Commit Graph

35 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Zooko O'Whielacronx
1fc6be28f4 setup: organize misc/ scripts and tools and remove obsolete ones
This is for ticket #1068.
2010-06-06 22:16:18 -07:00
Zooko O'Whielacronx
79fd1bd540 setup: remove binary _fusemodule.so 's
I would prefer to have just source code, or indications of what 3rd-party packages are required, under revision control, and have the build process generate or acquire the binaries as needed.  Also, having these in our release tarballs is interfering with getting Tahoe-LAFS uploaded into Ubuntu Karmic.  (Technically, they would accept binary modules as long as they came with the accompanying source so that they could satisfy their obligations under GPL2+ and TGPPL1+, but it is easier for now to remove the binaries from the source tree.)
In this case, these modules come from the MacFUSE project: http://code.google.com/p/macfuse/
2009-09-24 14:11:30 -07:00
Zooko O'Whielacronx
e94d980929 doc: add a copy of LGPL2 for documentation purposes for ubuntu 2009-09-23 22:42:18 -07:00
Zooko O'Whielacronx
5a46ace53a docs: Csaba Henk granted permission to license fuse.py under the same terms as Tahoe-LAFS itself 2009-09-21 08:46:59 -07:00
Zooko O'Whielacronx
7bf452e4bc setup: the mac-exe build (using py2app) requires macholib>=1.2.
Here is someone else's description of this problem:
http://rtmpy.org/ticket/7
2009-07-03 10:57:02 -07:00
Zooko O'Whielacronx
96774fba6b docs: add mac/README.txt to explain the first few basic facts about what the files are in this directory 2009-02-07 16:33:21 -07:00
robk-tahoe
00aa75d1e8 fuse/impl_c: move mac tahoefuse impl out into contrib/fuse
For a variety of reasons, high amongst them the fact that many people 
interested in fuse support for tahoe seem to have missed its existence,
the existing fuse implementation for tahoe, previously 'mac/tahoefuse.py'
has been renamed and moved.

It was suggested that, even though the mac build depends upon it, that
the mac/tahoefuse implementation be moved into contrib/fuse along with
the other fuse implementations.  The fact that it's not as extensively
covered by unit tests as mainline tahoe was given as corroboration.

In a bid to try and stem the confusion inherent in having tahoe_fuse,
tfuse and tahoefuse jumbled together (not necessarily helped by 
referring to them as impl_a, b and c respectively) I'm hereby renaming
tahoefuse as 'blackmatch'  (black match is, per wikipedia "a type of 
crude fuse" hey, I'm a punny guy)  Maybe one day it'll be promoted to
be 'quickmatch' instead...

Anyway, this patch moves mac/tahoefuse.py out to contrib/fuse/impl_c/
as blackmatch.py, and makes appropriate changes to the mac build process
to transclude blackmatch therein.  this leaves the extant fuse.py and
fuseparts business in mac/ as-is and doesn't attempt to address such
issues in contrib/fuse/impl_c.

it is left as an exercise to the reader (or the reader of a message
to follow) as to how to deal with the 'fuse' python module on the mac.

as of this time, blackmatch should work on both mac and linux, and
passes the four extant tests in runtests.  (fwiw neither impl_a nor
impl_b have I managed to get working on the mac yet)

since blackmatch supports a read-write and caching fuse interface to
tahoe, some write tests obviously need to be added to runtests.
2008-09-24 18:42:14 -07:00
robk-tahoe
d61fdafd41 fuse/impl_c: reworking of mac/tahoefuse, command line options, test integration
a handful of changes to the tahoefuse implementation used by the mac build, to 
make command line option parsing more flexible and robust, and moreover to 
facilitate integration of this implementation with the 'runtests' test harness
used to test the other two implementations.

