| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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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.
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This includes a generic JSONStream library built on top of Text.JSON
(somewhat hackishly).
It would be possible to stream out a single json document describing
all actions, but it's probably better for consumers if they can expect
one json document per line, so I did it that way instead.
Output from external programs used for transferring files is not
currently hidden when outputting json, which probably makes it not very
useful there. This may be dealt with if there is demand for json
output for --get or --move to be parsable.
The version, status, and find subcommands have hand-crafted output and
don't do json. The whereis subcommand needs to be modified to produce
useful json.
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This will allow adding other styles of output.
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fmap = liftM
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the liftM on its own can lift all the way into IO.
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Was a type alias; using newtype has the benefit that type errors will
show "Annex foo" rather than two lines of internal type nonsense. Yay!
There should be no other effects to size or runtime.
I've tried to do this at least twice before (each time I read RWH chapter 10);
finally understood how to this time.. sorta.
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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.
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It was always imported qualified as Git anyway
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Doubles the speed of fsck, and speeds up drop as well.
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Support creating the branch.
Unified branch state into a single data type.
Only commit changes when the index has been changed.
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This will speed up typical cases like git-annex get, which currently
has to read the location log once, then read it a second time in order to
add a line to it. Since these reads now involve more than just reading
in a file, it seemed good to add a cache layer.
Only the most recent thing needs to be cached, because git-annex has
good locality; it operates on one file at a time, and only cares
about one item from the branch per file.
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There is no suitable git hook to run code when pulling changes that
might need to be merged into the git-annex branch. The post-merge hook
is only run when changes are merged into HEAD, and it's possible,
and indeed likely that many pulls will only have changes in git-annex,
but not in HEAD, and not trigger it.
So, git-annex will have to take care to update the branch before reading
from it, to make sure it has merged in current info from remotes. Happily,
this can be done quite inexpensively, just a git-show-ref to list
branches, and a minimalized git-log to see if there are unmerged changes
on the branches. To further speed up, it will be done only once per
git-annex run, max.
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It doesn't export `state` there, so hiding it fails. Just list explicitly
what we use.
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* Update Debian build dependencies for ghc 7.
* Debian package is now built with S3 support. Thanks Joachim Breitner for
making this possible, also thanks Greg Heartsfield for working to improve
the hS3 library for git-annex.
Also hid a conflicting new symbol from Control.Monad.State
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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.
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This required parameterizing the type for Remote, to avoid a cycle.
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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.
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Added a cheap way to query the size of a queue.
runQueueAt is not the default yet only because there may be some code that
expects to be able to queue some suff, do something else, and run the whole
queue at the end.
10240 is an arbitrary size for the queue. If we assume annexed
filenames are between 10 and 255 characters long, then the queue will
build up between 100kb and 2550kb long commands. The max command line
length on linux is somewhere above 20k, so this is a fairly good balance --
the queue will buffer only a few megabytes of stuff and a minimal number
of commands will be run by xargs.
Also, insert queue items strictly, this should save memory.
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So, I have a type checked safe handling of filenames starting with dashes,
throughout the code.
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Now that it only contains types used by the backends
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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.
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This allows the Backend type to not depend on the Annex type, and
so the Annex type can later be moved out of TypeInternals.
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not used anywhere just yet..
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