a git remote has no effect, so
skip testing those variants in the TestRemote call.
It would be better if TestRemote itself could do this, but it
doesn't seem possible there. There is no way to look at a Remote and
tell if it supports chunking or encryption.
Note that, while the test suite displays output as it it's testing
exporting, it actually skips doing anything for the tests when run on
the git remote. So at least does not waste time even though the output
is not ideal.
This commit was sponsored by Noam Kremen on Patreon.
The test suite contains its own tests that test a lot of basic stuff
about git remotes, mostly in passing to set up other situations.
But testremote does try some unusual edge cases, which may as
well be tried for git remotes as well as directory, especially since
it's so little code to add it.
This commit was sponsored by Kevin Mueller on Patreon.
Display the transcript as part of the failure message for the assertion.
This avoids scrambling the tasty display.
This commit was sponsored by Ethan Aubin on Patreon.
Only displaying git-annex and git command output when something went wrong.
A few could still leak stderr. These include the couple of calls
to readProcess, which reads stdin but lets stderr through. But they don't
leak any usually, so probably only would when failing anyway.
Currently, there is no excess output at all!
This commit was sponsored by Brock Spratlen on Patreon.
9cb250f7be got the ones in RawFilePath,
but there were others that used the one from unix-compat, which fails at
runtime on windows. To avoid this,
import System.PosixCompat.Files hiding removeLink
This commit was sponsored by Ethan Aubin.
There is already one for drop, but move and drop don't handle numcopies
exactly the same, and there was recently a reversion in it checking
numcopies properly at all.
This commit was sponsored by Noam Kremen on Patreon.
All properties changed to use them, except for
prop_encode_c_decode_c_roundtrip, which already filtered to ascii
for other reasons.
A few modules had to be split out, because Setup does not build-depend
on QuickCheck.
nukeFile replaced with removeWhenExistsWith removeLink, which allows
using RawFilePath. Utility.Directory cannot use RawFilePath since setup
does not depend on posix.
This commit was sponsored by Graham Spencer on Patreon.
Had to split out some modules because getWorkingDirectory needs unix,
which is not a build-dep of configure.
This commit was sponsored by Brock Spratlen on Patreon.
And add a test case for that.
This certianly loses some of the 2x performance improvement in file
seeking that seekFilteredKeys led to, because now it has to stat the
worktree files again. Without benchmarking, I expect there will still be
a sizable improvement, and also the git-annex branch precaching that
seekFilteredKeys can do will still be a win of its approach.
Also worth noting that lookupKey, when the file DNE, check if it's in an
adjusted branch with hidden files, and if so, finds the key for the
file anyway. That was intended to make git-annex sync --content be able
to process those files, but a side effect was that, when a file was
deleted but the deletion not yet staged, git-annex commands used to
still list it. That was actually a bug. This commit fixes that bug too.
(git-annex sync --content on such a branch does not use seekFilteredKeys
so was not affected by the reversion or by this behavior change)
This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
git is making that configurable, and configuring it globally would break
the test suite in a few places.
No other part of git-annex assumes any branch name. Renamed a few
placeholders to make that clearer.
This commit was sponsored by Jake Vosloo on Patreon.
Not yet 100% done, so far I've grepped for waitForProcess and converted
everything that uses that to start the process with withCreateProcess.
Except for some things like P2P.IO and Assistant.TransferrerPool,
and Utility.CoProcess, that manage a pool of processes. See #2
in https://git-annex.branchable.com/todo/more_extensive_retries_to_mask_transient_failures/#comment-209f8a8c38e63fb3a704e1282cb269c7
for how those will need to be dealt with.
checkSuccessProcess, ignoreFailureProcess, and forceSuccessProcess calls waitForProcess, so
callers of them will also need to be dealt with, and have not been yet.
Todo item is done at last.
Might later want to think about testing some other types of remotes that
can be tested locally. The git remote itself is probably already well
enough tested by the test suite that testremote is not needed. Could
test things like bup, or rsync to a local directory. Or even external,
although that would require embedding an external special remote program
into the test suite..
Due to eg, too long a path to the agent socket, caused by running gpg in a
container where /run is not mounted, and/or some other gpg behavior like
unnecessarily making relative paths to its home directory absolute.
Considered using the system tmp dir rather than putting it inside .t/,
but then if TEMP were set to a long path, that would be a problem.
Relative path seems the best approach, and will always be nice and
short.
The only downside of it is, if git-annex somehow changes the cwd
while running, it would break. But git-annex does not do that, and
should never do that.
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.)