... to control the default behavior in all clones of a repository.
This includes a new Configurable data type, so the GitConfig type indicates
which values can be configured this way.
The implementation should be quite efficient; the config log is only read
once, and only when a Configurable value has not already been set by
git-config.
Indeed, it would be nice in the future to extend this, so that git-config
is itself only read on demand. Some commands may not need to look at the
git configuration at all.
This commit was sponsored by Trenton Cronholm on Patreon.
Any config names can be set using this; git-annex commands will only look
at specific ones that make sense and are worth the overhead of querying the
branch.
This might also be useful for storing whatever other config-type stuff the
user might want to shove into the git-annex branch.
This commit was sponsored by Jochen Bartl on Patreon.
I've long considered the XMPP support in git-annex a wart.
It's nice to remove it.
(This also removes the NetMessager, which was only used for XMPP, and the
daemonstatus's desynced list (likewise).)
Existing XMPP remotes should be ignored by git-annex.
This commit was sponsored by Brock Spratlen on Patreon.
The naming is unofrtunately not consistent, but the gnupg-options
were only used for encrypting, and it's too late to change that.
It would be nice to have a third setting that is always passed to gnupg,
but ~/.gnupg/options can be used to specify such global options when really
needed.
* add, addurl, import, importfeed: When in a v6 repository on a crippled
filesystem, add files unlocked.
* annex.addunlocked: New configuration setting, makes files always be
added unlocked. (v6 only)
The benchmark shows that the database access is quite fast indeed!
And, it scales linearly to the number of keys, with one exception,
getAssociatedKey.
Based on this benchmark, I don't think I need worry about optimising
for cases where all files are locked and the database is mostly empty.
In those cases, database access will be misses, and according to this
benchmark, should add only 50 milliseconds to runtime.
(NB: There may be some overhead to getting the database opened and locking
the handle that this benchmark doesn't see.)
joey@darkstar:~/src/git-annex>./git-annex benchmark
setting up database with 1000
setting up database with 10000
benchmarking keys database/getAssociatedFiles from 1000 (hit)
time 62.77 μs (62.70 μs .. 62.85 μs)
1.000 R² (1.000 R² .. 1.000 R²)
mean 62.81 μs (62.76 μs .. 62.88 μs)
std dev 201.6 ns (157.5 ns .. 259.5 ns)
benchmarking keys database/getAssociatedFiles from 1000 (miss)
time 50.02 μs (49.97 μs .. 50.07 μs)
1.000 R² (1.000 R² .. 1.000 R²)
mean 50.09 μs (50.04 μs .. 50.17 μs)
std dev 206.7 ns (133.8 ns .. 295.3 ns)
benchmarking keys database/getAssociatedKey from 1000 (hit)
time 211.2 μs (210.5 μs .. 212.3 μs)
1.000 R² (0.999 R² .. 1.000 R²)
mean 211.0 μs (210.7 μs .. 212.0 μs)
std dev 1.685 μs (334.4 ns .. 3.517 μs)
benchmarking keys database/getAssociatedKey from 1000 (miss)
time 173.5 μs (172.7 μs .. 174.2 μs)
1.000 R² (0.999 R² .. 1.000 R²)
mean 173.7 μs (173.0 μs .. 175.5 μs)
std dev 3.833 μs (1.858 μs .. 6.617 μs)
variance introduced by outliers: 16% (moderately inflated)
benchmarking keys database/getAssociatedFiles from 10000 (hit)
time 64.01 μs (63.84 μs .. 64.18 μs)
1.000 R² (1.000 R² .. 1.000 R²)
mean 64.85 μs (64.34 μs .. 66.02 μs)
std dev 2.433 μs (547.6 ns .. 4.652 μs)
variance introduced by outliers: 40% (moderately inflated)
benchmarking keys database/getAssociatedFiles from 10000 (miss)
time 50.33 μs (50.28 μs .. 50.39 μs)
1.000 R² (1.000 R² .. 1.000 R²)
mean 50.32 μs (50.26 μs .. 50.38 μs)
std dev 202.7 ns (167.6 ns .. 252.0 ns)
benchmarking keys database/getAssociatedKey from 10000 (hit)
time 1.142 ms (1.139 ms .. 1.146 ms)
1.000 R² (1.000 R² .. 1.000 R²)
mean 1.142 ms (1.140 ms .. 1.144 ms)
std dev 7.142 μs (4.994 μs .. 10.98 μs)
benchmarking keys database/getAssociatedKey from 10000 (miss)
time 1.094 ms (1.092 ms .. 1.096 ms)
1.000 R² (1.000 R² .. 1.000 R²)
mean 1.095 ms (1.095 ms .. 1.097 ms)
std dev 4.277 μs (2.591 μs .. 7.228 μs)
Decided it's too scary to make v6 unlocked files have 1 copy by default,
but that should be available to those who need it. This is consistent with
git-annex not dropping unused content without --force, etc.
* Added annex.thin setting, which makes unlocked files in v6 repositories
be hard linked to their content, instead of a copy. This saves disk
space but means any modification of an unlocked file will lose the local
(and possibly only) copy of the old version.
* Enable annex.thin by default on upgrade from direct mode to v6, since
direct mode made the same tradeoff.
* fix: Adjusts unlocked files as configured by annex.thin.
The git filter config can be used to map the single git-annex command to
the 2 actions, and this avoids "git annex clean" being used for this thing,
it might have a better use for that name later.
importfeed just calls addurl functions, so inherits this from it.
Note that addurl still generates a temp file, and uses that key to download
the file. It just adds it to the work tree at the end when the file is small.
* When annex objects are received into git repositories, their checksums are
verified then too.
* To get the old, faster, behavior of not verifying checksums, set
annex.verify=false, or remote.<name>.annex-verify=false.
* setkey, rekey: These commands also now verify that the provided file
matches the key, unless annex.verify=false.
* reinject: Already verified content; this can now be disabled by
setting annex.verify=false.
recvkey and reinject already did verification, so removed now duplicate
code from them. fsck still does its own verification, which is ok since it
does not use getViaTmp, so verification doesn't happen twice when using fsck
--from.
This needs a patch to git to cause the git-annex completion to be
auto-loaded when completing "git annex <tab>". Otherwise, it will only
load when "git-annex" is tab completed. Once loaded, it works for both
uses. I've submitted the git patch to the git mailing list.
This makes git annex unused use around 48 mb more memory than it did before,
but the massive increase in accuracy makes this worthwhile for all but the
smallest systems.
Also, I want to use the bloom filter for sync --all --content, to avoid
dropping files that the preferred content doesn't want, and 1/1000
false positives would be far too many in that use case, even if it were
acceptable for unused.
Actual memory use numbers:
1000: 21.06user 3.42system 0:26.40elapsed 92%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 501552maxresident)k
1000000: 21.41user 3.55system 0:26.84elapsed 93%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 549496maxresident)k
10000000: 21.84user 3.52system 0:27.89elapsed 90%CPU (0avgtext+0avgdata 549920maxresident)k
Based on these numbers, 10 million seemed a better pick than 1 million.