This substantially changes the internals of "tahoe cp", to behave in
accordance with the scheme developed in ticket:2329. test_cli_cp.py got
a large new test to exercise all the various combinations. This also
changes the set of error messages that "tahoe cp" can produce.
This modifies try_copy(), inserts a new implementation of
copy_things_to_directory() (and supporting methods), and fixes a few
bugs elsewhere.
fixes ticket:2329
This replaces the status display which was only distinct by color which is a usability issue for color-blind users. This commit includes test coverage by way of pattern matching on rendered templates. The PNG icons are conversions of original SVG source which I've included and placed in the public domain.
The latest setuptools (version 8) changed the way dependency
specifications ("I can handle libfoo version 2 or 3, but not 4") are
interpreted. The new version follows PEP440, which is simpler but
somewhat less expressive. Tahoe's _auto_deps.py now uses dep-specs which
are correctly parsed by both old and new setuptools.
Fixes ticket:2354.
* Restrict the requirements in _auto_deps.py to work with either the old
or PEP 440 semantics.
* Update check_requirement and tests to take account of changes for PEP
440 compatibility.
* Fix an error message.
* Remove a superfluous TODO.
add get_available_space() to NativeStorageServer
It uses a new 'available-space' key in the server's v1 version dict, or falls
back to 'maximum-immutable-share-size' (which presently always has the same
value but could have a different meaning in the future).
This is a squash merge of 9773555bb87fab71145ad7a0e84785a4e92d11f7
Instead of constructing a sys.argv for 'twistd' that reads the node's
.tac file, we construct arguments that tell twistd to use a special
in-memory-only plugin that creates the desired node instance directly.
We still use the name of the .tac file to decide which kind of instance
to make (Client, IntroducerNode, KeyGenerator, StatsGatherer), but never
actually read the contents of the .tac file. Later improvements could
change this to look inside the tahoe.cfg for a nodetype= directive, etc.
This also makes it easy to have "tahoe start BASEDIR" pass the rest of
its arguments on to twistd, so e.g. "tahoe start BASEDIR --nodaemon
--profile=prof.out" does what you'd expect "twistd --nodaemon
--profile=prof.out" to do. "tahoe run BASEDIR" is thus simply aliased to
"tahoe start BASEDIR --nodaemon". This removes the need to special-case
--profile and --syslog.
I also removed some of the default logging behavior:
before:
'tahoe start' = 'twistd --logfile BASEDIR logs/twistd.log'
'tahoe start --profile' adds '--profile=profiling_results.prof --savestats'
'tahoe run' = 'twistd --nodaemon --logfile BASEDIR/logs/tahoesvc.log'
after:
'tahoe start' = 'twistd --logfile BASEDIR logs/twistd.log'
unless --logfile, --nodaemon, or --syslog are passed
'tahoe start --profile' invalid, use 'tahoe start --profile=OUTPUT'
'tahoe run' = 'twistd --nodaemon'
so log messages go to stdout
This finally enables 'tahoe run' to work with all node types, including
the key-generator and stats-gatherer.
It gets 'tahoe start' one step closer to accepting --reactor= . To
actually accomplish this will require this file, the enclosing
__init_.py files, and everything they import to avoid importing the
reactor. (if anything imports twisted.internet.reactor before
startstop_node.start() gets to run, then --reactor= comes too late).
That will take a lot of work, and requires lazy-loading of many core
libraries (foolscap.logging in particular), and removing a lot of code
from src/allmydata/__init__.py .
Note fix following issues from origial commit:
refactor unittests, fix style, add test
(0) use CommonFixture as mixin to increase DRYness
(1) self.failUnlessIn('size', metadata.keys()) --> self.failUnlessIn('size', metdata)
(2) test_size_is_not_None --> test_size_is_0 AND test_size_is_1000
The stdlib 'subprocess' module in python-2.7.4 through 2.7.7 suffers
from http://bugs.python.org/issue18851 which causes unrelated file
descriptors to be closed when `subprocess.call()` fails the `exec()`,
such as when the executable being invoked does not actually exist. There
appears to be some randomness involved. This was fixed in python-2.7.8.
