syncthing/lib/ignore/ignore.go

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// Copyright (C) 2014 The Syncthing Authors.
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//
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// This Source Code Form is subject to the terms of the Mozilla Public
// License, v. 2.0. If a copy of the MPL was not distributed with this file,
// You can obtain one at https://mozilla.org/MPL/2.0/.
package ignore
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"errors"
"fmt"
"io"
"path/filepath"
"strings"
"time"
"github.com/gobwas/glob"
"github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/fs"
"github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/ignore/ignoreresult"
"github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/osutil"
"github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/sha256"
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"github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/sync"
)
// A ParseError signifies an error with contents of an ignore file,
// including I/O errors on included files. An I/O error on the root level
// ignore file is not a ParseError.
type ParseError struct {
inner error
}
func (e *ParseError) Error() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("parse error: %v", e.inner)
}
func (e *ParseError) Unwrap() error {
return e.inner
}
func IsParseError(err error) bool {
var e *ParseError
return errors.As(err, &e)
}
func parseError(err error) error {
if err == nil {
return nil
}
return &ParseError{err}
}
type Pattern struct {
pattern string
match glob.Glob
result ignoreresult.R
}
func (p Pattern) String() string {
ret := p.pattern
if !p.result.IsIgnored() {
ret = "!" + ret
}
if p.result.IsCaseFolded() {
ret = "(?i)" + ret
}
if p.result.IsDeletable() {
ret = "(?d)" + ret
}
return ret
}
func (p Pattern) allowsSkippingIgnoredDirs() bool {
if p.result.IsIgnored() {
return true
}
if p.pattern[0] != '/' {
return false
}
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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// A "/**" at the end is allowed and doesn't have any bearing on the
// below checks; remove it before checking.
pattern := strings.TrimSuffix(p.pattern, "/**")
if len(pattern) == 0 {
return true
}
if strings.Contains(pattern[1:], "/") {
return false
}
// Double asterisk everywhere in the path except at the end is bad
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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return !strings.Contains(strings.TrimSuffix(pattern, "**"), "**")
}
// The ChangeDetector is responsible for determining if files have changed
// on disk. It gets told to Remember() files (name and modtime) and will
// then get asked if a file has been Seen() (i.e., Remember() has been
// called on it) and if any of the files have Changed(). To forget all
// files, call Reset().
type ChangeDetector interface {
Remember(fs fs.Filesystem, name string, modtime time.Time)
Seen(fs fs.Filesystem, name string) bool
Changed() bool
Reset()
}
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type Matcher struct {
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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fs fs.Filesystem
lines []string // exact lines read from .stignore
patterns []Pattern // patterns including those from included files
withCache bool
matches *cache
curHash string
stop chan struct{}
changeDetector ChangeDetector
mut sync.Mutex
}
// An Option can be passed to New()
type Option func(*Matcher)
// WithCache enables or disables lookup caching. The default is disabled.
func WithCache(v bool) Option {
return func(m *Matcher) {
m.withCache = v
}
}
// WithChangeDetector sets a custom ChangeDetector. The default is to simply
// use the on disk modtime for comparison.
func WithChangeDetector(cd ChangeDetector) Option {
return func(m *Matcher) {
m.changeDetector = cd
}
}
func New(fs fs.Filesystem, opts ...Option) *Matcher {
m := &Matcher{
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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fs: fs,
stop: make(chan struct{}),
mut: sync.NewMutex(),
}
for _, opt := range opts {
opt(m)
}
if m.changeDetector == nil {
m.changeDetector = newModtimeChecker()
}
if m.withCache {
go m.clean(2 * time.Hour)
}
return m
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}
// Load and parse a file. The returned error may be of type *ParseError in
// which case a file was loaded from disk but the patterns could not be
// parsed. In this case the contents of the file are nonetheless available
// in the Lines() method.
