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>
This reduces allocations, in number and in size, while getting extended
attributes. This is mostly noticable when there is a large number of new
files to scan and we're running with the default scanProgressInterval --
then a queue of files is built in-memory, and this queue includes
extended attributes as part of file metadata. (Arguable it shouldn't,
but that's a more difficult and involved change.)
With 1M files to scan, each with one extended attribute, current peak
memory usage looks like this:
Showing nodes accounting for 1425.30MB, 98.19% of 1451.64MB total
Dropped 1435 nodes (cum <= 7.26MB)
Showing top 10 nodes out of 54
flat flat% sum% cum cum%
976.56MB 67.27% 67.27% 976.56MB 67.27%
github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/fs.getXattr
305.44MB 21.04% 88.31% 305.44MB 21.04%
github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/scanner.(*walker).walk.func1
45.78MB 3.15% 91.47% 1045.23MB 72.00%
github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/fs.(*BasicFilesystem).GetXattr
22.89MB 1.58% 93.04% 22.89MB 1.58%
github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/fs.listXattr
22.89MB 1.58% 94.62% 22.89MB 1.58%
github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/protocol.(*PlatformData).SetXattrs
16MB 1.10% 95.72% 16.01MB 1.10%
github.com/syndtr/goleveldb/leveldb/memdb.New
After the change, it's this:
Showing nodes accounting for 502.32MB, 95.70% of 524.88MB total
Dropped 1400 nodes (cum <= 2.62MB)
Showing top 10 nodes out of 91
flat flat% sum% cum cum%
305.43MB 58.19% 58.19% 305.43MB 58.19%
github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/scanner.(*walker).walk.func1
45.79MB 8.72% 66.91% 68.68MB 13.09%
github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/fs.(*BasicFilesystem).GetXattr
32MB 6.10% 73.01% 32.01MB 6.10%
github.com/syndtr/goleveldb/leveldb/memdb.New
22.89MB 4.36% 77.37% 22.89MB 4.36%
github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/fs.listXattr
22.89MB 4.36% 81.73% 22.89MB 4.36%
github.com/syncthing/syncthing/lib/protocol.(*PlatformData).SetXattrs
15.35MB 2.92% 84.66% 15.36MB 2.93%
github.com/syndtr/goleveldb/leveldb/util.(*BufferPool).Get
15.28MB 2.91% 87.57% 15.28MB 2.91% strings.(*Builder).grow
(The usage for xattrs is reduced from 976 MB to 68 MB)
lib/fs: Fix conflicts on Android due to fluctuating inode change time
[1] added inode change time to file info in order to support syncing
extended attributes. However, in the case of Android, this inode change
time fluctuates, leading to unexpected conflicts even when the user has
not even touched the files on the Android device itself. Thus, in order
to prevent those conflicts from happening, do not write inode change
time on Android.
[1] 6cac308bcd
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
### Purpose
Deduplicated files are apparently considered 'irregular' under the hood,
this causes them to simply be ignored by Syncthing. This change is more
of a workaround than a proper fix, as the fix should probably happen in
the underlying libraries? - which may take some time. In the meanwhile,
this change should make deduplicated files be treated as regular files
and be indexed and synced as they should.
### Testing
Create some volume where deduplication is turned on (see the relevant
issue for details, including a proper description of how to reproduce
it). Prior to this change, the deduplicated files were simply ignored
(even by the indexer). After this change, the deduplicated files are
being index and synced properly.
I don't really understand under what circumstances, but sometimes these
calls panic with a "panic: counter cannot decrease in value" because the
value passed to Add() was negative.
* lib/versioner: Factor out DefaultPath constant.
Replace several instances where .stversions is named literally to all
use the same definition in the versioner package. Exceptions are the
packages where a cyclic dependency on versioner is impossible, or some
tests which combine the versions base path with other components.
* lib/versioner: Fix comment about trash can in simple versioner.
* lib/versioner: Fix wrong versioning type string in error message.
The error message shows the folder type instead of the versioning
type, although the correct field is used in the comparison.
With this change, error messages include the offending characters or
name parts. Examples:
nul.txt: name is invalid, contains Windows reserved name: "nul"
foo>bar.txt: name is invalid, contains Windows reserved character: ">"
foo \bar.txt: name is invalid, must not end in space or period on Windows
This fixes various test issues with Go 1.20.
- Most tests rewritten to use fakefs where possible
- Some tests that were already skipped, or dubious (invasive,
unmaintainable, unclear what they even tested) have been removed
- Some actual code rewritten to better support testing in fakefs
Co-authored-by: Eric P <eric@kastelo.net>
This adds support for syncing extended attributes on supported
filesystem on Linux, macOS, FreeBSD and NetBSD. Windows is currently
excluded because the APIs seem onerous and annoying and frankly the uses
cases seem few and far between. On Unixes this also covers ACLs as those
are stored as extended attributes.
Similar to ownership syncing this will optional & opt-in, which two
settings controlling the main behavior: one to "sync" xattrs (read &
write) and another one to "scan" xattrs (only read them so other devices
can "sync" them, but not apply any locally).
Co-authored-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
all: Add package runtimeos for runtime.GOOS comparisons
I grew tired of hand written string comparisons. This adds generated
constants for the GOOS values, and predefined Is$OS constants that can
be iffed on. In a couple of places I rewrote trivial switch:es to if:s,
and added Illumos where we checked for Solaris (because they are
effectively the same, and if we're going to target one of them that
would be Illumos...).
This adds support for syncing ownership on Unixes and on Windows. The
scanner always picks up ownership information, but it is not applied
unless the new folder option "Sync Ownership" is set.
Ownership data is stored in a new FileInfo field called "platform data". This
is intended to hold further platform-specific data in the future
(specifically, extended attributes), which is why the whole design is a
bit overkill for just ownership.
This commit replaces `os.MkdirTemp` with `t.TempDir` in tests. The
directory created by `t.TempDir` is automatically removed when the test
and all its subtests complete.
Prior to this commit, temporary directory created using `os.MkdirTemp`
needs to be removed manually by calling `os.RemoveAll`, which is omitted
in some tests. The error handling boilerplate e.g.
defer func() {
if err := os.RemoveAll(dir); err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}
}
is also tedious, but `t.TempDir` handles this for us nicely.
Reference: https://pkg.go.dev/testing#T.TempDir
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
When pathSep is a constant, the compiler precomputes pathSep+pathSep and
".."+pathSep instead of emitting function calls to compute "//" and
"../". Benchmark results in lib/osutil:
name old time/op new time/op delta
TraversesSymlink-8 8.86µs ± 3% 8.53µs ± 4% -3.79% (p=0.000 n=18+20)
name old alloc/op new alloc/op delta
TraversesSymlink-8 1.06kB ± 0% 1.06kB ± 0% ~ (all equal)
name old allocs/op new allocs/op delta
TraversesSymlink-8 15.0 ± 0% 15.0 ± 0% ~ (all equal)