This should help clean up some of the uglier status outputs.
Supports:
* multi-line table cells
* character fills
* sparse tables
* insert, delete by row and column
* vertical separators
and not much else.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
crucible::VERSION doesn't make much sense now that libcrucible no
longer exists as a shared library. Nothing ever referenced it, so
it can go away.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
btrfs-tree provides classes for low-level access to btrfs tree objects.
An item class is provided to decode polymorphic btrfs item fields.
Several tree classes provide forward and backward iteration over raw
object items at different tree levels.
A csum tree class provides convenient access to csums by bytenr,
supporting all current btrfs csum types.
Wrapper classes for inode and subvol items provide direct access to
btrfs metadata fields without clumsy stat() wrappers or ioctls.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
For performance or workaround reasons we sometimes have to avoid doing
two conflicting operations at the same time, but we can still run any
number of non-conflicting operations in parallel.
MultiLocker (suggestions for a better class name welcome) blocks the
calling thread until there are no threads attempting to run a conflicting
operation.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
After some benchmarking, it turns out that std::vector<uint8_t> is
about 160 times slower than malloc(). malloc() is faster than "new
uint8_t[]" too. Get rid of std:;vector<uint8_t> and replace it with
a lightweight wrapper around malloc(), free(), and memcpy().
ByteVector has helpful methods for the common case of moving data to and
from ioctl calls that use a fixed-length header placed contiguously with a
variable-length input/output buffer. Data bytes are shared between copied
ByteVector objects, allowing a large single buffer to be cheaply chopped
up into smaller objects without memory copies. ByteVector implements the
more useful parts of the std::vector API, so it can replace std::vector
objects without needing an awkward adaptor class like Spanner.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
The weird things distros do to the path where uuid.h gets installed
have broken bees builds for the last time.
We were only using uuid to support a legacy feature that was removed
over four years ago.
Hypothetical users who are upgrading directly from bees v0.1 should
probably restart all the crawlers anyway--there were bugs. Also, if any
such users exist, I respect their tremendous patience with the horrible
performance all these years--bees got about 30x faster since v0.1.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
If we create an identical .version.cc then don't bother keeping it.
This prevents libcrucible from rebuilding if there are no other changes,
which in turn prevents all the binaries from rebuilding unconditionally.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
CityHash64 appears to be the fastest available block hashing algorithm
that is good enough for dedupe. It takes much less CPU than the CRC64
function, and avoids hash-collision problems with file formats that use
CRC64 as an integrity check on 4K block boundaries.
Extracted from git://github.com/google/cityhash with the "CRC" hash
functions (which require Intel/AMD CPU support) removed. We don't
need those, and they introduce a new (if only theoretical) build-time
dependency.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
libcrucible at one time in the distant past had to be a shared library
to force global C++ object initialization; however, this is no longer
required.
Make libcrucible static to solve various rpath and soname versioning
issues, especially when distros try (unwisely) to package the library
separately.
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
We didn't take enough care to fix all invocations of git in this
scenario.
Fixes: 32d2739 ("Makefile: Specify version when building from tarball")
Signed-off-by: Kai Krakow <kai@kaishome.de>
This commit brings back -O3 but in an overridable way. This should make
downstream distributions happy enough to accept it.
While at the subject, let's apply the same fixup logic to LDFLAGS, too.
This commit also properly gets rid of the implicit rules which collided
too easily with the depends.mk.
Signed-off-by: Kai Krakow <kai@kaishome.de>
Due to VPATH and how make resolves source paths, libcrucible.so ends up
with a hard-coded path to link against libuuid.so. Let's fix it by
turning the general rule into an explicit rule for libcrucible.so.
Signed-off-by: Kai Krakow <kai@kaishome.de>
We should probably not put it into the objects list. Let's instead
explicitly put it as a depend of libcrucible.so.
This allows us to not use *.cc as a depend for .version.cc which makes
more sense as CRUCIBLE_OBJS is also explicitly defined and not built
from wildcards.
Signed-off-by: Kai Krakow <kai@kaishome.de>
This commit adds support for putting package configuration options into
header files. This is needed to prepare reading config files from /etc.
Signed-off-by: Kai Krakow <kai@kaishome.de>
Dependencies can be generated in parallel which can be much faster. It
also puts away the problem that for may fail multiple times in a row and
leaving behind a broken intermediate file which would be picked up by
successive runs.
Signed-off-by: Kai Krakow <kai@kaishome.de>
Let's generalize the depends.mk target so we can easily move files
around later. While doing it, let's also fix the "gcc -M" call to use
explicit target names and not clobber it with preprocessor output.
Signed-off-by: Kai Krakow <kai@kaishome.de>
We can remove the explicit depend on the .h file because that is covered
by depends.mk. Let's instead depend on makeflags which makes more sense.
Signed-off-by: Kai Krakow <kai@kaishome.de>
We need a mechanism for distributing work across processor cores and
disks.
Task implements a simple FIFO/LIFO queue model for executing closures.
Some locking primitives are included (mutex and barrier).
Signed-off-by: Zygo Blaxell <bees@furryterror.org>
According to Gentoo packaging guide, -fPIC should only be used on shared
libraries, and not added unconditionally to every linker call.
Signed-off-by: Kai Krakow <kai@kaishome.de>