func (m *Matcher) Load(file string) error {
m.mut.Lock()
defer m.mut.Unlock()
if m.changeDetector.Seen(m.fs, file) && !m.changeDetector.Changed() {
return nil
}
fd, info, err := loadIgnoreFile(m.fs, file)
if err != nil {
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m.parseLocked(&bytes.Buffer{}, file)
return err
}
defer fd.Close()
m.changeDetector.Reset()
err = m.parseLocked(fd, file)
// If we failed to parse, don't cache, as next time Load is called
// we'll pretend it's all good.
if err == nil {
m.changeDetector.Remember(m.fs, file, info.ModTime())
}
return err
}
// Load and parse an io.Reader. See Load() for notes on the returned error.
func (m *Matcher) Parse(r io.Reader, file string) error {
m.mut.Lock()
defer m.mut.Unlock()
return m.parseLocked(r, file)
}
func (m *Matcher) parseLocked(r io.Reader, file string) error {
lines, patterns, err := parseIgnoreFile(m.fs, r, file, m.changeDetector, make(map[string]struct{}))
// Error is saved and returned at the end. We process the patterns
// (possibly blank) anyway.
m.lines = lines
newHash := hashPatterns(patterns)
if newHash == m.curHash {
// We've already loaded exactly these patterns.
return err
}
m.curHash = newHash
m.patterns = patterns
if m.withCache {
m.matches = newCache(patterns)
}
return err
}
// Match matches the patterns plus temporary and internal files.
func (m *Matcher) Match(file string) (result ignoreresult.R) {
switch {
case fs.IsTemporary(file):
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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return ignoreresult.IgnoreAndSkip
case fs.IsInternal(file):
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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return ignoreresult.IgnoreAndSkip
case file == ".":
return ignoreresult.NotIgnored
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}
m.mut.Lock()
defer m.mut.Unlock()
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if len(m.patterns) == 0 {
return ignoreresult.NotIgnored
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}
file = filepath.ToSlash(file)
if m.matches != nil {
// Check the cache for a known result.
res, ok := m.matches.get(file)
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if ok {
return res
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}
// Update the cache with the result at return time
defer func() {
m.matches.set(file, result)
}()
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}
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
2024-01-15 10:13:22 +00:00
// Check all the patterns for a match. Track whether the patterns so far
// allow skipping matched directories or not. As soon as we hit an
// exclude pattern (with some exceptions), we can't skip directories
// anymore.
var lowercaseFile string
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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canSkipDir := true
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for _, pattern := range m.patterns {
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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if canSkipDir && !pattern.allowsSkippingIgnoredDirs() {
canSkipDir = false
}
res := pattern.result
if canSkipDir {
res = res.WithSkipDir()
}
if pattern.result.IsCaseFolded() {
if lowercaseFile == "" {
lowercaseFile = strings.ToLower(file)
}
if pattern.match.Match(lowercaseFile) {
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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return res
}
} else if pattern.match.Match(file) {
lib/ignore: Optimise ignoring directories for filesystem watcher (fixes #9339) (#9340) This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the intuitive thing: ``` /foo /bar !whatever * ``` - `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored - `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag - Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper. To enable this, some refactoring was necessary: - The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of the pattern set as a whole. - That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed uglier and more annoying to use) - `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with `Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API simplification!) - The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the `Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`. That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like `ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion. Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well covered by the existing ones... Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry. --------- Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
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return res
}
}
// Default to not matching.
