Age | Commit message (Collapse) | Author |
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This allow different paths for raw data and metadata, avoiding
unnecessary json parsing.
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There was an if without an else on error handler that avoided handling
errors that falled back current logic. Added a generic one to the tail
so we dont miss it.
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1) enable HTTP 1.1 chunked upload on server
2) make the client sync.py generate a list of function calls instead of
a list of full docs
3) disable encryption pool
4) make the doc encryption a list of function calls
5) create a twisted protocol for sending
6) make a producer that calls the doc generation as necessary
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This commit finishes reversion into u1db original streaming protocol for
downloads.
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It's not being used
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If a doc doesnt have a content it means it was deleted. Sync stream was
unable to represent this state.
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Check if the backend provides a commit method before calling or we will
break the tests with InMemoryDatabase
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Make the client parse a 2-line doc on sync download stream.
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Temporary fix for server streaming
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We were using 1 transaction per doc, which is bad.
Reference:
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1711631/improve-insert-per-second-performance-of-sqlite
Code now uses 1 transaction for the whole sync.
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We discovered that class was registering a `finalClose` to be
executed on reactor shutdown.
On the multiuser scenario, a logout destroys Soledad and should
properly terminate everything related to it. That SQLCipherU1DBSync
instance was being held even after logout by the reactor so it
could call that `finalClose` on shutdown.
The `finalClose` only set running to False and set a `shutdownID` that
was not used anywhere else, so we removed it and moved setting
running to False to the `close` function method. That way we preserve
the functionality but let the instance be properly garbage collected
on logout.
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Otherwise it will put the exception as an additional parameter.
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this is needed for some mail tests.
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This was discovered during load tests: Trying to process more than 999
docs triggers an error on SQLite due a select query not supporting 999
values to query.
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test_processing_order aims to check that unordered docs wont be
processed, but if we let the pool start and advance Twisted LoopingCall
clock right before calling the processing method manually, the process
method will run concurrently and cause a race condition issue.
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SQLCipher database access errors can raise Soledad exceptions. Database access
and multithreading resources are allocated in different places, so we have to
be careful to close all multithreading mechanismis in case of database access
errors. If we don't, zombie threads may haunt the reactor.
This commit adds SQLCipher exception trapping and Soledad exception raising
for database access errors, while properly shutting down multithreading
resources.
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From this moment on, we embed a fork of u1db called l2db.
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It was breaking E126 and E202 before
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Do not initialize the openssl context on each call to decrypt.
I'm not 100% sure of the causal chain, but it seems that the
initialization of the osrandom engine that openssl backend does might be
breaking havoc when sqlcipher is calling rand_bytes concurrently.
further testing is needed to confirm this is the ultimate cause, but in
my tests this change avoids the occurrence of the dreaded Floating Point
Exception in soledad/sqlcipher.
- Resolves: #8180
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For the case where the user already has data synced, this commit will
migrate the docs_received table to have the column sync_id.
That is required by the refactoring in the previous commits.
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Docs created from one failed sync would be there for the next one,
possibly causing a lot of hard to find errors. This commit adds a
sync_id field to track each sync documents isolated and cleans up the
pool on start instead of constructor.
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This commit adds tests for doc ordering and encdecpool control
(start/stop). Also optimizes by deleting in batch and checking for a
sequence in memory before asking the local staging for documents.
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This commit removes the multiprocessing pool and gives a step closer to
make encdecpool simpler. Download speed is now at a constant rate, CPU
usage lower and reactor responding fast when running with a HTTP server
like Pixelated.
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Theoretically (until now), Soledad inherits from U1DB the behaviour of only
accepting valid JSON for documents contents. JSON documents only allow for
unicode strings. Despite that, until now we had implemented lossy convertion
to unicode to avoid encoding errors when dumping/loading JSON content. This
allowed for API users to pass non-unicode to Soledad, but caused the
application to take more time because of conversion.
There were 2 problem with this: (1) conversion may take a long time and a lot
of memory when convertin large payloads; and (2) conversion was being made
before deferring to the adbapi, and this was blocking the reactor.
This commit completelly removes the conversion to unicode, thus leaving the
responsibility of unicode conversion to users of the Soledad API.
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The constructor method of Soledad was receiving two arguments for user
id. One of them was optional with None as default. It could cause an
inconsistent state with uuid set but userid unset.
This change remove the optional user_id argument from initialization
method and return the uuid if anyone call Soledad.userid method.
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Shared db locking was used to avoid the case in which two different devices
try to store/modify remotelly stored secrets at the same time. We want to
avoid remote locks because of the problems they create, and prefer to crash
locally.
For the record, we are currently using the user's password to encrypt the
secrets stored in the server, and while we continue to do this we will have to
re-encrypt the secrets and update the remote storage whenever the user changes
her password.
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for some reason, available_backends does not work inside a frozen
PyInstaller binary.
- Resolves: #7952
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