Using Sets is the right thing; they have constant size lookup like my
SizeList, and logn insertation, which beats nub to death.
Runs faster than --fast mode did before, and gives accurate counts.
13 seconds total runtime with a warm cache in a repository with 40 thousand
keys.
find: Rather than only showing files whose contents are present, when used
with --exclude --copies or --in, displays all files that match the
specified conditions.
Note that this is a behavior change for find --exclude! Old behavior
can be gotten with find --in . --exclude=...
These were a mistake, they make the type signatures harder to read and
less flexible. The CommandSeek, CommandStart, CommandPerform, and
CommandCleanup types were a good idea, but composing them with the
parameters expected is going too far.
It probably does not make sense to enable auto mode for move. I cannot
think of a situation where it would make sense to try to use it.
A hypothetical auto mode for move would only differ from a normal
move in one case -- when both repositories have a file, move deletes it
from one, and this reduces the number of copies. So an auto mode would
either only let move work in that situation, or avoid removing the file
in that situation, depending on the number of copies. This would be
complex to implement, and is perhaps not a very obvious behavior.
The error is a good thing to have, so users don't expect it to do something
it does not.
get, drop: Added --auto option, which decides whether to get/drop content
as needed to work toward the configured numcopies.
The problem with bundling it up in optimize was that I then found I wanted
to run an optmize that did not drop files, only got them. Considered adding
a --only-get switch to it, but that seemed wrong. Instead, let's make
existing subcommands optionally smarter.
Note that the only actual difference between drop and drop --auto is that
the latter does not even try to drop a file if it knows of not enough
copies, and does not print any error messages about files it was unable to
drop.
It might be nice to make get avoid asking git for attributes when not in
auto mode. For now it always asks for attributes.
Adds a missing newline when a longnote is followed by a endresult.
Multiple longnotes in a row will now be separated by a blank line, which
could be a bug or a feature depending on taste.
Removed several places where newlines were explicitly displayed after
longnotes.
First, this ensures that git annex addurl, when run repeatedly with the
same url, doesn't create duplicate files, which it did before when it
fell back to the longer filename.
Secondly, the file part of an url is frequently not very descriptive on its
own.
The uri scheme, auth, and port is intentionally left out, as clutter.
Using a single strictness annotation, in just the right place.
Tried several others, none of which helped and some of which potentially
hurt. This is only the second time I've really had to deal with this in
a year of using haskell, which is, I suppose not that bad.
when a git repository is first being created. Clones will automatically
notice that git-annex is in use and automatically perform a basic
initalization. It's still recommended to run "git annex init" in any
clones, to describe them.
The tricky part about this is that to generate a key, the file must be
present already. Worked around by adding (back) an URL key type, which
is used for addurl --fast.
This was more complex than would be expected. unannex has to use git commit -a
since it's removing files from git; git commit filelist won't do.
Allow commands to be added to the Git queue that have no associated files,
and run such commands once.
The only remaining vestiage of backends is different types of keys. These
are still called "backends", mostly to avoid needing to change user interface
and configuration. But everything to do with storing keys in different
backends was gone; instead different types of remotes are used.
In the refactoring, lots of code was moved out of odd corners like
Backend.File, to closer to where it's used, like Command.Drop and
Command.Fsck. Quite a lot of dead code was removed. Several data structures
became simpler, which may result in better runtime efficiency. There should
be no user-visible changes.
That sucking sound is a whole page of code vanishing to be replaced with
return . catMaybes . map (logFileKey . takeFileName) =<< Branch.files
What can I say, git is my database, and haskell my copilot.
Do not set annex.version whenever any command is run. Just do it in init.
This ensures that, if a repo has annex.version=3, it has a git-annex
branch, so we don't have to run a command every time to check for the
branch.
Remove the old ad-hoc logic for v0 and v1, to simplify version checking.
stop changing gitattributes on init
create git-annex branch on init
ugly special case for init in a bare repository goes away, yay!
git annex init is also faster, at least in a large existing repo, as
it does not need to run the slow 'git add'
get not honoring --from has surprised me a few times, so least surprise
suggests it should just behave like copy --from. This leaves the difference
between get and copy being that copy always requires the remote to copy
from, while get will decide whether to get a file from a key/value store or
a remote.
Avoid git reset here too, so I no longer need to care that it's much more
expensive than seems wise (but I asked the git list about that anyway).
