Commit Graph

60 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jakob Borg
77970d5113
refactor: use modern Protobuf encoder (#9817)
At a high level, this is what I've done and why:

- I'm moving the protobuf generation for the `protocol`, `discovery` and
`db` packages to the modern alternatives, and using `buf` to generate
because it's nice and simple.
- After trying various approaches on how to integrate the new types with
the existing code, I opted for splitting off our own data model types
from the on-the-wire generated types. This means we can have a
`FileInfo` type with nicer ergonomics and lots of methods, while the
protobuf generated type stays clean and close to the wire protocol. It
does mean copying between the two when required, which certainly adds a
small amount of inefficiency. If we want to walk this back in the future
and use the raw generated type throughout, that's possible, this however
makes the refactor smaller (!) as it doesn't change everything about the
type for everyone at the same time.
- I have simply removed in cold blood a significant number of old
database migrations. These depended on previous generations of generated
messages of various kinds and were annoying to support in the new
fashion. The oldest supported database version now is the one from
Syncthing 1.9.0 from Sep 7, 2020.
- I changed config structs to be regular manually defined structs.

For the sake of discussion, some things I tried that turned out not to
work...

### Embedding / wrapping

Embedding the protobuf generated structs in our existing types as a data
container and keeping our methods and stuff:

```
package protocol

type FileInfo struct {
  *generated.FileInfo
}
```

This generates a lot of problems because the internal shape of the
generated struct is quite different (different names, different types,
more pointers), because initializing it doesn't work like you'd expect
(i.e., you end up with an embedded nil pointer and a panic), and because
the types of child types don't get wrapped. That is, even if we also
have a similar wrapper around a `Vector`, that's not the type you get
when accessing `someFileInfo.Version`, you get the `*generated.Vector`
that doesn't have methods, etc.

### Aliasing

```
package protocol

type FileInfo = generated.FileInfo
```

Doesn't help because you can't attach methods to it, plus all the above.

### Generating the types into the target package like we do now and
attaching methods

This fails because of the different shape of the generated type (as in
the embedding case above) plus the generated struct already has a bunch
of methods that we can't necessarily override properly (like `String()`
and a bunch of getters).

### Methods to functions

I considered just moving all the methods we attach to functions in a
specific package, so that for example

```
package protocol

func (f FileInfo) Equal(other FileInfo) bool
```

would become

```
package fileinfos

func Equal(a, b *generated.FileInfo) bool
```

and this would mostly work, but becomes quite verbose and cumbersome,
and somewhat limits discoverability (you can't see what methods are
available on the type in auto completions, etc). In the end I did this
in some cases, like in the database layer where a lot of things like
`func (fv *FileVersion) IsEmpty() bool` becomes `func fvIsEmpty(fv
*generated.FileVersion)` because they were anyway just internal methods.

Fixes #8247
2024-12-01 16:50:17 +01:00
greatroar
d00a30069a
lib/db: Constant/unused args and return values, double it.Release (#8259) 2022-04-27 20:32:44 +02:00
greatroar
7fa141ea39
all: Unused args, retvals, assignments (#7926) 2021-09-08 00:11:16 +02:00
Simon Frei
69ce121267
lib/db: Missing event-logger in write-transaction (#7793) 2021-06-27 08:43:49 +02:00
Simon Frei
23a0e18292
lib/db: Fix accounting bug when dropping indexes (#7774) 2021-06-17 10:15:11 +02:00
Simon Frei
1a22689328
lib/db: Add failure reports to failures iterating over hashes (#7755) 2021-06-07 23:10:35 +02:00
Jakob Borg
ce65aea0ab
lib/db: Use a more concurrent GC (fixes #7722) (#7750)
This changes the GC mechanism so that the first pass (which reads all
FileInfos to populate bloom filters with block & version hashes) can
happen concurrently with normal database operations.

The big gcMut still exists, and we grab it temporarily to block all
other modifications while we set up the bloom filters. We then release
the lock and let other things happen, with those other things also
updating the bloom filters as required. Once the first phase is done we
again grab the gcMut, knowing that we are the sole modifier of the
database, and do the cleanup.

