From the documentation of Walkdir::min_depth():
Set the minimum depth of entries yielded by the iterator.
The smallest depth is 0 and always corresponds to the path given to
the new function on this type. Its direct descendents have depth 1,
and their descendents have depth 2, and so on.
This means that when we started with "/tmp/store", we end up yielding
that exact path in the first iteration. This is exactly what we do _not_
want.
Setting the minimal depth to 1 fixes this bug.
This changes the internal GlobStoreIdIterator to return Result<StoreId>,
which gives us the possibility to aggregate errors in the
Store::retrieve_for_module() function and return them instead of tracing
them from the store.
The changes the internals to actually fetch the whole list of storeids,
which is unfortunate of course, but changing the interface is not an
option here, in my opinion.
At least we're only aggregating pathes, so the memory usage is pretty
low here.
This patch fixes a problem where the Store::delete() function only
checked the store-internal cache whether an entry exists, but not the
Filesystem. After this patch is applied, the Store::delete() function
also checks the filesystem whether the entry exists.
As we rely on the filesystem in Store::entries(), which is a bug and
shouldn't be done, we rewrite this function and use the file_abstraction
framework.
This merge solved a _LOT_ of conflicts and was a rather complicated one,
as parts of the conflict-resolution involved rewriting of half the
stuff.
This merge commit fixes all the things so a `cargo check --all`
succeeds, but I did not yet check whether tests run without failure.
This is the first part of a series of patches that reimplements the
logging backend to be more powerful and configurable.
This first patch adds types and infrastructure to be able to implement a
powerful logging abstraction.
It does not implement much functionality, except for a check whether a
module is enabled or not when logging (if configured in the config
file).
This is necessary to be able to re-build a Runtime object with an new
set of "commandline arguments". For example if a test wants to test two
calls to imag, for example a "add" operation followed by a "remove" operation.
These functions are feature-gated therefor and should only be used in
tests.
This patch removes unused crate imports reported by newer rust versions.
Some crates were only required for tests, some only for tests with
macro_import - these things were fixed with feature gates.