It's not necessary to reset the staged file content from the index, as
the `git add` of the the symlink will replace it anyway.
`git commit` of unlocked files is still slow, since git still has to shove
their entire content into the index, only to have it be thrown away. So it's
still better to use `git annex add`
This was a real PITA to fix, since location logs can be staged in
both the current repo, as well as in local remote's repos, in
which case the cwd will not be in the repo. And git add needs different
params in both cases, when absolute paths are not used.
In passing, git annex fsck now stages location log fixes.
Since the queue is flushed in between subcommand actions being run,
there should be no issues with actions that expect to queue up some stuff
and have it run after they do other stuff. So I didn't have to audit for
such assumptions.
For example, this could happen if using SHA1 and a file with content
"foo" were added to that backend. Then a file with "content" foo were
migrated from the WORM backend.
Assume that, if a backend assigned the same key, the already annexed
content must be the same. So, the "old" content can be reused.
Add --fast flag, that can enable less expensive, but also less thurough versions of some commands.
* Add --fast flag, that can enable less expensive, but also less thurough
versions of some commands.
* fsck: In fast mode, avoid checking checksums.
* unused: In fast mode, just show all existing temp files as unused,
and avoid expensive scan for other unused content.
Free space checking is now done, for transfers of data for keys that have free space metadata.
(Notably, not for SHA* keys generated with git-annex 0.24 or earlier.)
The code is believed to work on Linux, FreeBSD, and OSX; check compile-time
messages to see if it is not enabled for your OS.
It compiles. It sorta works. Several subcommands are FIXME marked and
broken, because things that used to accept separate --backend and --key
params need to be changed to accept just a --key that encodes all the key
info, now that there is metadata in keys.
When adding files to the annex, the symlinks pointing at the annexed
content are made to have the same mtime as the original file. While git
does not preserve that information, this allows a tool like metastore to be
used with annexed files.
This assumes that changes to content in bare repos are made from some
non-bare repo, and that the location log is updated on that side.
That's true for move --from and move --to.
It's *not* true for dropkey and setkey and recvkey. But those are plumbing
level commands, so I guess it's ok to assume that someone running those
in a bare repo knows what they're doing. And git-annex-shell is used to
run those, and if the bare repo is non-local, it needs to be able to use
them even though they cannot update the location log. So this seems
unavoidable.
Based on http://hackage.haskell.org/trac/ghc/ticket/3307 ,
whether FilePath contains decoded unicode varies by OS.
So, add a configure check for it.
Also, renamed showFile to filePathToString
Internally, the filenames are stored as un-decoded unicode.
I tried decoding them, but then haskell tries to access the wrong files.
Hmm.
So, I've unhappily chosen option "B", which is to decode filenames before
they are displayed.
Still todo:
- add repos from uuid.log that were not directly found
- group repos into their respective hosts
- display inaccessible repos and broken remote connections in red
- anonymize the url display somewhat, so the maps can be shared
- use uuid info to tell when two apparently different repos are actually
the same repo accessed in different ways
* Improved temp file handling. Transfers of content can now be resumed
from temp files later; the resume does not have to be the immediate
next git-annex run.
* unused: Include partially transferred content in the list.
Rename Locations functions for better consitency, and make their values
more consistent too.
Used </> rather than manually building paths. There are still more places
that manually do so, but are tricky, due to the behavior of </> when
the second FilePath is absolute. So I only changed places where
it obviously was relative.
Moved away from a map of flags to storing config directly in the AnnexState
structure. Got rid of most accessor functions in Annex.
This allowed supporting multiple --exclude flags.
* bugfix: Running `move --to` with a remote whose UUID was not yet known
could result in git-annex not recording on the local side where the
file was moved to. This could not result in data loss, or even a
significant problem, since the remote *did* record that it had the file.
* Also, add a general guard to detect attempts to record information
about repositories with missing UUIDs.
* fsck: Check if annex.numcopies is satisfied.
* fsck: Verify the sha1 of files when the SHA1 backend is used.
* fsck: Verify the size of files when the WORM backend is used.
* fsck: Allow specifying individual files to fsk if fscking everything
is not desired.
* fsck: Fix bug, introduced in 0.04, in detection of unused data.
isLocked was doing the expensive check before the cheap one. Let's not
fork git diff twice per file when committing, especially.
git diff is still run more than strictly necessary (ie, more than once)
if multiple unlocked files are being committed. But much better now.