return ignoreresult.NotIgnored
}
// Lines return a list of the unprocessed lines in .stignore at last load
func (m *Matcher) Lines() []string {
m.mut.Lock()
defer m.mut.Unlock()
return m.lines
}
// Patterns return a list of the loaded patterns, as they've been parsed
func (m *Matcher) Patterns() []string {
m.mut.Lock()
defer m.mut.Unlock()
patterns := make([]string, len(m.patterns))
for i, pat := range m.patterns {
patterns[i] = pat.String()
}
return patterns
}
func (m *Matcher) String() string {
return fmt.Sprintf("Matcher/%v@%p", m.Patterns(), m)
}
func (m *Matcher) Hash() string {
m.mut.Lock()
defer m.mut.Unlock()
return m.curHash
}
func (m *Matcher) Stop() {
close(m.stop)
}
func (m *Matcher) clean(d time.Duration) {
t := time.NewTimer(d / 2)
for {
select {
case <-m.stop:
return
case <-t.C:
m.mut.Lock()
if m.matches != nil {
m.matches.clean(d)
}
t.Reset(d / 2)
m.mut.Unlock()
}
}
}
func hashPatterns(patterns []Pattern) string {
h := sha256.New()
for _, pat := range patterns {
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h.Write([]byte(pat.String()))
h.Write([]byte("\n"))
}
return fmt.Sprintf("%x", h.Sum(nil))
}
func loadIgnoreFile(fs fs.Filesystem, file string) (fs.File, fs.FileInfo, error) {
fd, err := fs.Open(file)
if err != nil {
return fd, nil, err
}
info, err := fd.Stat()
if err != nil {
fd.Close()
}
return fd, info, err
}
func loadParseIncludeFile(filesystem fs.Filesystem, file string, cd ChangeDetector, linesSeen map[string]struct{}) ([]Pattern, error) {
// Allow escaping the folders filesystem.
// TODO: Deprecate, somehow?
if filesystem.Type() == fs.FilesystemTypeBasic {
uri := filesystem.URI()
joined := filepath.Join(uri, file)
if !fs.IsParent(joined, uri) {
filesystem = fs.NewFilesystem(filesystem.Type(), filepath.Dir(joined))
file = filepath.Base(joined)
}
}
if cd.Seen(filesystem, file) {
return nil, errors.New("multiple include")
}
fd, info, err := loadIgnoreFile(filesystem, file)
if err != nil {
// isNotExist is considered "ok" in a sense of that a folder doesn't have to act
// upon it. This is because it is allowed for .stignore to not exist. However,
// included ignore files are not allowed to be missing and these errors should be
// acted upon on. So we don't preserve the error chain here and manually set an
// error instead, if the file is missing.
if fs.IsNotExist(err) {
err = errors.New("file not found")
}
return nil, err
}
defer fd.Close()
cd.Remember(filesystem, file, info.ModTime())
_, patterns, err := parseIgnoreFile(filesystem, fd, file, cd, linesSeen)
return patterns, err
}
func parseLine(line string) ([]Pattern, error) {
pattern := Pattern{
result: ignoreresult.Ignored,
}
// Allow prefixes to be specified in any order, but only once.
var seenPrefix [3]bool
for {
if strings.HasPrefix(line, "!") && !seenPrefix[0] {
seenPrefix[0] = true
line = line[1:]
pattern.result = pattern.result.ToggleIgnored()
} else if strings.HasPrefix(line, "(?i)") && !seenPrefix[1] {
seenPrefix[1] = true
pattern.result = pattern.result.WithFoldCase()
line = line[4:]
} else if strings.HasPrefix(line, "(?d)") && !seenPrefix[2] {
seenPrefix[2] = true
pattern.result = pattern.result.WithDeletable()
line = line[4:]
} else {
break
}
}
if line == "" {
return nil, parseError(errors.New("missing pattern"))
}
if pattern.result.IsCaseFolded() {
line = strings.ToLower(line)
}
pattern.pattern = line
var err error
if strings.HasPrefix(line, "/") {
// Pattern is rooted in the current dir only
pattern.match, err = glob.Compile(line[1:], '/')
return []Pattern{pattern}, parseError(err)
}
patterns := make([]Pattern, 2)
if strings.HasPrefix(line, "**/") {
// Add the pattern as is, and without **/ so it matches in current dir
pattern.match, err = glob.Compile(line, '/')
if err != nil {
return nil, parseError(err)
}
patterns[0] = pattern
line = line[3:]
pattern.pattern = line
pattern.match, err = glob.Compile(line, '/')
if err != nil {
return nil, parseError(err)
}
patterns[1] = pattern
return patterns, nil
}
// Path name or pattern, add it so it matches files both in
// current directory and subdirs.