this patch includes;
- improvements to command line option parsing [ see below ]
- support for 'aliases' akin to other tahoe tools
- tweaks to support linux (ubuntu hardy)

the linux support tweaks are, or at least seem to be, a result of the fact that
hardy ships with fuse 0.2pre3, as opposed to the fuse0.2 that macfuse is based
upon.  at least the versions I was working with have discrepencies in their
interfaces, but on reflection this is probably a 'python-fuse' version issue
rather than fuse per se.  At any rate, the fixes to handling the Stat objects
should be safe against either version, it's just that the bindings on hardy
lacked code that was in the 'fuse' python module on the mac...

command line options:

the need for more flexible invocation in support of the runtests harness led
me to rework the argument parsing from some simple positional hacks with a
pass-through of the remainder to the fuse binding's 'fuse_main' to a system
using twisted.usage to parse arguments, and having just one option '-o' being
explicitly a pass-through for -o options to fuse_main. the options are now:

--node-directory NODEDIR : this is used to look up the node-url to connect
to if that's not specified concretely on the command line, and also used to
determine the location of the cache directory used by the implementation,
specifically '_cache' within the nodedir.  default value: ~/.tahoe

--node-url NODEURL : specify a node-url taking precendence over that found
in the node.url file within the nodedir

--alias ALIAS : specifies the named alias should be mounted. a lookup is
performed in the alias table within 'nodedir' to find the root dir cap
the named alias must exist in the alias table of the specified nodedir

--root-uri ROOTURI : specifies that the given directory uri should be mounted

at least one of --alias and --root-uri must be given (which directory to mount
must be specified somehow)  if both are given --alias takes precedence.

--cache-timeout TIMEOUTSECS : specifies the number of seconds that cached
directory data should be considered valid for.  this tahoefuse implementation
implements directory caching for a limited time; largely because the mac (i.e.
the Finder in particular) tends to make a large number of requests in quick 
successsion when browsing the filesystem.  on the flip side, the 'runtests'
unit tests fail in the face of such caching because the changes made to the
underlying tahoe directories are not reflected in the fuse presentation.  by 
specifying a cache-timeout of 0 seconds, runtests can force the fuse layer
into refetching directory data upon each request.

any number of -oname=value options may be specified on the command line,
and they will all be passed into the underlying fuse_main call.

a single non-optional argument, the mountpoint, must also be given.
2008-09-24 17:15:35 -07:00
robk-tahoe
0042881736 macapp: changed to remove 'Tahoe' from .app name
Change the build product from 'Allmydata Tahoe' to 'Allmydata'
more inkeeping with the branding of the Allmydata product
2008-06-10 17:31:45 -07:00
Brian Warner
652b96ec95 mac/Makefile: remove the verbose hdiutil diagnostics now that we resolved the problem 2008-09-11 17:46:22 -07:00
Brian Warner
a402a5a4fb mac/Makefile: upload the .dmg file with foolscap xfer-client.py instead of scp 2008-09-08 16:19:43 -07:00
Brian Warner
8f2410cd30 mac/Makefile: more attempts to debug the buildslave failure 2008-08-29 15:06:14 -07:00
Brian Warner
6972e81581 mac: add -verbose to the hdiutil call, to figure out why it's failing on the buildslave 2008-08-29 13:52:43 -07:00
robk-tahoe
abae0345ad tahoefuse: fix typo which could cause data corruption
a typo in the 'flags2mode' code would wind up passing the O_APPEND
flag into the os open() call, which would cause the file to be opened
in 'strict append' mode, i.e. all writes extend the file, regardless of
calls to seek.

this causes a problem for tahoefuse in that the seek() calls made to
filehandles open through fuse would be ignored when write()s occurred.
this was evidenced by corruption seen when using rsync.  it turns out
that rsync actually makes overlapping writes in some cases, i.e. even
when writing a new fresh file out, it still doesn't write a simple
contiguous span of data, but will make writes overlapping data already
written. this is probably related to the way it manages data blocks 
internally for rolling checksums etc.  at any rate, this bug would 
thus cause rsync in those cases to write a chunk of duplicate data
into the file - leading to tahoe securely and reliably storing the
wrong data.