I also removed the final compaction step.
2021-06-07 10:52:06 +02:00
Simon Frei
dd39556759
lib: Revert needing invalid files (fixes #7608, ref #7476) (#7609) 2021-04-29 22:01:46 +02:00
Simon Frei
f30f9c50f8
lib/db: Handle indirection error repairing sequences (fixes #7026) (#7525) 2021-04-05 10:24:16 +02:00
Simon Frei
273ee09925
lib/db, lib/model: Allow needing invalid files (fixes #7474) (#7476) 2021-03-15 07:58:01 +01:00
Simon Frei
46bbc78e82
lib/db: Fix and improve removing entries from global (ref #6501) (#7336) 2021-02-08 08:38:41 +01:00
Simon Frei
78bd0341a8
all: Handle errors opening db/creating file-set (ref #5907) (#7150) 2020-12-21 12:59:22 +01:00
Simon Frei
bd0c9913cf
lib/db: Remove index ids when dropping folder (#7200) 2020-12-21 11:10:59 +01:00
Simon Frei
27c91c57d5
lib/db: Remove need for the right dev removing globals (fixes #7036) (#7044) 2020-10-21 08:26:10 +02:00
Jakob Borg
674fca3868
lib/db, lib/protocol: Never need empty-version entries (fixes #6961) (#6962)
Avoid havoc when discovering locally-deleted-upgraded files during repair / need calculation...

Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
2020-09-07 20:18:25 +02:00
Simon Frei
52d1681fe6
lib/db: Copy returned, old FileVersion (#6952) 2020-09-04 14:13:38 +02:00
Simon Frei
7b821d2550
lib/db: Add local need check&repair (#6950) 2020-09-04 14:01:46 +02:00
Simon Frei
0e3e0a7c9e
cmd/stindex, lib/db: Use same condition to check for needed files (#6954) 2020-09-04 13:59:04 +02:00
Simon Frei
8f5215878b
lib/db: Don't put truncated files (ref #6855, ref #6501) (#6888) 2020-08-18 09:20:12 +02:00
Simon Frei
850dd4cd25
lib/db: Don't count invalid items to global state (ref #6850) (#6863) 2020-07-30 13:49:14 +02:00
Simon Frei
08e0f938a9
lib/db: Update global meta even if unchanged (fixes #6850) (#6852) 2020-07-24 12:36:16 +02:00
Audrius Butkevicius
55147f5901
lib/db: Rework flush hooks (#6838) 2020-07-19 08:55:27 +02:00
André Colomb
46536509d7
lib/protocol: Avoid panic in DeviceIDFromBytes (#6714) 2020-06-07 10:31:12 +02:00
Simon Frei
1f8e6c55f6
lib/db: Refactor to use global list by version (fixes #6372) (#6638)
Group the global list of files by version, instead of having one flat list for all devices. This removes lots of duplicate protocol.Vectors.

Co-authored-by: Jakob Borg <jakob@kastelo.net>
2020-05-30 09:50:23 +02:00
Jakob Borg
94beed5c10
lib/db: Add Badger backend (fixes #5910) (#6250) 2020-05-29 13:43:02 +02:00
Simon Frei
5b34c31cb3
lib/db: Don't panic on seq. coruption when debugging (#6662) 2020-05-18 10:42:51 +02:00
Jakob Borg
531ceb2b0f
Add indirection for large version vectors. (#6376)
This adds indirection of large version vectors in the same manner as we
already to block lists. The effect is the same: less duplicated data in
some situations.

To mitigate the impact for when this indirection
wouldn't be needed I've added an indirection cutoff for both blocks and
the new version vector stuff: we don't do the indirection at all for
small block lists or small version vectors, instead storing it directly
like we used to do. This is faster for small files and small setups.
2020-05-13 14:28:42 +02:00
Simon Frei
ba4462a70b
lib/db: Fix updating/removing from global (ref #6413) (#6635) 2020-05-13 12:56:49 +02:00
Audrius Butkevicius
decb967969
all: Reorder sequences for better rename detection (#6574) 2020-05-11 20:15:11 +02:00
Simon Frei
a94951becd
lib/db, lib/model: Keep need stats in metadata (ref #5899) (#6413) 2020-05-11 15:07:06 +02:00
Audrius Butkevicius
da99203dcd
lib/db: Fix non-truncated fileinfo loading (#6621) 2020-05-08 20:31:43 +01:00
Simon Frei
22242d51be
lib/db: Refactor getting global lists (#6529)
* lib/db: Refactor getting global lists