Tahoe's iputil.py uses subprocess.call on many different "ifconfig"-type
executables, most of which don't exist on any given platform (added in
git commit 8e31d66cd0). This results in a lot of file-descriptor
closing, which (at least during unit tests) tends to clobber important
things like Tub TCP sockets. This seems to be the root cause behind
ticket:2121, in which normal code tries to close already-closed sockets,
crashing the unit tests. Since different platforms have different
ifconfigs, some platforms will experience more failed execs than others,
so this bug could easily behave differently on linux vs freebsd, as well
as working normally on python-2.7.8 or 2.7.4.
This patch inserts a guard to make sure that os.path.isfile() is true
before allowing Popen.call() to try executing the target. This ought to
be enough to avoid the bug. It changes both iputil.py and
allmydata.__init__ (which uses Popen for calling "lsb_release"), which
are all the places where 'subprocess' is used outside of unit tests.
Other potential fixes: use the 'subprocess32' module from PyPI (which is
a bug-free backport of the Python3 stdlib subprocess module, but would
introduce a new dependency), or require python >= 2.7.8 (but this would
rule out development/deployment on the current OS-X 10.9 release, which
ships with 2.7.5, as well as other distributions like Ubuntu 14.04 LTS).
I believe this closes ticket:2121, and given the apparent relationship
between 2121 and 2023, I think it also closes ticket:2023 (although
since 2023 doesn't have copies of the failing log files, it's hard to
tell). I'm hoping that this will tide us over until 1.11 is released, at
which point we can execute on the plan to remove iputil.py entirely by
changing the way that nodes learn their externally-facing IP address.
Some Travis-CI workers report persistently empty disks, causing spurious
test failures. It's not really that important to assert used>0, so this
relaxes the test.
Closes ticket:2290
Closes ticket:2281 (trac).
This removes src/allmydata/test/trial_coverage.py, which was a
in-process way to run trial tests under the "coverage" code-coverage
tool. These days, the preferred way to do this is with "coverage run",
although the actual invocation is a bit messy because of the way
bin/trial uses subprocess.call() to invoke the real entrypoint script
with the right PYTHONPATH (see #1698 for details). Hopefully this will
be improved to use a simpler "coverage run .." command in the future.
This patch also removes twisted/plugins/allmydata_trial.py, which
enabled the "--reporter=bwverbose-coverage" option. Finally it modifies
setup.py to stop looking for that option and adding "trialcoverage" to
the dependencies list, which gets us closer to removing "setup_requires"
entirely.
The new rules for "bin/tahoe ARG1.. SUBCOMMAND ARG2.." arg:
* --node-directory is only accepted in ARG1, not ARG2
* create-*/start/stop/restart accept --basedir in ARG2, or an explicit
basedir argument
* only one of --node-directory/--basedir/explicit-basedir is accepted
* --quiet/--version is only accepted in ARG1, not ARG2
Closes#166
This should now fail quickly (during "tahoe start"). Previously this
would silently treat an unparseable size as "0", and the only way to
discover that it had had a problem would be to look at the foolscap log,
or examine the storage-service web page for the unexpected "Reserved
Size" number.
Previously, Introducers always used a swissnum of "introducer", so
anyone who could learn the (public) tubid of the introducer would be
able to connect to and use it. This changes new Introducers to use the
same randomly-generated swissnum as clients and storage servers do, so
that you absolutely must learn the introducer.furl from someone who
knows it already before you can connect.
This change also moves the location of the file that stores
introducer.furl from BASEDIR/introducer.furl to
BASEDIR/private/introducer.furl, since that's where we keep the private
things. The first time an introducer is started with the new code, it
will move any existing BASEDIR/introducer.furl into the new place.
Note that this will not change the FURL of existing introducers: it will
only affect newly created ones. When you change an introducer's FURL,
you must also update all of the nodes (clients and storage servers)
which connect to it, so upgrading it to an unguessable one isn't
something we should do automatically.
This stores the sequence number in BASEDIR/announcement-seqnum, and
increments it each time any service is published (every service
announcement is regenerated with the new sequence number). As everyone
knows, time is an illusion, and occasionally goes backwards, so a
counter is generally safer (and reveals less information about the
node).
Later, we'll improve the introducer client to tolerate rollbacks (where,
perhaps due to a VM being restarted from an earlier checkpoint, the
stored sequence number reverts to an earlier version).