fixing this, so that non-append file opens do not pass O_APPEND seems
to eliminate this problem.
2008-05-07 16:42:20 -07:00
robk-tahoe
8179daee4a tahoefuse: return bogus but useful data to statfs call
previously tahoefuse returned the fs stat for the filesystem the fuse plugin
was running upon (e.g. '/').  this works ok until you need to copy more to
tahoe than the local machine has free disk space, at which point Finder will
refuse to copy 'too much' data.

this changes it so that tahoe always reports 2TiB used of an 8TiB filesystem
this is entirely bogus, but allows copies of up to 2TiB to be initiated.
2008-05-07 16:40:09 -07:00
robk-tahoe
d7b82e0555 macapp: updated icon for mac build 2008-03-18 16:13:38 -07:00
robk-tahoe
bd58f6f799 macapp: new mac icon
this provides a new icon for the .app bundle
also removes the setting of the dock icon from within wx
(which previously used a different icon)
2008-03-07 18:48:28 -07:00
robk-tahoe
4bbaaff49f macfuse: fix unicode handling
at one point I'd thrown in a 'str' since fuse api bits required a str instance
but tahoe returns unicode objects from its json parsing.  that, naturally
enough should really be a utf8 encoded str of the unicode object...
2008-03-06 17:43:25 -07:00
robk-tahoe
6cac9c479c macfuse: slew of updates
various updates to improve the functionality of the mac fuse plugin


1. caching

previously, the experimental tahoefuse plugin pre-loaded the whole
structure of the specified mount into memory at launch time. changes
which were made through that fuse plugin would be remembered, but any
changes made through other tahoe clients would not be reflected.

now directory contents are only loaded when needed, and the data is
cached for a limited time.  any use of Directory objects should first
call maybe_refresh() which will check the time since the cache was last
loaded, and if the data is older than some validity period (currently
26s) then the directory's contents will be refetched and reloaded.
this replaces the 'load_dir()' method of TFS

whenever a local change is made to a Directory object, or when the
aforementioned cache reloading notices a change in directory data, the
mtime of the directory is automatically updated.
 

2. stat / metadata

the retrieval of 'stat' information for getattr(), and the way that
metadata is handled, has been refactored to better reflect the fact that
metadata in tahoe is only represented by 'edges' (i.e entries in 
directories) not on 'nodes' (files or directories themselves) hence a 
stat lookup should be a query to the parent directory (specifically the 
parent specified by the path being queried in the case that a node has 
multiple parents) for details known by that directory for the given 
child, rather than a query to the child itself.

the TStat utility class for returning stat information to the python-
fuse layer has been extended to accept a 'metadata' argument in its
constructor.  any fields found in the metadata dict which match the
names of the stat attributes are loaded into the TStat object.  the 
'ctime' and 'mtime' attributes are translated to st_ctime and st_mtime
to mesh with the existing timestamp handling code. any fields specified
by kwargs to the constructor override things that might be loaded from
the metadata dict.

Directory objects now track their children as a dict mapping name to 
(child_obj, metadata) tuples. This is because the metadata in tahoe
will be stored exclusively on the edges of the graph. each Directory
maintains its own mtime however, and get_stat() calls will report the
mtime of a directory based on the last modification of the Directory 
object, not based on any mtime records from the parent directory's 
metadata for that child.  This addresses the fact that since directories
may be shared, a given parent may or may not reflect the latest changes,
however one of the Finder's behaviours is to examine the stat of a
directory, and not to bother doing a readdir() if the stat is unchanged.
i.e. unless directories report their changes in their stat info, the
Finder will not show changes within that directory.


