git-annex/Utility/FileSystemEncoding.hs
Joey Hess 4224fae71f
optimise read and write for Keys database (untested)
Writes are optimised by queueing up multiple writes when possible.
The queue is flushed after the Annex monad action finishes. That makes it
happen on program termination, and also whenever a nested Annex monad action
finishes.

Reads are optimised by checking once (per AnnexState) if the database
exists. If the database doesn't exist yet, all reads return mempty.

Reads also cause queued writes to be flushed, so reads will always be
consistent with writes (as long as they're made inside the same Annex monad).
A future optimisation path would be to determine when that's not necessary,
which is probably most of the time, and avoid flushing unncessarily.

Design notes for this commit:

- separate reads from writes
- reuse a handle which is left open until program
  exit or until the MVar goes out of scope (and autoclosed then)
- writes are queued
  - queue is flushed periodically
  - immediate queue flush before any read
  - auto-flush queue when database handle is garbage collected
  - flush queue on exit from Annex monad
    (Note that this may happen repeatedly for a single database connection;
    or a connection may be reused for multiple Annex monad actions,
    possibly even concurrent ones.)
- if database does not exist (or is empty) the handle
  is not opened by reads; reads instead return empty results
- writes open the handle if it was not open previously
2015-12-23 19:18:52 -04:00

174 lines
5.4 KiB
Haskell

{- GHC File system encoding handling.
-
- Copyright 2012-2014 Joey Hess <id@joeyh.name>
-
- License: BSD-2-clause
-}
{-# LANGUAGE CPP #-}
{-# OPTIONS_GHC -fno-warn-tabs #-}
module Utility.FileSystemEncoding (
fileEncoding,
withFilePath,
md5FilePath,
decodeBS,
encodeBS,
decodeW8,
encodeW8,
encodeW8NUL,
decodeW8NUL,
truncateFilePath,
setConsoleEncoding,
) where
import qualified GHC.Foreign as GHC
import qualified GHC.IO.Encoding as Encoding
import Foreign.C
import System.IO
import System.IO.Unsafe
import qualified Data.Hash.MD5 as MD5
import Data.Word
import Data.Bits.Utils
import Data.List
import Data.List.Utils
import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy as L
#ifdef mingw32_HOST_OS
import qualified Data.ByteString.Lazy.UTF8 as L8
#endif
import Utility.Exception
{- Sets a Handle to use the filesystem encoding. This causes data
- written or read from it to be encoded/decoded the same
- as ghc 7.4 does to filenames etc. This special encoding
- allows "arbitrary undecodable bytes to be round-tripped through it".
-}
fileEncoding :: Handle -> IO ()
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
fileEncoding h = hSetEncoding h =<< Encoding.getFileSystemEncoding
#else
{- The file system encoding does not work well on Windows,
- and Windows only has utf FilePaths anyway. -}
fileEncoding h = hSetEncoding h Encoding.utf8
#endif
{- Marshal a Haskell FilePath into a NUL terminated C string using temporary
- storage. The FilePath is encoded using the filesystem encoding,
- reversing the decoding that should have been done when the FilePath
- was obtained. -}
withFilePath :: FilePath -> (CString -> IO a) -> IO a
withFilePath fp f = Encoding.getFileSystemEncoding
>>= \enc -> GHC.withCString enc fp f
{- Encodes a FilePath into a String, applying the filesystem encoding.
-
- There are very few things it makes sense to do with such an encoded
- string. It's not a legal filename; it should not be displayed.
- So this function is not exported, but instead used by the few functions
- that can usefully consume it.
-
- This use of unsafePerformIO is belived to be safe; GHC's interface
- only allows doing this conversion with CStrings, and the CString buffer
- is allocated, used, and deallocated within the call, with no side
- effects.
-
- If the FilePath contains a value that is not legal in the filesystem
- encoding, rather than thowing an exception, it will be returned as-is.
-}
{-# NOINLINE _encodeFilePath #-}
_encodeFilePath :: FilePath -> String
_encodeFilePath fp = unsafePerformIO $ do
enc <- Encoding.getFileSystemEncoding
GHC.withCString enc fp (GHC.peekCString Encoding.char8)
`catchNonAsync` (\_ -> return fp)
{- Encodes a FilePath into a Md5.Str, applying the filesystem encoding. -}
md5FilePath :: FilePath -> MD5.Str
md5FilePath = MD5.Str . _encodeFilePath
{- Decodes a ByteString into a FilePath, applying the filesystem encoding. -}
decodeBS :: L.ByteString -> FilePath
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
decodeBS = encodeW8NUL . L.unpack
#else
{- On Windows, we assume that the ByteString is utf-8, since Windows
- only uses unicode for filenames. -}
decodeBS = L8.toString
#endif
{- Encodes a FilePath into a ByteString, applying the filesystem encoding. -}
encodeBS :: FilePath -> L.ByteString
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
encodeBS = L.pack . decodeW8NUL
#else
encodeBS = L8.fromString
#endif
{- Converts a [Word8] to a FilePath, encoding using the filesystem encoding.
-
- w82c produces a String, which may contain Chars that are invalid
- unicode. From there, this is really a simple matter of applying the
- file system encoding, only complicated by GHC's interface to doing so.
-
- Note that the encoding stops at any NUL in the input. FilePaths
- do not normally contain embedded NUL, but Haskell Strings may.
-}
{-# NOINLINE encodeW8 #-}
encodeW8 :: [Word8] -> FilePath
encodeW8 w8 = unsafePerformIO $ do
enc <- Encoding.getFileSystemEncoding
GHC.withCString Encoding.char8 (w82s w8) $ GHC.peekCString enc
{- Useful when you want the actual number of bytes that will be used to
- represent the FilePath on disk. -}
decodeW8 :: FilePath -> [Word8]
decodeW8 = s2w8 . _encodeFilePath
{- Like encodeW8 and decodeW8, but NULs are passed through unchanged. -}
encodeW8NUL :: [Word8] -> FilePath
encodeW8NUL = intercalate nul . map encodeW8 . split (s2w8 nul)
where
nul = ['\NUL']
decodeW8NUL :: FilePath -> [Word8]
decodeW8NUL = intercalate (s2w8 nul) . map decodeW8 . split nul
where
nul = ['\NUL']
{- Truncates a FilePath to the given number of bytes (or less),
- as represented on disk.
-
- Avoids returning an invalid part of a unicode byte sequence, at the
- cost of efficiency when running on a large FilePath.
-}
truncateFilePath :: Int -> FilePath -> FilePath
#ifndef mingw32_HOST_OS
truncateFilePath n = go . reverse
where
go f =
let bytes = decodeW8 f
in if length bytes <= n
then reverse f
else go (drop 1 f)
#else
{- On Windows, count the number of bytes used by each utf8 character. -}
truncateFilePath n = reverse . go [] n . L8.fromString
where
go coll cnt bs
| cnt <= 0 = coll
| otherwise = case L8.decode bs of
Just (c, x) | c /= L8.replacement_char ->
let x' = fromIntegral x
in if cnt - x' < 0
then coll
else go (c:coll) (cnt - x') (L8.drop 1 bs)
_ -> coll
#endif
{- This avoids ghc's output layer crashing on invalid encoded characters in
- filenames when printing them out. -}
setConsoleEncoding :: IO ()
setConsoleEncoding = do
fileEncoding stdout
fileEncoding stderr