This is an initial conversion of the directory pages from the old style
to the new style which is based on Twitter Bootstrap.
Still some remaining work to be done. You can see a screenshot here:
http://i.imgur.com/MPEngGx.png
This should hopefully satisfy the Debian requirement to include original
sources. The old minified files for d3 and jquery were 63k and 91k
respectively, while the new unminified files are 133k and 293k.
We also change the order of setting up attributes in Retrieve so that _raise_notenoughshareserror() can be called from _setup_download.
Signed-off-by: Daira Hopwood <david-sarah@jacaranda.org>
A simple refactoring. Doesn't even require a new or updated unit test.
Author: Zooko O'Whielacronx <zooko@zooko.com>
Signed-off-by: Daira Hopwood <david-sarah@jacaranda.org>
For a brief while (in between releases 1.9 and 1.10, specifically from
revision bc21726 on 12-Mar-2012, until bf416af on 10-Jun-2012), the new
introducer code stored its node key in NODEDIR/private/server.privkey .
After that point, it was updated to store this key in
NODEDIR/private/node.privkey instead. Fallback code was added to read
from the old location if present (so that folks using development
versions could keep their node keys after the bf416af change).
This patch removes the fallback code. If you have a node which was run
under a version of Tahoe within this range, you need to manually update
your node by running:
mv NODEDIR/private/server.privkey NODEDIR/private/node.privkey
and then restart the node. If you accidentally start an older node with
code after this patch, it will create a new key (and other peers will
think a new server has appeared). You can either stick with the new key,
or use the command above to switch back to the old key.
See docs/nodekeys.rst (not yet written) for details about the node key
and how it is used.
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).
I want mode="w" (i.e. text, with newline conversion) for code that
writes newline-terminated strings (which should also be human readable)
to files. I like to use things like "cat .tahoe/permutation-seed"
without seeing the seed jammed together with the next command prompt.
twisted.web.html.escape was used to produce html-encoded string (to then look
it up in "value" attribute), but behavior of that function has changed between
Twisted 12.2.0 (simple custom implementation) and 12.3.0 (imported from stdlib
cgi module).
This also simplifies how case-insensitivity is handled, and fixes a corner case
where the wrong exception was raised when the size ends in "BB".
fixes#1812
Signed-off-by: David-Sarah Hopwood <davidsarah@mint>
This contains several merged patches. Individual messages follow, latest first:
* Fix a warning from check-miscaptures.
* In retrieve.py, explicitly test whether a key is in self.servermap.proxies
rather than catching KeyError.
* Added a new comment to the MDMF version of the test I removed, explaining
the removal of the SDMF version.
* Removed test_corrupt_all_block_hash_tree_late, since the entire block_hash_tree
is cached in the servermap for an SDMF file.
* Fixed several tests that require files larger than the servermap cache.
* Remove unused test_response_cache_memory_leak().
* Exercise the cache.
* Test infrastructure for counting cache misses on MDMF files.
* Removed the ResponseCache. Instead, the MDMFSlotReadProxy initialized
by ServerMap is kept around so Retrieve can access it. The ReadProxy
has a cache of the first 1000 bytes initially read from each share by
the ServerMap. We're able to satisfy a number of requests out of this
cache, so roundtrips are reduced from 84 to 60 in test_deepcheck_mdmf.
There is still some mystery about under what conditions the cache has
fewer than 1000 bytes. Also this breaks some existing unit tests that
depend on the inner behavior of ResponseCache.
* The servermap.proxies (a cache of SlotReadProxies) is now keyed
by (verinfo,serverid,shnum) rather than just (serverid,shnum)
* Minor cosmetic changes
* Added a test failure if the number of cache misses is too high.
Author: Andrew Miller <amiller@dappervision.com>
Signed-off-by: David-Sarah Hopwood <davidsarah@jacaranda.org>
This prints out which things are different when two sets are expected to be the
same. This was useful to me when debugging the code under test. Hm, this
pattern might be more generally useful...
The unnecessary request was from the upload helper to the sender, and it was
there in order to trigger the sender to deliver cleartext hashes. But we've
long since removed cleartext hashes.