3. refactoring

reporting of many error codes has been refactored to raise IOError
subclasses with the appropriate errno.  this exploits python-fuse's
built-in mechanism for catching IOError and reporting the errno
embedded within it automatically, while simplifying the code within
the plugin.

the add_child() method on TFS was removed in favour of simply having an
add_child() method on Directory objects. this provides a more OO
approach in that Directory is responsible for maintaining its own in
memory state and also writing changes back to the node.  similarly for
remove_child()

these changes, along with the new tfs.compose_url() method, 
significantly simplify and improve readability of mkdir, rename methods
along with the newer link and unlink.  these also get improved error
reporting.

various operations (chmod, chown, truncate, utime) are now ignored.
previously they would report an unsupported operation (EOPNOTSUPP)
but now are simply logged and ignored.  this surpresses errors caused
by some client programs which try to use these operations, but at the
moment those operations are meaningless to the tahoe filesystem anyway.


4. link / unlink / rmdir

link, symlink calls are now supported, though with semantics differing
from posix, both equivalent.  unlink, rmdir calls are now supported, 
also equivalent.

link or symlink calls duplicate the uri of the named source and adds it
as a child of another directory according to the destination path.  for
directories, this creates a 'hard' link, i.e. the same directory will
appear in multiple locations within the filesystem, and changes in 
any place will be reflected everywhere.  for files, by contrast, since
the uri being duplicated is an immutable CHK uri, link/symlink for files
is equivalent to a copy - though significantly cheaper. (a file copy
with the fuse plugin is likely to cause a new file to be written and
uploaded, the link command simply adds an entry referring to an
existing uri)

in testing, the 'ln' command is unable to make hard links (i.e. call
link()) for directories, though symlink ('ln -s') is supported. 
either forms works equivalently for files.

unlink and rmdir both remove the specified entry from its parent
directory.


5. logging

the 'tfuse.log' file now only reports launches of the fuse plugin. once
the plugin has parsed the options, it reopens the log file with the
name of the mount, e.g. tfuse.root_dir.log, so that multiple instances
running concurrently will not interfere with each others' logging.


6. bug fixes

the tmp_file in the cache dir backing files opened for write was
intermittently failing to open the file.  added O_CREAT to the os.open
call so that files will be created if missing, not throw errors.

a failure to correctly parse arguments if no mount (dir_cap) name was
given but also no fuse options were given has been fixed. now the
command 'tahoe fuse mountpoint' will correctly default to root_dir
also when running from source, arguments to tahoefuse were not handled
to correctly match the 'tahoe fuse ...' behaviour.
2008-02-29 20:12:41 -07:00
robk-tahoe
8dad6fffc3 mac build: ahem. fix makefile probs
oops. I screwed up the makefile syntax further. buildslave would spend a
lot of fruitless time trawling the entire drive.  this fixes that. and a
stray -n.  ahem.  [looks down sheepishly]
2008-02-26 18:48:22 -07:00
robk-tahoe
360c9d485c mac build: fix makefile bug
blah $( foo )  is more explicit than blah ` foo ` in a bash-like context
unfortunately it doesn't translate very well to makefiles, for which $(
means something else entirely
2008-02-26 18:20:10 -07:00
robk-tahoe
9063eebf64 mac build: tweaks to build fuse for 10.4 and 10.5
rather than trying to build a single .app with both 10.4 and 10.5 fuse
libraries embedded within it, for the time being, we're just going to
have independant 10.4 and 10.5 builds.

