* fix CLI commands (put, mkdir) to send format=, not mutable-type=
* fix tests
* test_cli: fix tests that observe t=json output, don't ignore failures in
'tahoe put'
* fix handling of version= to make it easier to use the default
* interpret ?mutable=true&format=MDMF as MDMF, not SDMF
The filecaps used to be produced with hints for 'k' and segsize, but they
weren't actually used, and doing so had the potential to limit how we change
those filecaps in the future. Also the parsing code had some problems dealing
with other numbers of extensions. Removing the existing fields and making the
parser tolerate (and ignore) extra ones makes MDMF more future-proof.
This consistently records all immutable uploads in the Recent Uploads And
Downloads page, regardless of code path. Previously, certain webapi upload
operations (like PUT /uri/$DIRCAP/newchildname) failed to pass the History
object and were left out.
- Learn how to create MDMF files and directories through the
mutable-type argument.
- Operate with the interface changes associated with MDMF and #993.
- Learn how to do partial updates of mutable files.
This patch is a rebase of a patch originally written by Brian. I didn't change any of the intent of Brian's patch, just ported it to current trunk.
refs #1363
Apparently none of the two authors (stercor, terrell), three reviewers (warner, davidsarah, terrell), or one committer (me) actually ran the tests. This is presumably due to #20.
fixes#1412
The service generated by strports.service() changed in 10.2, and the ugly
private-attribute-reading hack we used to glean a kernel-allocated port
number (e.g. when using "tcp:0", especially during unit tests) broke, causing
Tahoe to be completely unusable with Twisted-10.2 . The new ugly
private-attribute-reading hack starts by figuring out what sort of service
was generated, then reads different attributes accordingly.
This also hushes a warning when using schemeless strports strings like "0" or
"3456", by quietly prepending a "tcp:" scheme, since 10.2 complains about
those. It also adds getURL() and getPortnum() accessors to the "webish"
service, rather than having unit tests dig through _url and _portnum and such
to find out what they are.
deliver all shares at once instead of feeding them out one-at-a-time.
Also fix distribution of real-number-of-segments information: now all
CommonShares (not just the ones used for the first segment) get a
correctly-sized hashtree. Previously, the late ones might not, which would
make them crash and get dropped (causing the download to fail if the initial
set were insufficient, perhaps because one of their servers went away).
Update tests, add some TODO notes, improve variable names and comments.
Improve logging: add logparents, set more appropriate levels.
This patch also renames some instances of "find_shares()" to "find_all_shares()" and other instances to "find_uri_shares()" as appropriate -- the conflation between those names confused me at first when writing these tests.
Fix parsing of a Range: header to support:
- multiple ranges (parsed, but not returned)
- suffix byte ranges ("-2139")
- correct handling of incorrectly formatted range headers
(correct behaviour is to ignore the header and return the full
file)
- return appropriate error for ranges outside the file
Multiple ranges are parsed, but only the first range is returned.
Returning multiple ranges requires using the multipart/byterange
content type.
To test the changes for #577, we need a deterministic way to simulate
the passage of long periods of time. twisted.internet.task.Clock seems,
from my Googling, to be the way to go for this functionality. I changed
a few things so that OphandleTable would use twisted.internet.task.Clock
when testing:
* WebishServer.__init___ now takes an optional 'clock' parameter,
* which it passes to the root.Root instance it creates.
* root.Root.__init__ now takes an optional 'clock' parameter, which it
passes to the OphandleTable.__init__ method.
* OphandleTable.__init__ now takes an optional 'clock' parameter. If
it is provided, and it isn't None, its callLater method will be used
to schedule ophandle expirations (as opposed to using
reactor.callLater, which is what OphandleTable does normally).
* The WebMixin object in test_web.py now sets a self.clock parameter,
which is a twisted.internet.task.Clock that it feeds to the
WebishServer it creates.
Tests using the WebMixin can control the passage of time in
OphandleTable by accessing self.clock.