pattern.match, err = glob.Compile(line, '/')
if err != nil {
return nil, parseError(err)
}
patterns[0] = pattern
line = "**/" + line
pattern.pattern = line
pattern.match, err = glob.Compile(line, '/')
if err != nil {
return nil, parseError(err)
}
patterns[1] = pattern
return patterns, nil
}
func parseIgnoreFile(fs fs.Filesystem, fd io.Reader, currentFile string, cd ChangeDetector, linesSeen map[string]struct{}) ([]string, []Pattern, error) {
var patterns []Pattern
addPattern := func(line string) error {
newPatterns, err := parseLine(line)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("invalid pattern %q in ignore file: %w", line, err)
}
patterns = append(patterns, newPatterns...)
return nil
}
scanner := bufio.NewScanner(fd)
var lines []string
for scanner.Scan() {
line := strings.TrimSpace(scanner.Text())
lines = append(lines, line)
}
if err := scanner.Err(); err != nil {
return nil, nil, err
}
var err error
for _, line := range lines {
if _, ok := linesSeen[line]; ok {
continue
}
linesSeen[line] = struct{}{}
switch {
case line == "":
continue
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case strings.HasPrefix(line, "//"):
continue
}
line = filepath.ToSlash(line)
switch {
case strings.HasPrefix(line, "#include"):
fields := strings.SplitN(line, " ", 2)
if len(fields) != 2 {
err = parseError(errors.New("failed to parse #include line: no file?"))
break
}
includeRel := strings.TrimSpace(fields[1])
if includeRel == "" {
err = parseError(errors.New("failed to parse #include line: no file?"))
break
}
includeFile := filepath.Join(filepath.Dir(currentFile), includeRel)
var includePatterns []Pattern
if includePatterns, err = loadParseIncludeFile(fs, includeFile, cd, linesSeen); err == nil {
patterns = append(patterns, includePatterns...)
} else {
// Wrap the error, as if the include does not exist, we get a
// IsNotExists(err) == true error, which we use to check
// existence of the .stignore file, and just end up assuming
// there is none, rather than a broken include.
err = parseError(fmt.Errorf("failed to load include file %s: %w", includeFile, err))
}
case strings.HasSuffix(line, "/**"):
err = addPattern(line)
case strings.HasSuffix(line, "/"):
err = addPattern(line + "**")
default:
err = addPattern(line)
if err == nil {
err = addPattern(line + "/**")
}
}
if err != nil {
return lines, nil, err
}
}
return lines, patterns, nil
}
// WriteIgnores is a convenience function to avoid code duplication
func WriteIgnores(filesystem fs.Filesystem, path string, content []string) error {
if len(content) == 0 {
err := filesystem.Remove(path)
if fs.IsNotExist(err) {
return nil
}
return err
}
fd, err := osutil.CreateAtomicFilesystem(filesystem, path)
if err != nil {
return err
}
wr := osutil.LineEndingsWriter(fd)
for _, line := range content {
fmt.Fprintln(wr, line)
}
if err := fd.Close(); err != nil {
return err
}
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filesystem.Hide(path)
return nil
}
type modtimeCheckerKey struct {
fs fs.Filesystem
name string
}
// modtimeChecker is the default implementation of ChangeDetector
type modtimeChecker struct {
modtimes map[modtimeCheckerKey]time.Time
}
func newModtimeChecker() *modtimeChecker {
return &modtimeChecker{
modtimes: map[modtimeCheckerKey]time.Time{},
}
}
func (c *modtimeChecker) Remember(fs fs.Filesystem, name string, modtime time.Time) {
c.modtimes[modtimeCheckerKey{fs, name}] = modtime
}
func (c *modtimeChecker) Seen(fs fs.Filesystem, name string) bool {
_, ok := c.modtimes[modtimeCheckerKey{fs, name}]
return ok
}
func (c *modtimeChecker) Reset() {
c.modtimes = map[modtimeCheckerKey]time.Time{}
}
func (c *modtimeChecker) Changed() bool {
for key, modtime := range c.modtimes {
info, err := key.fs.Stat(key.name)
if err != nil {
return true
}
if !info.ModTime().Equal(modtime) {
return true
}
}
return false
}