this provides a 10.5 _fusemodule.so, and build changes to copy the
appropriate versions of files for 10.4 or 10.5 from sub dirs of mac/
into the build tree before triggering py2app
2008-02-26 18:08:44 -07:00
robk-tahoe
3603608e68 mac build: make a couple of build dependency hints soft imports
the existing environment on otto requires a few build hints in order for
xml parsing to work properly.  these hints are unnecessary, and moreover
their import by depends.py is broken, in the 10.5 environment in which 
zandr's buildslave is running.
2008-02-26 17:39:07 -07:00
robk-tahoe
1a02f38cf3 mac build: updates to respect UPLOAD_DEST argument to make
the make mac-upload target now requires an UPLOAD_DEST argument to be given,
which is the rsync destination (including trailing '/') to which the version
stamped directory containing the .dmg should be placed.  the account the 
build is running as (e.g. 'buildslave') should have ssh access to the account
specified in that dest. one might also consider locking the key down to the
target directory by adding something like 
command="rsync --server -vlogDtpr . /home/amduser/public_html/dist/mac-blah/"
to the corresponding authorized_key entry on the target machine.
2008-02-26 17:03:53 -07:00
robk-tahoe
6f5ccb1707 macfuse: move macfuse files around to simplify pythonpath
the mac/macfuse subdirectory needed to be added to the pythonpath in order
to build a binary incorporating the mac fuse system.  this change should
make those modules accessible relative to the mac/ directory which is
implicitly included in the .app build process.
2008-02-19 17:18:17 -07:00
robk-tahoe
2ae8a482aa macfuse: rework fuse initialisation, integrate with 'tahoe'
this provides a variety of changes to the macfuse 'tahoefuse' implementation.
most notably it extends the 'tahoe' command available through the mac build
to provide a 'fuse' subcommand, which invokes tahoefuse.  this addresses
various aspects of main(argv) handling, sys.argv manipulation to provide an
appropriate command line syntax that meshes with the fuse library's built-
in command line parsing.

this provides a "tahoe fuse [dir_cap_name] [fuse_options] mountpoint"
command, where dir_cap_name is an optional name of a .cap file to be found
in ~/.tahoe/private defaulting to the standard root_dir.cap. fuse_options
if given are passed into the fuse system as its normal command line options
and the mountpoint is checked for existence before launching fuse.

the tahoe 'fuse' command is provided as an additional_command to the tahoe
runner in the case that it's launched from the mac .app binary.

this also includes a tweak to the TFS class which incorporates the ctime
and mtime of files into the tahoe fs model, if available.
2008-02-19 17:16:08 -07:00
robk-tahoe
dcf304ab9b macfuse: another tahoe fuse implementation
This is the result of various experimentation done into using python-fuse
to provide access to tahoe on the mac.  It's rough in quite a few places,
and is really the result of investigation more than a thorough
implemenation of the fuse api.

upon launch, it looks for the users root_dir by opening ~/.tahoe/node.url
and ~/.tahoe/private/root_dir.cap it then proceeds to cache the directory
structure found by walking the users tahoe drive (safely in the face of
directory loops) into memory and then mounts that filesystem.

when a file is read, it calls the tahoe node to first download the file
into a cache directory (~/.tahoe/_cache) and then serves up the file
from there.

when a file is written, a temporary file is allocated within the tmp dir
of the cache, and upon close() (specifically upon release()) the file is
uploaded to the tahoe node, and the new directory entry written.

note that while the durectory structure is cached into memory only when
the filesystem is mounted, that it is 'write through' i.e. changes made
via fuse are reflected into the underlying tahoe fs, even though changes
made to the tahoe fs otherwise show up only upon restart.

in addition to opening files for read and write, the mkdir() and rename()
calls are supported.  most other file system operations are not yet
supported.  notably stat() metadata is not currently tracked by tahoe,
and is variably reported by this fs depending on write cache files.


also note that this version does not fully support Finder.  access through
normal unix commands such as cat, cp, mv, ls etc works fine, and read 
access to file from within finder (including preview images and double-
click to open) work ok.  but copies to the tahoe drive from within finder
may or may not succeed, but will always report an error. This is still
under investigation.

also note that this does not include any build integration.  the included
_fusemodule.so was built on mac os 10.4 against macfuse 1.3.0, and is
known to not work against 10.5-1.3.1  it's possible it may also contain
dependencies upon parts of macports used to build the python that it was
built against. this will be cleaned up later.

