If we get an error writing to a socket, then we should perhaps
[rsync/rsync.git] / TODO
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3URGENT ---------------------------------------------------------------
4
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5
6IMPORTANT ------------------------------------------------------------
7
8Cross-test versions
9
10 Part of the regression suite should be making sure that we don't
11 break backwards compatibility: old clients vs new servers and so
12 on. Ideally we would test the cross product of versions.
13
14 It might be sufficient to test downloads from well-known public
15 rsync servers running different versions of rsync. This will give
16 some testing and also be the most common case for having different
17 versions and not being able to upgrade.
18
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19use chroot
20
21 If the platform doesn't support it, then don't even try.
22
23 If running as non-root, then don't fail, just give a warning.
24 (There was a thread about this a while ago?)
25
26 http://lists.samba.org/pipermail/rsync/2001-August/thread.html
27 http://lists.samba.org/pipermail/rsync/2001-September/thread.html
28
29--files-from
30
31 Avoids traversal. Better option than a pile of --include statements
32 for people who want to generate the file list using a find(1)
33 command or a script.
34
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35File list structure in memory
36
37 Rather than one big array, perhaps have a tree in memory mirroring
38 the directory tree.
39
40 This might make sorting much faster! (I'm not sure it's a big CPU
41 problem, mind you.)
42
43 It might also reduce memory use in storing repeated directory names
44 -- again I'm not sure this is a problem.
0e5a1f83 45
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46Performance
47
48 Traverse just one directory at a time. Tridge says it's possible.
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49
50 At the moment rsync reads the whole file list into memory at the
51 start, which makes us use a lot of memory and also not pipeline
52 network access as much as we could.
53
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54
55Handling duplicate names
56
b3e6c815 57 We need to be careful of duplicate names getting into the file list.
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58 See clean_flist(). This could happen if multiple arguments include
59 the same file. Bad.
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60
61 I think duplicates are only a problem if they're both flowing
62 through the pipeline at the same time. For example we might have
63 updated the first occurrence after reading the checksums for the
64 second. So possibly we just need to make sure that we don't have
65 both in the pipeline at the same time.
66
67 Possibly if we did one directory at a time that would be sufficient.
68
69 Alternatively we could pre-process the arguments to make sure no
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70 duplicates will ever be inserted. There could be some bad cases
71 when we're collapsing symlinks.
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72
73 We could have a hash table.
74
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75 The root of the problem is that we do not want more than one file
76 list entry referring to the same file. At first glance there are
77 several ways this could happen: symlinks, hardlinks, and repeated
78 names on the command line.
79
80 If names are repeated on the command line, they may be present in
81 different forms, perhaps by traversing directory paths in different
82 ways, traversing paths including symlinks. Also we need to allow
83 for expansion of globs by rsync.
84
85 At the moment, clean_flist() requires having the entire file list in
86 memory. Duplicate names are detected just by a string comparison.
87
88 We don't need to worry about hard links causing duplicates because
89 files are never updated in place. Similarly for symlinks.
90
91 I think even if we're using a different symlink mode we don't need
92 to worry.
93
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94 Unless we're really clever this will introduce a protocol
95 incompatibility, so we need to be able to accept the old format as
96 well.
97
98
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99Memory accounting
100
101 At exit, show how much memory was used for the file list, etc.
102
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103 Also we do a wierd exponential-growth allocation in flist.c. I'm
104 not sure this makes sense with modern mallocs. At any rate it will
105 make us allocate a huge amount of memory for large file lists.
106
0e5a1f83 107
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108Hard-link handling
109
110 At the moment hardlink handling is very expensive, so it's off by
111 default. It does not need to be so.
112
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113 Since most of the solutions are rather intertwined with the file
114 list it is probably better to fix that first, although fixing
115 hardlinks is possibly simpler.
116
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117 We can rule out hardlinked directories since they will probably
118 screw us up in all kinds of ways. They simply should not be used.
119
120 At the moment rsync only cares about hardlinks to regular files. I
121 guess you could also use them for sockets, devices and other beasts,
122 but I have not seen them.
123
124 When trying to reproduce hard links, we only need to worry about
125 files that have more than one name (nlinks>1 && !S_ISDIR).