* VL -> Versions

* keyBuf

* don't touch db migration
2020-05-01 08:30:20 +01:00
Simon Frei
df318ed370
lib/db: Don't get blocklists on drop and missing continue (ref #6457) (#6502) 2020-04-07 13:13:18 +02:00
Jakob Borg
c4abe6f815
lib/db: Don't whack blocks when putting truncated file (#6434)
As of the latest database checker we are again putting files without
blocks. I'm not 100% convinced that's a great idea, but we also do it
for ignored files apparently so it looks like we probably should support
it. This adds an escape hatch that must be manually enabled...
2020-03-20 12:07:14 +01:00
Simon Frei
cf11fa4327
lib/db: Fix removeFromGlobal and no filenames in error (fixes #6427) (#6428) 2020-03-19 14:32:22 +01:00
Simon Frei
40580d8b9b
lib/db: Remove emptied global list in checkGlobals (fixes #6425) (#6426) 2020-03-19 14:30:20 +01:00
Simon Frei
1bd4ea0cbb
lib/db: Don't ignore failures unmarshaling version lists (#6411) 2020-03-16 10:09:27 +01:00
Simon Frei
a1cb1d70c4
lib/db: Use need func in withNeed and simplify (#6412) 2020-03-16 08:45:45 +01:00
Jakob Borg
4f7a77597e
lib/db: Slightly improve indirection (ref #6372) (#6373)
I was working on indirecting version vectors, and that resulted in some
refactoring and improving the existing block indirection stuff. We may
or may not end up doing the version vector indirection, but I think
these changes are reasonable anyhow and will simplify the diff
significantly if we do go there. The main points are:

- A bunch of renaming to make the indirection and GC not about "blocks"
  but about "indirection".

- Adding a cutoff so that we don't actually indirect for small block
  lists. This gets us better performance when handling small files as it
  cuts out the indirection for quite small loss in space efficiency.

- Being paranoid and always recalculating the hash on put. This costs
  some CPU, but the consequences if a buggy or malicious implementation
  silently substituted the block list by lying about the hash would be bad.
2020-02-27 11:19:21 +01:00
Jakob Borg
10cb14fcb8 lib/db: Allow put partial FileInfo without blocks (ref #6353) 2020-02-22 17:44:34 +01:00
Simon Frei
32e12abb43
lib/db: Don't panic on incorrect BlocksHash (fixes #6353) (#6355) 2020-02-22 16:51:23 +01:00
Simon Frei
fae7425bbf
lib: Modify FileInfos consistently (ref #6321) (#6349) 2020-02-19 16:58:09 +01:00
Simon Frei
05e23f1991
lib/db: Don't call backend.Commit twice (ref #6337) (#6342) 2020-02-14 08:11:24 +01:00
Jakob Borg
a728743c86
lib/db: Use Commit() instead of commit() (#6330)
The readWriteTransaction offered both commit() (the one to use) and
Commit() (via embedding) where the latter didn't close the read
transaction. This removes the lower cased variant in order to prevent
the mistake.

The only place where the mistake was made was the new gc runner, where
it would leave a read snapshot open forever.
2020-02-12 11:59:55 +01:00
Jakob Borg
04e648fee6
lib/db: Handle missing block lists as missing file (ref #6321) (#6322)
Also explicitly handle non-nil but empty block lists (if they should
ever pop up as an effect of unmarshalling changes or whatnot).
2020-02-11 15:37:22 +01:00
Jakob Borg
8fc2dfad0c
lib/db: Deduplicate block lists in database (fixes #5898) (#6283)
* lib/db: Deduplicate block lists in database (fixes #5898)

This moves the block list in the database out from being just a field on
the FileInfo to being an object of its own. When putting a FileInfo we
marshal the block list separately and store it keyed by the sha256 of
the marshalled block list. When getting, if we are not doing a
"truncated" get, we do an extra read and unmarshal for the block list.

Old block lists are cleared out by a periodic GC sweep. The alternative
would be to use refcounting, but:

- There is a larger risk of getting that wrong and either dropping a
  block list in error or keeping them around forever.

- It's tricky with our current database, as we don't have dirty reads.
  This means that if we update two FileInfos with identical block lists in
  the same transaction we can't just do read/modify/write for the ref
  counters as we wouldn't see our own first update. See above about
  tracking this and risks about getting it wrong.

GC uses a bloom filter for keys to avoid heavy RAM usage. GC can't run
concurrently with FileInfo updates so there is a new lock around those
operation at the lowlevel.

The end result is a much more compact database, especially for setups
with many peers where files get duplicated many times.

This is per-key-class stats for a large database I'm currently working
with, under the current schema:

```
 0x00:  9138161 items, 870876 KB keys + 7397482 KB data, 95 B +  809 B avg, 1637651 B max
 0x01:   185656 items,  10388 KB keys + 1790909 KB data, 55 B + 9646 B avg,  924525 B max
 0x02:   916890 items,  84795 KB keys +    3667 KB data, 92 B +    4 B avg,     192 B max
 0x03:      384 items,     27 KB keys +       5 KB data, 72 B +   15 B avg,      87 B max
 0x04:     1109 items,     17 KB keys +      17 KB data, 15 B +   15 B avg,      69 B max
 0x06:      383 items,      3 KB keys +       0 KB data,  9 B +    2 B avg,      18 B max
 0x07:      510 items,      4 KB keys +      12 KB data,  9 B +   24 B avg,      41 B max
 0x08:     1349 items,     12 KB keys +      10 KB data,  9 B +    8 B avg,      17 B max
 0x09:      194 items,      0 KB keys +     123 KB data,  5 B +  634 B avg,   11484 B max
 0x0a:        3 items,      0 KB keys +       0 KB data, 14 B +    7 B avg,      30 B max
 0x0b:   181836 items,   2363 KB keys +   10694 KB data, 13 B +   58 B avg,     173 B max
 Total 10426475 items, 968490 KB keys + 9202925 KB data.
```

