This was a nasty bug. Users reported that restic aborts with panic:
panic: store new item in finalized index
The code calling panic() is in the Store() method of an index and guards
the failure case that an index is to be modified while it has already
been saved in the repo.
What happens here (at least that's what I suspect): PackerManager calls
Current() on a MasterIndex, which yields one index A. Concurrently,
another goroutine calls Repository.SaveFullIndex(), which in turn calls
MasterIndex.FullIndexes(), which (among others) yields the index A. Then
all indexes are marked as final. Then the other goroutine is executed
which adds an entry to the index A, which is now marked as final. Then
the panic occurs.
The commit solves this by removing MasterIndex.Current() and adding a
Store() method that stores the entry in one non-finalized index. This
method uses the same RWMutex as the other methods (e.g. FullIndexes()),
thereby ensuring that the full indexes can only be processed before or
after Store() is called.
Closes#367
Target directories from the from-files argument get added to the command
line args, after which all command line args were appended to the same
variable again causing duplicates. Split the used variables to avoid
this.
Signed-off-by: Sjoerd Simons <sjoerd@luon.net>
Previously such files (typically log files) wouldn't be backed up at
all!
The proper behaviour is to backup what we can, and warn the operator
that file is possibly not complete. But it is a warning, not an error.
Closes#689
Since client.BucketExists was changed to return a separate 'found' value, instead of reporting an error when the bucket doesn't exist, the error code path does no longer imply a call to client.MakeBucket. So the second part of the debug message, "...trying to create the bucket" doesn't apply any more.
Also, changed the name of the return value from 'ok' to 'found', matching the API documentation at https://docs.minio.io/docs/golang-client-api-reference#BucketExists.
It fails on pre-release versions, anyway. It's enough to mention the oldest
supported version in README.md. Anything older than two latest Go releases
is bad idea, anyway, 'cause it's unsupported by Go development team.
Closes#680