126
127 The basic point of this is to discover alternate names that refer to
128 the same file. All operations, including creating the file and
129 writing modifications to it need only to be done for the first name.
130 For all later names, we just create the link and then leave it
131 alone.
132
133 If hard links are to be preserved:
134
135 Before the generator/receiver fork, the list of files is received
136 from the sender (recv_file_list), and a table for detecting hard
137 links is built.
138
139 The generator looks for hard links within the file list and does
140 not send checksums for them, though it does send other metadata.
141
142 The sender sends the device number and inode with file entries, so
143 that files are uniquely identified.
144
145 The receiver goes through and creates hard links (do_hard_links)
146 after all data has been written, but before directory permissions
147 are set.
148
149 At the moment device and inum are sent as 4-byte integers, which
150 will probably cause problems on large filesystems. On Linux the
151 kernel uses 64-bit ino_t's internally, and people will soon have
152 filesystems big enough to use them. We ought to follow NFS4 in
153 using 64-bit device and inode identification, perhaps with a
154 protocol version bump.
155
156 Once we've seen all the names for a particular file, we no longer
157 need to think about it and we can deallocate the memory.
158
159 We can also have the case where there are links to a file that are
160 not in the tree being transferred. There's nothing we can do about
161 that. Because we rename the destination into place after writing,
162 any hardlinks to the old file are always going to be orphaned. In
163 fact that is almost necessary because otherwise we'd get really
164 confused if we were generating checksums for one name of a file and
165 modifying another.
166
167 At the moment the code seems to make a whole second copy of the file
168 list, which seems unnecessary.
169
170 We should have a test case that exercises hard links. Since it
171 might be hard to compare ./tls output where the inodes change we
172 might need a little program to check whether several names refer to
173 the same file.
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174
175IPv6
176
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177 Implement suggestions from http://www.kame.net/newsletter/19980604/
178 and ftp://ftp.iij.ad.jp/pub/RFC/rfc2553.txt
179
180 If a host has multiple addresses, then listen try to connect to all
181 in order until we get through. (getaddrinfo may return multiple
c10b0bdd 182 addresses.) This is kind of implemented already.
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183
184 Possibly also when starting as a server we may need to listen on
185 multiple passive addresses. This might be a bit harder, because we
186 may need to select on all of them. Hm.
187
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188 Define a syntax for IPv6 literal addresses. Since they include
189 colons, they tend to break most naming systems, including ours.
190 Based on the HTTP IPv6 syntax, I think we should use
191
192 rsync://[::1]/foo/bar
193 [::1]::bar
194
195 which should just take a small change to the parser code.
196
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197Errors
198
199 If we hang or get SIGINT, then explain where we were up to. Perhaps
200 have a static buffer that contains the current function name, or
201 some kind of description of what we were trying to do. This is a
202 little easier on people than needing to run strace/truss.
203
204 "The dungeon collapses! You are killed." Rather than "unexpected
205 eof" give a message that is more detailed if possible and also more
206 helpful.
207
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208 If we get an error writing to a socket, then we should perhaps
209 continue trying to read to see if an error message comes across
210 explaining why the socket is closed. I'm not sure if this would
211 work, but it would certainly make our messages more helpful.
212
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213File attributes
214
215 Device major/minor numbers should be at least 32 bits each. See
216 http://lists.samba.org/pipermail/rsync/2001-November/005357.html
217
218 Transfer ACLs. Need to think of a standard representation.
219 Probably better not to even try to convert between NT and POSIX.
220 Possibly can share some code with Samba.
5aafd07b 221
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222Empty directories
223
224 With the current common --include '*/' --exclude '*' pattern, people
225 can end up with many empty directories. We might avoid this by
226 lazily creating such directories.
227
c6e27b60 228
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229zlib
230
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231 Perhaps don't use our own zlib.
232
233 Advantages:
234
235 - will automatically be up to date with bugfixes in zlib
236
237 - can leave it out for small rsync on e.g. recovery disks
238
239 - can use a shared library
240
241 - avoids people breaking rsync by trying to do this themselves and
242 messing up
243
244 Should we ship zlib for systems that don't have it, or require
245 people to install it separately?