Unit tests pass both before and after this change, and code-coverage shows that
the block I changed is exercised in unit tests.
This probably only works on Linux. It uses sudo to mount and unmount the tmpfs,
which may prompt for a password. refs #20
Signed-off-by: David-Sarah Hopwood <david-sarah@jacaranda.org>
Nevow automatically HTML-escapes strings passed in stan without a raw marker.
Written by MK_FG. fixes#1143
Signed-off-by: David-Sarah Hopwood <david-sarah@jacaranda.org>
The current Twisted release is 12.1.0, which (like 12.0.0 before it)
isn't compatible with foolscap-0.6.2 and earlier. We previously required
foolscap>=0.6.1, since that's all we actually need from foolscap itself.
_auto_deps specifies twisted>=11.0.0, so any system that can't meet that
will install the current Twisted (12.1.0), which will give them
something incompatible with foolscap-0.6.1 and 0.6.2 .
If we're limited to setuptools's declarative constraint language (and
can't have a function which evaluates the available dependency versions
and gives recommendations on which to change), then the only safe
approach is to make sure that any acceptable Foolscap version will be
compatible with all acceptable Twisted versions. So, bump the foolscap
dependency to >=0.6.3, which covers all currently-known
incompatibilities.
The wait_for_connections() method, which is used at the start of
test_system to make sure that all the clients are connected to all the
servers, did not also wait for clients to be connected to their Helpers.
Every once in a while, the helper connection would take a bit longer,
and then
test_system.SystemTest.test_filesystem._test_web._got_welcome_helper
would fail, because we'd check for a helper connection before it was
ready.
The fix is to modify wait_for_connections's polling predicate to look
for helper connections (if configured) as well as the regular
introducer- and server- connections.
Tested by temporarily adding a large (30s) delay to the connectTo() call
in Uploader.startService, simulating a long helper
connection-establishment delay. This makes the test fail consistently.
Then I fixed wait_for_connections(), and the test passed (slowly). Then
I removed the delay.
Closes#1467
Improve the column headers to make it clear that this list shows Tub
IDs. (we can't show pubkey-based serverids because clients don't give
those to us: only servers provide pubkeys). This should be the only
place in the whole webapi that shows TubIDs for modern (V2-introducer)
nodes.
This makes it easy to distinguish between old V1-Introducer
nodes (identified by their Foolscap TubID) and new V2 nodes (identified
by their ed25519 pubkey).
This fixes a few places where we used to display a tubid even if we had
a pubkey, making it hard to visually correlate servers in two different
displays. It also cleans up the way we pass serverids to the JS-based
download timeline.
The "introweb" subscribed-clients list still shows tubids.
The _upload_resumable() test interrupts a Helper upload partway
through (by shutting down the Helper), then restarts the Helper and
resumes the upload. The control flow is kind of tricky: to do anything
"partway through" requires adding a hook to the Uploadable. The previous
flow depended upon a (fragile) call to self.stall(), which waits a fixed
number of seconds.
This removes one of those stall() calls (the remainder is in
test/common.py and I'll try removing it in a subsequent revision). It
also removes some now-redundant wait_for_connections() calls, since
bounce_client() doesn't fire its Deferred until the client has finished
coming back up (and uses wait_for_connections() internally to do so).
There was one corner case (where the client disconnects at just the
wrong time) that could have dropped a Deferred, leading to an Unhandled
Error. Clean up the control flow to avoid this case.
This prepares for invitation-based reciprocal-permission Accounting. In
the scheme I'm developing, nodes publish "I accept shares from Y"
messages, which are assembled into a graph, and server will accept
shares from any client node reachable in this graph. For this to work,
the serverX->clientY edge must be connectable to the serverY->clientZ
edge, which means "clientY" and "serverY" must be connected. If clientY
and serverY are two distinct keys, they must be cross-signed. Life is
easier if there's just one key "Y", rather than distinct client- and
server- keys. Calling this one key "server.privkey" would be confusing.
"node.privkey" and "node.pubkey" makes more sense.
