On Tue, 2017-05-09 at 22:54 +1000, Allan McRae wrote:
Hi all,
Every time I attempt to work on repo-add, I find it to be a very difficult endeavour. Even though it is half the size of makepkg (without even including any of libmakepkg), it is much more convoluted to work on.
We also have a weird repository database system. We have: - .db dbs with package information, signatures and delta information - .files dbs that are the same as .db dbs but additionally include filelists
There are two reasons the .files dbs replicate all information in the .db dbs - .db and .files dbs getting out of sync could cause issues - a complete database is useful for things like archweb, mostly to avoid the above
I would also like to include information on source packages to these databases. The files information is separate due to wanting our primary database to be small. Likewise, source package information needs to be separate (the signatures take most of the size in the .db dbs, so adding source package signatures effectively doubles the size).
So two points up for discussion:
1) Sync repository layout? I don't see any point in leaving the tar based format, as reading of sync databases is not a bottleneck. (The local db format can be a bottleneck, but that is a separate discussion...)
Do we split the information in .db out of .files and add a .full db with complete information? Then any .src db could follow suit and just have source package information. How do we get around the out of sync issue (e.g., a package is removed from .db, but we have an old .files database with it). Do we add timestamps, and print a warning on -F operations when the two are out of sync?
Perhaps instead of timestamps, how about adding a .DBINFO file and include a hash in that file that is shared between both the .db and .files databases (and perhaps the source db as well). This way, when something checks the .files, you can tell if it doesn't match the .db (because in my opinion, the .db is more important so that's what I would compare anything to). I'm not really sure what good a .full db would do for us though. Just seems to me like extra stuff to download.
2) Do we need a better (read "more easily maintainable") tool for handling database generation and updates? libalpm already can read in information package files, so we could add libalpm/db_write.c with the database creation functions. Should we unify our repo format with our local database format which we already write?
I think this would be great. Especially the part of implementing something in libalpm to do this. It would allow projects like pyalpm or my own php-alpm to be used to also create repos.
I am looking for ideas here. Please brainstorm to your hearts content.
I know this is two months after the fact, but here's my take on it. Mark