I'll make TreeState::snapshot() return a boolean denoting whether tree_state
is updated or not. New tree_id can be obtained from TreeState, so let's
remove it from the return value.
While making tree_state() return RefMut<TreeState> instead of RefMut<Option<_>>,
I felt uncomfortable that tree_state(&self) returned a mutable reference. So
this patch splits it into tree_state() and tree_state_mut().
I was reading a draft of "Git Rev News: Edition 91" [1] where Peff
mentions some unfinished patches to allow negative timestamps in
Git. So I figured I should add support for that before I forget. I
haven't checked if libgit2 supports it, so it might be that our Git
backend still doesn't support it after this patch.
[1] https://github.com/git/git.github.io/blob/master/rev_news/drafts/edition-91.md
Otherwise a file could be created out of the working copy directory.
This only works for untracked symlinks and sequentially "added" symlinks
and files. For "removed" and "modified" entries, the parent directories are
considered valid and fs::remove_file() will be called. This also doesn't
prevent race conditions caused by concurrent checkouts.
New create_parent_dirs() would be slightly slower than the original because
it traverses directories from the root whereas fs::create_dir_all() does that
from the leaf and exits when reached to a directory.
This doesn't work yet since write_file() overwrites the existing file, which
will be fixed by the next patch.
I've added a callback parameter to update() just because that's the easiest
option. If we want to report the number of the conflicting files (through
CheckoutStats), the callback interface wouldn't work nicely and the error
handling would have to be moved to the update() body. If we want to make
both check_out() and set_sparse_patterns() ignore EEXIST error, we can
eliminate the calback parameter at all.
If a file gets replaced by a directory right after list files in a
directory but before we stat the file, we currently crash. Let's
instead treat it as a missing file, using the mechanism introduced for
#258.
This patch makes us treat special files (e.g. Unix sockets) as absent
when snapshotting the working copy. We can consider later reporting
such files back to the caller (possibly via callback) so it can inform
the user about them.
Closes#258
This patch is essentially f6a516ff6d taken further, to also apply to
when we write a symlink or a conflict. As with regular files, these
races seem very unlikely to happen, but I found these cases while
working on #258, so let's fix. Fixing it also means that we don't need
to handle these transition cases in the next patch (when
`file_states()` can indicate that the file is e.g. a socket).
The regular `Display` format is (not surprisingly) more user-friendly,
as pointed out by @yuja.
I also switched to using format strings for these cases, and some
nearby strings for consistency.
We can easily make the `DirEntry` available here, so we can call
`.metadata()` on that instead of on the `Path`. I think that avoids
walking the path. I'm sure this has no significant impact on
performance, but it's also almost as readable.
When we have just written a file to disk on checkout, let's record the
size we expected instead of what we got from `fstat()`. This should
address a race where the file was modified between the time we wrote
it and the time we requested its stat. I just happened to notice this
while going through the code; it seems very unlikely to be noticed in
practice.
When we have just written a file or conflict, we can get metadata for
it via the open file descriptor instead of using the path. That
removes the risk of a race where the file got removed or replaced by
another file type (at least on Unix).
These assertions were there to catch bugs, but when the bugs happen,
the assertions can obsure the underlying error (as @tp-woven found out
on #258). Let's just print errors instead.
The biggest difference in the API is that fields are now public. The
exception from that is `oneof` fields, which still require setters and
getters.
I couldn't measure any difference in performance. I didn't expect any
difference either, but it's good that it didn't seem to regress. I
timed `jj debug operation <some hash prefix>`, which will read the
whole operation log (to check that the prefix is unambiguous).
I think I copied the name `write_tree()` from Git, but I find it quite
confusing, since it's not clear if it write a tree to the working copy
or reads the working copy and writes a tree to the store (it's the
former).
When committing the working copy, we try to not visit ignored
directories (as e.g. `target/` often is), but we need to visit it if
there are already tracked files in it. I initially missed that in
c1060610bd and then fixed it in a028f33e3b. The fix works by
checking if the next path after the ignored path is inside the ignore
path (viewed as a directory). However, I forgot to handle the case
where there are no paths at all after the ignored path. So, for
example, if the `target/` directory should be ignored and it there
were no tracked paths after `target/` in alphabetical order, we would
still visit the directory. That's why the bug reproduced in the
`git-branchless` repo but not in the `jj` repo (because there are
files under `testing/` and `tests/` here).
Closes#247.
This patch makes room for sparse patterns in the `TreeState` proto
message. We also start setting that value to a list of just the
pattern `.` when we create new working copies. Old working copies
without the sparse patterns are also interpreted as having that single
pattern. Note that this absence of sparse patterns is different from a
present list of no patterns. The latter is a valid state and means
that no paths are included in the sparse checkout.
We do it for all the other kinds of objects already. It's useful to
have the path for backends that store objects by path (we don't have
any such backends yet). I think the reason I didn't do it from the
beginning was because we had separate `RepoPath` types for files and
directories back then.
The library crate shouldn't look up the user's `$HOME` directory
(maybe the library is used by a server process), so let's have the
caller pass it into the library crate instead.
We no longer need the commit ID, so we shouldn't make the callers pass
it. This lets us simplify several tests, because they no longer to
create commits just to check out a tree in the working copy.
We used to use the value to detect races, but we use the tree ID and
the operation ID these days, so we don't need the commit ID.
By changing this, we can avoid creating some commit IDs in tests,
which is why I tackled this issue now.
There are only two callers of `LockedWorkingCopy::check_out()`. One is
in `commands.rs`. That caller already checks after taking the lock
that the old commit ID is as expected. The other caller is
`WorkingCopy::check_out()`. We can simply move the check to that level
since it's the only caller that cares now.
`LockedWorkingCopy::discard()` shouldn't result in changes to the
on-disk state, but `LockedWorkingCopy::check_out()` may have already
written a state file, which is surprising. The changes also remain in
memory, which is also surprising. Let's fix both of those issues.