One-server-per-node is a pretty easy restriction. Originally I was
thinking that the client.key should be provided in each webapi call,
just like a filecap is, making a single node useable by multiple users
(Accounting principals), and not providing any ambient storage
authority. But I've been unable to think of a comfortable WUI for
that (at least without requiring javascript), nor a friendly way to
transfer account authority (e.g. writecaps that include storage
authority). So I'm more willing to have one-client-per-node these days.
(and note that this rename doesn't seriously preclude
many-clients-per-node or zero-clients-per-node anyways, it just makes
one-client-per-node less awkward)
DeepResultsBase also has a get_corrupt_shares(), and it is populated
from CheckResults.get_corrupt_shares(). It has been updated too, along
with get_remaining_corrupt_shares().
Remove temporary get_new_corrupt_shares() and
get_new_incompatible_shares().
This changes all code which feeds CheckResults(sharemap=) to provide
IServer instances, but CheckResults converts these to old-style
serverids during output, so downstream code doesn't have to change yet.
It adds a temporary get_new_sharemap(), which *does* return IServer
instances, so the immutable repairer can build new CheckResults from an
old one. This will go away when get_sharemap() is updated to return
IServer (and downstream code is updated too).
i.e. change set_data() to accept lots of parameters, instead of taking
a single dictionary with lots of keys. Also Convert all CheckResults
creators to use it.
The goal is to make CheckResults more strongly typed, and remove the
ambiguous ".data" field in favor of a bunch of specific counters and
sharelists, so I can changes .sharemap and .servermap to use IServer
instances instead of string serverids. By cleaning this up first, I hope
to get that task done with less debugging.
The Fake*Node classes in test/common.py were accumulating share data in
a class-level dictionary, which persisted from one test run to the next.
As a result, running test_web.py over and over (with trial's
--until-failure feature) made this dictionary grow without bound,
eventually running out of memory.
This fix moves that dictionary into the FakeClient built fresh for each
test, so it doesn't build up. It does the same thing for "file_types",
which was much smaller but still lived at the class level.
Closes#1729
This stores IDisplayableServer-providing instances (StubServers or
NativeStorageServers) in the .servermap and .sharemap dictionaries. But
get_servermap()/get_sharemap() still return data structures with
serverids, not IServers, by translating their data on the way out. This
lets us put off changing the callers for a little bit longer.
IDisplayableServer includes just enough functionality to call
.get_name() and friends, which is all that the UploadResults really
need. IServer is a superset that includes actual share-manipulation
methods. StubServer instances provide only IDisplayableServer, while
actual NativeStorageServer instances provide the full IServer interface.
When the Helper sends a serverid (so we know what to call the server but
nothing else about it, and have no corresponding NativeStorageServer
object to reference), but we want to store an IDisplayableServer in the
UploadResults, we create a synthetic StubServer "server" and store that
instead.
Complete the getter-based transformation, by hiding ".uri" and updating
callers to use get_uri(). Also don't set a dummy self._uri, leave it
undefined until someone calls set_uri().
This hides attributes with e.g. _sharemap, and creates getters like
get_sharemap() to access them, for every field except .uri . This will
make it easier to modify the internal representation of .sharemap
without requiring callers to adjust quite yet.
".uri" has so many users that it seemed better to update it in a
subsequent patch.
Populate most of UploadResults (except .uri, which is learned later when
using a Helper) in the constructor, instead of allowing creators to
write to attributes later. This will help isolate the fields that we
want to change to use IServers.
This splits the pb.Copyable on-wire object (HelperUploadResults) out
from the local results object (UploadResults). To maintain compatibility
with older Helpers, we have to leave pb.Copyable classes alone and
unmodified, but we want to change UploadResults to use IServers instead
of serverids. So by using a different class on the wire, and translating
to/from it on either end, we can accomplish both.
This measured how long the Helper took to do a filecheck before asking
for ciphertext. The "Contacting Helper" report includes both
existence_check and the client-helper RTT.
