refactorings:
- introduced concept of default answer:
if the answer string is in the defaultish sequence, the return value of yes() will be the default.
e.g. if just pressing <enter> when asked on the console or if an empty string or "default" is
in the environment variable for overriding.
if an environment var has an invalid value and no retries are enabled: return default
if retries are enabled, next retry won't use the env var again, but either ask via input().
- simplify:
only one default - this should be a SAFE default as it is used in some special conditions
like EOF or invalid input with retries disallowed.
no isatty() magic, the "yes" shell command exists, so we could receive input even if it is not from a tty.
- clean:
separate retry flag from retry_msg
one of the biggest issues with borg < 1.0 was that it had a default target chunk
size of 64kiB, thus it created a lot of chunks, a huge chunk management overhead
(high RAM and disk usage).
The fnmatch module in Python's standard library implements a pattern
format for paths which is similar to shell patterns. However, “*”
matches any character including path separators. This newly introduced
pattern syntax with the selector “sh” no longer matches the path
separator with “*”. Instead “**/” can be used to match zero or more
directory levels.
The existing option to exclude files and directories, “--exclude”, is
implemented using fnmatch[1]. fnmatch matches the slash (“/”) with “*”
and thus makes it impossible to write patterns where a directory with
a given name should be excluded at a specific depth in the directory
hierarchy, but not anywhere else. Consider this structure:
home/
home/aaa
home/aaa/.thumbnails
home/user
home/user/img
home/user/img/.thumbnails
fnmatch incorrectly excludes “home/user/img/.thumbnails” with a pattern
of “home/*/.thumbnails” when the intention is to exclude “.thumbnails”
in all home directories while retaining directories with the same name
in all other locations.
With this change regular expressions are introduced as an additional
pattern syntax. The syntax is selected using a prefix on “--exclude”'s
value. “re:” is for regular expression and “fm:”, the default, selects
fnmatch. Selecting the syntax is necessary when regular expressions are
desired or when the desired fnmatch pattern starts with two alphanumeric
characters followed by a colon (i.e. “aa:something/*”). The exclusion
described above can be implemented as follows:
--exclude 're:^home/[^/]+/\.thumbnails$'
The “--exclude-from” option permits loading exclusions from a text file
where the same prefixes can now be used, e.g. “re:\.tmp$”.
The documentation has been extended and now not only describes the two
pattern styles, but also the file format supported by “--exclude-from”.
This change has been discussed in issue #43 and in change request #497.
[1] https://docs.python.org/3/library/fnmatch.html
Signed-off-by: Michael Hanselmann <public@hansmi.ch>
removed --log-level due to overlap with how --verbose works now.
for consistency, added --info as alias to --verbose (as the effect is
setting INFO log level).
also added --debug which sets DEBUG log level.
note: there are no messages emitted at DEBUG level yet.
WARNING is the default (because we want mostly silent behaviour,
except if something serious happens), so we don't need --warning
as an option.
the problem here was that we do not just have changed and unchanged items,
but also a lot of items besides regular files which we just back up "as is" without
determining whether they are changed or not. thus, we can't support changed/unchanged
in a way users would expect them to work.
the A/M/U status only applies to the data content of regular files (compared to the index).
for all items, we ALWAYS save the metadata, there is no changed / not changed detection there.
thus, I replaced this with a --filter option where you can just specify which
status chars you want to see listed in the output.
E.g. --filter AM will only show regular files with A(dded) or M(odified) state, but nothing else.
Not giving --filter defaults to showing all items no matter what status they have.
Output is emitted via logger at info level, so it won't show up except if the logger is at that level.
this was making us require mock, which is really a test component and
shouldn't be part of the runtime dependencies. furthermore, it was
making the imports and the code more brittle: it may have been
possible that, through an environment variable, backups could be
corrupted because mock libraries would be configured instead of real
once, which is a risk we shouldn't be taking.
finally, this was used only to build docs, which we will build and
commit to git by hand with a fully working borg when relevant.
see #384.
This is what attic used by default, but borgbackup defaults to "no compression".
I just adjusted the command invocation, so we can keep the example output
(which shows that stuff was compressed).
Also: add FAQ item about compression.