usage:
    python tahoefuse.py /Path/to/choice/of/mountpoint
or optionally
    python tahoefuse.py -ovolicon=/Path/to/icon.icns /Path/to/mountpoint

upon startup, tahoefuse will walk the tahoe directory, then print a
summary of files and folders found, and then daemonise itself. to exit,
either eject the 'drive' (note: 10.5 doesn't show it as a drive, since
it considers fuse to be a connected server instead) or unmount it via
umount /Path/to/mountpoint etc.
2008-02-14 18:35:10 -07:00
Zooko O'Whielacronx
1c456e8210 mac: shebang usr bin env python
This makes it so that I can run "./setup.py" on the command-line, instead of "python ./setup.py".
2008-02-13 16:17:14 -07:00
robk-tahoe
525bfeca25 better mac .app icon 2008-01-24 20:23:47 -07:00
robk-tahoe
5085c35002 cleanup mac and windows build code
this moves some of the code common to both windows and mac builds into the
allmydata module hierarchy, and cleans up the windows and mac build directories
to import the code from there.
2008-01-23 21:06:41 -07:00
robk-tahoe
214411a10f eliminate startup spam for resources that can't be found
remove debug messages (and traceback) from node output in the case that the
pkg resources hook can't find a requested file. it will now silently return
the empty string for files that can't be resolved
2008-01-23 18:22:23 -07:00
robk-tahoe
ffeee54f91 fix tahoe script installation logic
refine the logic in the .app which tries to install the 'tahoe' script.

now it will do nothing if 'tahoe' is found anywhere on the user's path,
and only if it's not present will it try to install it in each of the
candidate paths (/usr/local/bin ~/bin ~/Library/bin) which are on the
user's path
2008-01-23 18:05:56 -07:00
robk-tahoe
d38b8cedc1 mac build: fixed permission problem on upload .dmg 2008-01-23 14:51:18 -07:00
robk-tahoe
d5abc68060 have mac app write a tahoe upon startup
upon startup, the .app will look in '/usr/local/bin', '~/bin', '~/Library/bin'
if it finds one of these dirs, and can write into it, and there isn't already
a 'tahoe' present, it will write a small bach script which will launch the
binary contained within the .app bundle

this allows the .app bundle to offer the services of the 'tahoe' script
easily and simply
2008-01-22 20:35:01 -07:00
robk-tahoe
68c2d54c0b add mac native build
This patch adds support for a mac native build.

At the moment it's a fairly simple .app - i.e. so simple as to be unacceptable
for a shipping product, but ok for testing and experiment at this point.

notably once launched, the app's ui does not respond at all, although its dock
icon does allow it to be force-quit.

this produces a single .app bundle, which when run will look for a node basedir
in ~/.tahoe.  If one is not found, one will be created in ~/Library/Application
Support/Allmydata Tahoe, and that will be symlinked to ~/.tahoe

if the basedir is lacking basic config (introducer.furl and root_dir.cap) then
the wx config wizard will be launched to log into an account and to set up
those files.

if a webport file is not found, the default value of 8123 will be written into
it.

once the node has started running, a webbrowser will be opened to the webish
interface at the users root_dir

note that, once configured, the node runs as the main thread of the .app,
no daemonisation is done, twistd is not involved.

the binary itself, from within the .app bundle, i.e.
"Allmydata Tahoe.app/Contents/MacOS/Allmydata Tahoe"
can be used from the command line and functions as the 'tahoe' executable
would in a unix environment, with one exception - when launched with no args
it triggers the default behaviour of running a node, and if necessary config
wizard, as if the user had launched the .app

one other gotcha to be aware of is that symlinking to this binary from some
other place in ones $PATH will most likely not work. when I tried this,
something - wx I believe - exploded, since it seems to use argv[0] to figure
out where necessary libraries reside and fails if argv[0] isn't in the .app
bundle.  it's pretty easy to set up a script a la
    #!/bin/bash
    /Blah/blah/blah/Allmydata\ Tahoe.app/Contents/MacOS/Allmydata\ Tahoe "${@}"
2008-01-22 19:32:26 -07:00