Note 7.4 GB of data in class 00, total size 9.2 GB. After running the
migration we get this instead:

```
 0x00:  9138161 items, 870876 KB keys + 2611392 KB data, 95 B +  285 B avg,    4788 B max
 0x01:   185656 items,  10388 KB keys + 1790909 KB data, 55 B + 9646 B avg,  924525 B max
 0x02:   916890 items,  84795 KB keys +    3667 KB data, 92 B +    4 B avg,     192 B max
 0x03:      384 items,     27 KB keys +       5 KB data, 72 B +   15 B avg,      87 B max
 0x04:     1109 items,     17 KB keys +      17 KB data, 15 B +   15 B avg,      69 B max
 0x06:      383 items,      3 KB keys +       0 KB data,  9 B +    2 B avg,      18 B max
 0x07:      510 items,      4 KB keys +      12 KB data,  9 B +   24 B avg,      41 B max
 0x09:      194 items,      0 KB keys +     123 KB data,  5 B +  634 B avg,   11484 B max
 0x0a:        3 items,      0 KB keys +       0 KB data, 14 B +   17 B avg,      51 B max
 0x0b:   181836 items,   2363 KB keys +   10694 KB data, 13 B +   58 B avg,     173 B max
 0x0d:    44282 items,   1461 KB keys +   61081 KB data, 33 B + 1379 B avg, 1637399 B max
 Total 10469408 items, 969939 KB keys + 4477905 KB data.
```

Class 00 is now down to 2.6 GB, with just 61 MB added in class 0d.

There will be some additional reads in some cases which theoretically
hurts performance, but this will be more than compensated for by smaller
writes and better compaction.

On my own home setup which just has three devices and a handful of
folders the difference is smaller in absolute numbers of course, but
still less than half the old size:

```
 0x00:  297122 items,  20894 KB keys + 306860 KB data, 70 B + 1032 B avg, 103237 B max
 0x01:  115299 items,   7738 KB keys +  17542 KB data, 67 B +  152 B avg,    419 B max
 0x02: 1430537 items, 121223 KB keys +   5722 KB data, 84 B +    4 B avg,    253 B max
 ...
 Total 1947412 items, 151268 KB keys + 337485 KB data.
```

to:

```
 0x00:  297122 items,  20894 KB keys +  37038 KB data, 70 B +  124 B avg,    520 B max
 0x01:  115299 items,   7738 KB keys +  17542 KB data, 67 B +  152 B avg,    419 B max
 0x02: 1430537 items, 121223 KB keys +   5722 KB data, 84 B +    4 B avg,    253 B max
 ...
 0x0d:   18041 items,    595 KB keys +  71964 KB data, 33 B + 3988 B avg, 101109 B max
 Total 1965447 items, 151863 KB keys + 139628 KB data.
```

* wip

* wip

* wip

* wip
2020-01-24 08:35:44 +01:00
Simon Frei
08f0e125ef all: Transactionalize db.FileSet (fixes #5952) (#6239) 2020-01-21 18:23:08 +01:00
Simon Frei
0bec01b827 lib/db: Remove *instance by making everything *Lowlevel (#6204) 2019-12-02 08:18:04 +01:00
Jakob Borg
c71116ee94
Implement database abstraction, error checking (ref #5907) (#6107)
This PR does two things, because one lead to the other:

- Move the leveldb specific stuff into a small "backend" package that
defines a backend interface and the leveldb implementation. This allows,
potentially, in the future, switching the db implementation so another
KV store should we wish to do so.

- Add proper error handling all along the way. The db and backend
packages are now errcheck clean. However, I drew the line at modifying
the FileSet API in order to keep this manageable and not continue
refactoring all of the rest of Syncthing. As such, the FileSet methods
still panic on database errors, except for the "database is closed"
error which is instead handled by silently returning as quickly as
possible, with the assumption that we're anyway "on the way out".
2019-11-29 09:11:52 +01:00
Simon Frei
fe4daf242b
cmd, lib/db: Actually close goleveldb (fixes #5505) (#5671) 2019-05-02 11:15:00 +02:00