246
247 Apparently this will make us incompatible with versions of rsync
248 that use the patched version of rsync. Probably the simplest way to
249 do this is to just disable gzip (with a warning) when talking to old
250 versions.
251
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252
253logging
254
255 Perhaps flush stdout after each filename, so that people trying to
256 monitor progress in a log file can do so more easily. See
257 http://bugs.debian.org/cgi-bin/bugreport.cgi?bug=48108
258
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259 At the connections that just get a list of modules are not logged,
260 but they should be.
261
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262rsyncd over ssh
263
264 There are already some patches to do this.
265
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266proxy authentication
267
268 Allow RSYNC_PROXY to be http://user:pass@proxy.foo:3128/, and do
269 HTTP Basic Proxy-Authentication.
270
271 Multiple schemes are possible, up to and including the insanity that
272 is NTLM, but Basic probably covers most cases.
273
274SOCKS
275
276 Add --with-socks, and then perhaps a command-line option to put them
277 on or off. This might be more reliable than LD_PRELOAD hacks.
278
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279Better statistics:
280
281 <Rasmus> mbp: hey, how about an rsync option that just gives you the
282 summary without the list of files? And perhaps gives more
283 information like the number of new files, number of changed,
284 deleted, etc. ?
285 <mbp> Rasmus: nice idea
286 <mbp> there is --stats
287 <mbp> but at the moment it's very tridge-oriented
288 <mbp> rather than user-friendly
289 <mbp> it would be nice to improve it
290 <mbp> that would also work well with --dryrun
291
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292TDB:
293
294 Rather than storing the file list in memory, store it in a TDB.
295
296 This *might* make memory usage lower while building the file list.
297
298 Hashtable lookup will mean files are not transmitted in order,
299 though... hm.
300
301 This would neatly eliminate one of the major post-fork shared data
302 structures.
303
304
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305PLATFORMS ------------------------------------------------------------
306
307Win32
308
309 Don't detach, because this messes up --srvany.
310
311 http://sources.redhat.com/ml/cygwin/2001-08/msg00234.html
312
313 According to "Effective TCP/IP Programming" (??) close() on a socket
314 has incorrect behaviour on Windows -- it sends a RST packet to the
315 other side, which gives a "connection reset by peer" error. On that
316 platform we should probably do shutdown() instead. However, on Unix
317 we are correct to call close(), because shutdown() discards
318 untransmitted data.
319
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320DEVELOPMENT ----------------------------------------------------------
321
322Splint
323
324 Build rsync with SPLINT to try to find security holes. Add
325 annotations as necessary. Keep track of the number of warnings
326 found initially, and see how many of them are real bugs, or real
327 security bugs. Knowing the percentage of likely hits would be
328 really interesting for other projects.
329
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330Torture test
331
332 Something that just keeps running rsync continuously over a data set
333 likely to generate problems.
334
335Cross-testing
336
337 Run current rsync versions against significant past releases.
338
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339Memory debugger
340
3a79260d 341 jra recommends Valgrind:
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342
343 http://devel-home.kde.org/~sewardj/
344
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345DOCUMENTATION --------------------------------------------------------
346
347Update README
348
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349BUILD FARM -----------------------------------------------------------
350
351Add machines
352
353 AMDAHL UTS (Dave Dykstra)
354
355 Cygwin (on different versions of Win32?)
356
357 HP-UX variants (via HP?)
33d213bb 358
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359 SCO
360
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361NICE -----------------------------------------------------------------
362
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363--no-detach and --no-fork options
364
365 Very useful for debugging. Also good when running under a
366 daemon-monitoring process that tries to restart the service when the
367 parent exits.
368
369hang/timeout friendliness
370
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371verbose output
372
373 Indicate whether files are new, updated, or deleted
374
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375 At end of transfer, show how many files were or were not transferred
376 correctly.
377
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378internationalization
379
380 Change to using gettext(). Probably need to ship this for platforms
381 that don't have it.
382
383 Solicit translations.
384
385 Does anyone care?
386
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387rsyncsh
388
389 Write a small emulation of interactive ftp as a Pythonn program
390 that calls rsync. Commands such as "cd", "ls", "ls *.c" etc map
391 fairly directly into rsync commands: it just needs to remember the
392 current host, directory and so on. We can probably even do
393 completion of remote filenames.