For non-overlapping uploads, it was being returned correctly. But when
multiple upload requests overlapped, and the file was not already in the
grid, the filecheck would only run once, and its existence_check time
would be reported for all uploaders (even if they didn't have to wait
for that time). Cleaning that up proved too difficult: the only correct
place to report this time is from the initial remote_upload_chk() call,
but the return value of that is too constrained to accomodate it in the
needs-upload case.
So I'm removing it altogether. Eventually I plan to add a proper
events/times field and record more data, including this check, in a form
that can be drawn on a nice zoomable timeline view.
Old clients talking to a new Helper (which doesn't supply the value)
will tolerate the loss (they'll just display an empty field on the web
view).
Unlike set.union(), which returns a new set, DictOfSets.union() modified
the DictOfSets in-place. The name collision bit me when I changed some
code from using DictOfSets to a normal set, and expected that
set.union() would modify the set in-place. Since there was only one user
of DictOfSets.union, I figured it was safer to just get rid of it.
If a server did not respond to the pre-repair filecheck, but did respond
to the repair, that server was not correctly added to the
RepairResults.data["servers-responding"] list. (This resulted from a
buggy usage of DictOfSets.union() in filenode.py).
In addition, servers to which filecheck queries were sent, but did not
respond, were incorrectly added to the servers-responding list
anyawys. (This resulted from code in the checker.py not paying attention
to the 'responded' flag).
The first bug was neatly masked by the second: it's pretty rare to have
a server suddenly start responding in the one-second window between a
filecheck and a subsequent repair, and if the server was around for the
filecheck, you'd never notice the problem. I only spotted the smelly
code while I was changing it for IServer cleanup purposes.
I added coverage to test_repairer.py for this. Trying to get that test
to fail before fixing the first bug is what led me to discover the
second bug. I also had to update test_corrupt_file_verno, since it was
incorrectly asserting that 10 servers responded, when in fact one of
them throws an error (but the second bug was causing it to be reported
anyways).
Previously, test_runner sometimes fails because the _node_has_started()
poller fires after the portnum file has been opened, but before it has
actually been filled, allowing the test process to observe an empty file,
which flunks the test.
This adds a new fileutil.write_atomically() function (using the usual
write-to-.tmp-then-rename approach), and uses it for both node.url and
client.port . These files are written a bit before the node is really up and
running, but they're late enough for test_runner's purposes, which is to know
when it's safe to read client.port and use 'tahoe restart' (and therefore
SIGINT) to restart the node.
The current node/client code doesn't offer any better "are you really done
with startup" indicator.. the ideal approach would be to either watch the
logfile, or connect to its flogport, but both are a hassle. Changing the node
to write out a new "all done" file would be intrusive for regular
operations.
t=info contains randomly-generated ophandles, and t=rename-form contains the
name of the child being renamed, so neither is eligible for a
short-circuiting ETag. Enhanced test_web to exercise this. Had to improve
FakeCHKFileNode slightly to let it participate. Refs #443.
When client does a conditional GET/HEAD with If-none-match:, if the condition
fails (ie, the client's ETag matches the file's) then we can short-circuit
the whole process and immediately return an empty body.
Like immutable files, the ETag is based on the storage index. However, since
a directory is a special interpretation of a file, it is distinguished from
the file by prepending "DIR:" onto the start of the ETag, and adding
-representation on the end (where -representation is the ?t= argument, json,
info, etc).
It also checks the return of setETag and avoids generating a representation
if the client already has it.
test_web.py: use shouldFail2(), safer than old shouldFail()
directory.py: forbid slashes in from_name=, return BAD_REQUEST instead of
GONE when trying to move into a non-directory
The move webapi function now takes a target_type argument which lets it
know whether the target is a subdirectory name or URI. This is an
improvement over the old system in which the move handler tried to guess
whether the target was a name or a URI. Also fixed a little docs
copypaste problem and tweaked some line wrapping.
This adds "move file" capability to the web UI's directory display. The
support and test framework is heavily based on the similar "rename file"
feature. Unit tests and documentation are included. Multiple in-progress
versions of this patch may be found in ticket 1579. This version
includes arbitrary URI target support and is compatible with the change
from tahoe_css to tahoe.css.
