32 lines
1.6 KiB
Text
32 lines
1.6 KiB
Text
[[!comment format=mdwn
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username="helmut"
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ip="89.0.176.236"
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subject="Asynchronous hooks?"
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date="2012-10-13T09:46:14Z"
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content="""
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Is there a way to use asynchronous remotes? Interaction with git annex would have to
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split the part of initiating some action from completing it.
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I imagine I could `git annex copy` a file to an asynchronous remote and the command
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would almost immediately complete. Later I would learn that the transfer is
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completed, so the hook must be able to record that information in the `git-annex`
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branch. An additional plumbing command seems required here as well as a way to
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indicate that even though the store-hook completed, the file is not transferred.
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Similarly `git annex get` would immediately return without actually fetching the
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file. This should already be possible by returning non-zero from the retrieve-hook.
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Later the hook could use plumbing level commands to actually stick the received file
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into the repository.
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The remove-hook should need no changes, but the checkpresent-hook would be more like
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a trigger without any actual result. The extension of the plumbing required for the
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extension to the receive-hook could update the location log. A downside here is that
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you never know when a fsck has completed.
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My proposal does not include a way to track the completion of actions, but relies on
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the hook to always complete them reliably. It is not clear that this is the best road
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for asynchronous hooks.
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One use case for this would be a remote that is only accessible via uucp. Are there
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other use cases? Is the drafted interface useful?
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"""]]
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