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