63 lines
3 KiB
Markdown
63 lines
3 KiB
Markdown
Fixed one howler of a bug today. Turns out that
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`git annex fsck --all --from remote` didn't actually check the content of
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the remote, but checked the local repository. Only `--all` was buggy;
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`git annex fsck --from remote` was ok. Don't think this is crash priority
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enough to make a release for, since only `--all` is affected.
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Somewhat uncomfortably made `git annex sync` pass
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`--allow-unrelated-histories` to git merge. While I do think that git's
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recent refusal to merge unrelated histories is good in general, the
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problem is that initializing a direct mode repository involves making an
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empty commit. So merging from a remote into such a direct mode repository
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means merging unrelated histories, while an indirect mode repository doesn't.
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Seems best to avoid such inconsistencies, and the only way I could see to
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do it is to always use `--allow-unrelated-histories`. May revisit this once
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direct mode is finally removed.
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Using the git-annex arm standalone bundle on some WD NAS boxes used to
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work, and then it seems they changed their kernel to use a nonstandard page
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size, and broke it. This actually seems to be a
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[bug in the gold linker](http://bugs.debian.org/844467), which defaults to an
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unncessarily small page size on arm. The git-annex arm bundle is being
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adjusted to try to deal with this.
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ghc 8 made `error` include some backtrace information. While it's really
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nice to have backtraces for unexpected exceptions in Haskell, it turns
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out that git-annex used `error` a lot with the intent of showing an error
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message to the user, and a backtrace clutters up such messages. So,
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bit the bullet and checked through every `error` in git-annex and made such
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ones not include a backtrace.
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Also, I've been considering what protocol to use between git-annex nodes
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when communicating over tor. One way would be to make it very similar to
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`git-annex-shell`, using rsync etc, and possibly reusing code from
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git-annex-shell. However, it can take a while to make a connection across
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the tor network, and that method seems to need a new connection for each
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file transfered etc. Also thought about using a http based protocol. The
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servant library is great for that, you get both http client and server
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implementations almost for free. Resuming interrupted transfers might
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complicate it, and the hidden service side would need to listen on a unix
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socket, instead of the regular http port. It might be worth it to use http
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for tor, if it could be reused for git-annex http servers not on the tor
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network. But, then I'd have to make the http server support git pull and
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push over http in a way that's compatable with how git uses http, including
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authentication. Which is a whole nother ball of complexity. So, I'm leaning
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instead to using a simple custom protocol something like:
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> AUTH $localuuid $token
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< AUTH-OK $remoteuuid
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> SENDPACK $length
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> $gitdata
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< RECVPACK $length
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< $gitdata
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> GET $pos $key
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< SENDING $length
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< $bytes
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> GET-OK
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> PUT $key
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< SEND $pos
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> SENDING $length
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> $bytes
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< PUT-OK
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Today's work was sponsored by Riku Voipio.
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