We have the invalid bit to indicate that a file isn't good. That's enough for remote devices. For ourselves, it would be good to know sometimes why the file isn't good - because it's an unsupported type, because it matches an ignore pattern, or because we detected the data is bad and we need to rescan it.
Or, and this is the main future reason for the PR, because it's a change detected on a receive only device. We will want something like the invalid flag for those changes, but marking them as invalid today means the scanner will rehash them. Hence something more fine grained is required.
This introduces a LocalFlags fields to the FileInfo where we can stash things that we care about locally. For example,
FlagLocalUnsupported = 1 << 0 // The kind is unsupported, e.g. symlinks on Windows
FlagLocalIgnored = 1 << 1 // Matches local ignore patterns
FlagLocalMustRescan = 1 << 2 // Doesn't match content on disk, must be rechecked fully
The LocalFlags fields isn't sent over the wire; instead the Invalid attribute is calculated based on the flags at index sending time. It's on the FileInfo anyway because that's what we serialize to database etc.
The actual Invalid flag should after this just be considered when building the global state and figuring out availability for remote devices. It is not used for local file index entries.
To optimize WithNeed, which is called for the local device whenever an index
update is received. No tracking for remote devices to conserve db space, as
WithNeed is only queried for completion.
Unignored files are marked as conflicting while scanning, which is then resolved
in the subsequent pull. Automatically reconciles needed items on send-only
folders, if they do not actually differ except for internal metadata.
When scanner.Walk detects a change, it now returns the new file info as well as the old file info. It also finds deleted and ignored files while scanning.
Also directory deletions are now always committed to db after their children to prevent temporary failure on remote due to non-empty directory.
This keeps the data we need about sequence numbers and object counts
persistently in the database. The sizeTracker is expanded into a
metadataTracker than handled multiple folders, and the Counts struct is
made protobuf serializable. It gains a Sequence field to assist in
tracking that as well, and a collection of Counts become a CountsSet
(for serialization purposes).
The initial database scan is also a consistency check of the global
entries. This shouldn't strictly be necessary. Nonetheless I added a
created timestamp to the metadata and set a variable to compare against
that. When the time since the metadata creation is old enough, we drop
the metadata and rebuild from scratch like we used to, while also
consistency checking.
A new environment variable STCHECKDBEVERY can override this interval,
and for example be set to zero to force the check immediately.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4547
LGTM: imsodin
These functions were very naive and slow. We haven't done much about
them because they pretty much don't matter at all for Syncthing
performance. They are however called very often in the discovery server
and these optimizations have a huge effect on the CPU load on the
public discovery servers.
The code isn't exactly obvious, but we have good test coverage on all
these functions.
benchmark old ns/op new ns/op delta
BenchmarkLuhnify-8 12458 1045 -91.61%
BenchmarkUnluhnify-8 12598 1074 -91.47%
BenchmarkChunkify-8 10792 104 -99.04%
benchmark old allocs new allocs delta
BenchmarkLuhnify-8 18 1 -94.44%
BenchmarkUnluhnify-8 18 1 -94.44%
BenchmarkChunkify-8 44 2 -95.45%
benchmark old bytes new bytes delta
BenchmarkLuhnify-8 1278 64 -94.99%
BenchmarkUnluhnify-8 1278 64 -94.99%
BenchmarkChunkify-8 42552 128 -99.70%
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4346
This updates kcp and uses our own fork which:
1. Keys sessions not just by remote address, but by remote address +
conversation id 2. Allows not to close connections that were passed directly
to the library. 3. Resets cache key if the session gets terminated.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4339
LGTM: calmh
After this change,
- Symlinks on Windows are always unsupported. Sorry.
- Symlinks are always enabled on other platforms. They are just a small
file like anything else. There is no need to special case them. If you
don't want to sync some symlinks, ignore them.
- The protocol doesn't differentiate between different "types" of
symlinks. If that distinction ever does become relevant the individual
devices can figure it out by looking at the destination when they
create the link.
It's backwards compatible in that all the old symlink types are still
understood to be symlinks, and the new SYMLINK type is equivalent to the
old SYMLINK_UNKNOWN which was always a valid way to do it.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3962
LGTM: AudriusButkevicius
Also tweaks the proto definitions:
- [packed=false] on the block_indexes field to retain compat with
v0.14.16 and earlier.
- Uses the vendored protobuf package in include paths.
And, "build.go setup" will install the vendored protoc-gen-gogofast.
This should ensure that a proto rebuild isn't so dependent on whatever
version of the compiler and package the developer has installed...