'serverid' is the pubkey (for V2 clients), falling back to the tubid (for V1
clients). This also required cleaning up the way the index is created for the
old V1 introducer.
This significantly cleans up the IntroducerServer web-status renderers.
Instead of poking around in the introducer's internals, now the web-status
renderers get clean AnnouncementDescriptor and SubscriberDescriptor
objects. They are still somewhat foolscap-centric, but will provide a clean
abstraction boundary for future improvements.
The specific #1721 bug was that old (V1) subscribers were handled by
wrapping their RemoteReference in a special WrapV1SubscriberInV2Interface
object, but the web-status display was trying to peek inside the object to
learn what host+port it was associated with, and the wrapper did not proxy
those extra attributes.
A test was added to test_introducer to make sure the introweb page renders
properly and at least contains the nicknames of both the V1 and V2 clients.
This was a premature feature addition to the mock filenode, and gets in the
way of the IServer refactoring I'm trying to do. Best to remove it now and
re-introduce it in a better form later when it's actually needed.
This avoids the name collision between the actual results
objects (defined in allmydata.check_results) and the code that renders
these objects into HTML (defined in allmydata.web.check_results). Only
the web-side objects were renamed.
This fixes bug #1689. Repair was using MODE_READ to build the servermap,
which doesn't try hard enough to grab the privkey, and also doesn't guarantee
sending queries to all servers. This patch adds a new MODE_REPAIR which does
both, and does a separate, distinct mapupdate to start wth repair cycle,
instead of relying upon the (MODE_CHECK) mapupdate leftover from the
filecheck that triggered the repair.
SystemTest has a couple of different phases, separated by a poller which
waits for everything to be idle (all messages delivered, none in flight). It
does this by watching some internal "_debug_outstanding" counters in the
server and in each client, and waiting for them to hit zero.
Just before the last phase, we replace the server with a new one (to make
sure clients re-send their messages properly). Unfortunately, the polling
function closed over the variable holding the original server, and didn't see
the replacement. It kept polling the old server, and failed to notice the
outstanding messages for the new server. The last phase of the test (check3)
was started too early, which failed (since some messages had not yet been
delivered), and then exploded in a flurry of dirty-reactor errors (because
some messages were delivered after test shutdown).
This replaces the closed-over-variable with a "self.the_introducer", which
seems to fix the race.
One additional place to look at in the future: the client
announcement-receive path (remote_announce) uses an eventually(). If the
message has been received and the eventual-send posted (but not yet executed)
when the poller sees it, the poller might erroneously conclude that the
client is idle and cause the same problem as above. To fix this, the poller
(probably all pollers) could be enhanced to do a flushEventualQueue before
querying the are-we-done-yet predicate function.
This still leaves immutable-publish results incorrectly using tubids instead
of serverids. That will need some more work, since it might change the Helper
interface.
This introduces new client and server halves to the Introducer (renaming the
old one with a _V1 suffix). Both have fallbacks to accomodate talking to a
different version: the publishing client switches on whether the server's
.get_version() advertises V2 support, the server switches on which
subscription method was invoked by the subscribing client.
The V2 protocol sends a three-tuple of (serialized announcement dictionary,
signature, pubkey) for each announcement. The V2 server dispatches messages
to subscribers according to the service-name, and throws errors for invalid
signatures, but does not otherwise examine the messages. The V2 receiver's
subscription callback will receive a (serverid, ann_dict) pair. The
'serverid' will be equal to the pubkey if all of the following are true:
the originating client is V2, and was told a privkey to use
the announcement went through a V2 server
the signature is valid
If not, 'serverid' will be equal to the tubid portion of the announced FURL,
as was the case for V1 receivers.
Servers will create a keypair if one does not exist yet, stored in
private/server.privkey .
The signed announcement dictionary puts the server FURL in a key named
"anonymous-storage-FURL", which anticipates upcoming Accounting-related
changes in the server advertisements. It also provides a key named
"permutation-seed-base32" to tell clients what permutation seed to use. This
is computed at startup, using tubid if there are existing shares, otherwise
the pubkey, to retain share-order compatibility for existing servers.