This is inspired by the circuit breaker pattern used for distributed
systems. If too many requests fails, then it is better to immediately
fail new requests for a limited time to give the backend time to
recover.
By only forgetting a file in the cache at most once, we can ensure that
a broken file is only retrieved once again from the backend. If the file
stored there is broken, previously it would be cached and deleted
continuously. Now, it is retrieved only once again, all later requests
just use the cached copy and either succeed or fail immediately.
A file is always cached whole. Thus, any out of bounds access will also
fail when directed at the backend. To handle case in which the cached
file is broken, then caller must call Cache.Forget(h) for the file in
question.
Two restic processes running concurrently can try to remove the same
files from the cache. This could cause one process to fail with an error
if the other one has already remove a file that the current process also
tries to delete.
The ioutil functions are deprecated since Go 1.17 and only wrap another
library function. Thus directly call the underlying function.
This commit only mechanically replaces the function calls.
Instead of first checking whether a file is in the repository cache and
then opening it, we just can open the file. This saves one stat call. If
the file is in the cache, everything is fine and otherwise the code
follows its normal fallback path.
Many instances of errors.Wrap in this package would produce messages
like "Open: open <filename>: no such file or directory"; those now omit
the first "Open:" (or "Stat:", or "MkdirAll"). The function readVersion
now appends its own name to the error message, rather than the function
that failed, to make it easier to spot. Other function names (e.g.,
Load) are already added further up in the call chain.
- be explicit when discarding returned errors from .Close(), etc.
- remove named return values from funcs when naked return not used
- fix some "err" shadowing when redeclaration not needed
This commits adds rudimentary support for a cache directory, enabled by
default. The cache directory is created if it does not exist. The cache
is used if there's anything in it, newly created snapshot and index
files are written to the cache automatically.