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3864
The protobuf encoder now produces packed arrays for things like []int32,
which is actually correct according to the proto3 spec. However
Syncthing v0.14.16 and earlier doesn't support this. This reverts the
encoding change, but keeps the updated decoder so that we are both more
compatible with other proto3 implementations and can move to the updated
encoder in the future.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3856
This makes the device ID a real type that can be used in the protobuf
schema. That avoids the juggling back and forth from []byte in a bunch
of places and simplifies the code.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3695
This adds autodetection of the fastest hashing library on startup, thus
handling the performance regression. It also adds an environment
variable to control the selection, STHASHING=standard (Go standard
library version, avoids SIGILL crash when the minio library has bugs on
odd CPUs), STHASHING=minio (to force using the minio version) or unset
for the default autodetection.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3617
We used to consider deleted files & directories 128 bytes large. After
the delta indexes change a bug slipped in where deleted files would be
weighted according to their old non-deleted size. Both ways are
incorrect (but the latest change made it worse), as if there are more
files deleted than remaining data in the repo the needSize can be
greater than the globalSize, resulting in a negative completion
percentage.
This change makes it so that deleted items are zero bytes large, which
makes more sense. Instead we expose the number of files that we need to
delete as a separate field in the Completion() result, and hack the
percentage down to 95% complete if it was 100% complete but we need to
delete files. This latter part is sort of ugly, but necessary to give
the user some sort of feedback.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3556
So there were some issues here. The main problem was that
model.Close(deviceID) was overloaded to mean "the connection was closed
by the protocol layer" and "i want to close this connection". That meant
it could get called twice - once *to* close the connection and then once
more when the connection *was* closed.
After this refactor there is instead a Closed(conn) method that is the
callback. I didn't need to change the parameter in the end, but I think
it's clearer what it means when it takes the connection that was closed
instead of a device ID. To close a connection, the new close(deviceID)
method is used instead, which only closes the underlying connection and
leaves the cleanup to the Closed() callback.
I also changed how we do connection switching. Instead of the connection
service calling close and then adding the connection, it just adds the
new connection. The model knows that it already has a connection and
makes sure to close and clean out that one before adding the new
connection.
To make sure to sequence this properly I added a new map of channels
that get created on connection add and closed by Closed(), so that
AddConnection() can do the close and wait for the cleanup to happen
before proceeding.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3490
This adds a new nanoseconds field to the FileInfo, populates it during
scans and sets the non-truncated time in Chtimes calls.
The actual file modification time is defined as modified_s seconds +
modified_ns nanoseconds. It's expected that the modified_ns field is <=
1e9 (that is, all whole seconds should go in the modified_s field) but
not really enforced. Given that it's an int32 the timestamp can be
adjusted += ~2.9 seconds by the modified_ns field...
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3431
This lets us add message types in the future, for authentication or
other purposes, without completely breaking old clients. I see this as
similar behavior to adding fields to messages - newer clients must
simple be aware that older ones may ignore the message and act
accordingly.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3390
This changes the BEP protocol to use protocol buffer serialization
instead of XDR, and therefore also the database format. The local
discovery protocol is also updated to be protocol buffer format.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3276
LGTM: AudriusButkevicius
This is in preparation for future changes, but also improves the
handling when talking to pre-v0.13 clients. It breaks out the Hello
message and magic from the rest of the protocol implementation, with the
intention that this small part of the protocol will survive future
changes.
To enable this, and future testing, the new ExchangeHello function takes
an interface that can be implemented by future Hello versions and
returns a version indendent result type. It correctly detects pre-v0.13
protocols and returns a "too old" error message which gets logged to the
user at warning level:
[I6KAH] 09:21:36 WARNING: Connecting to [...]:
the remote device speaks an older version of the protocol (v0.12) not
compatible with this version
Conversely, something entirely unknown will generate:
[I6KAH] 09:40:27 WARNING: Connecting to [...]:
the remote device speaks an unknown (newer?) version of the protocol
The intention is that in future iterations the Hello exchange will
succeed on at least one side and ExchangeHello will return the actual
data from the Hello together with ErrTooOld and an even more precise
message can be generated.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3289
This implements a new debug/trace infrastructure based on a slightly
hacked up logger. Instead of the traditional "if debug { ... }" I've
rewritten the logger to have no-op Debugln and Debugf, unless debugging
has been enabled for a given "facility". The "facility" is just a
string, typically a package name.
This will be slightly slower than before; but not that much as it's
mostly a function call that returns immediately. For the cases where it
matters (the Debugln takes a hex.Dump() of something for example, and
it's not in a very occasional "if err != nil" branch) there is an
l.ShouldDebug(facility) that is fast enough to be used like the old "if
debug".
The point of all this is that we can now toggle debugging for the
various packages on and off at runtime. There's a new method
/rest/system/debug that can be POSTed a set of facilities to enable and
disable debug for, or GET from to get a list of facilities with
descriptions and their current debug status.
Similarly a /rest/system/log?since=... can grab the latest log entries,
up to 250 of them (hardcoded constant in main.go) plus the initial few.
Not implemented in this commit (but planned) is a simple debug GUI
available on /debug that shows the current log in an easily pasteable
format and has checkboxes to enable the various debug facilities.
The debug instructions to a user then becomes "visit this URL, check
these boxes, reproduce your problem, copy and paste the log". The actual
log viewer on the hypothetical /debug URL can poll regularly for new log
entries and this bypass the 250 line limit.
The existing STTRACE=foo variable is still obeyed and just sets the
start state of the system.