* TemplateSaveError -> CardTypeError
* Don't show success tooltip if export fails
* Attach help page to error
Show help link if export fails due to card type error.
* Add type (dae)
* Add shared show_exception() (dae)
- Use a shared routine for printing standard backend errors, so that
we can take advantage of the help links in eg. the card layout screen
as well.
- The truthiness check on help in showInfo() would have ignored the
enum 0 value.
- Close the exporting dialog on a documented failure as well
* Fix local variable help_page
* Add Deleted error and disable all bad browser rows
* Avoid error when opening the browse screen to a card with a missing note (dae)
* In cards mode, a missing note is NotFound, not Deleted (dae)
So we distinguish between referential integrity error, and explicit
deletion.
* Remove redundant try block
Anki's DB schema unfortunately uses odid=0 instead of null to indicate
a lack of an original due date, so having a due position of 0 leads to
the temporary due date not being reset when the card is removed from
a filtered deck.
https://forums.ankiweb.net/t/anki-2-1-50-beta-6-9-stable-release/18181/52
If we don't force a full sync when restoring, any items that were added
since the backup may have already been sent to AnkiWeb, and they
won't have deletion records. After the user restores from a backup,
they'll end up in a state where their local and AnkiWeb collections
differ, and the changes will not sync. The old backup code forced a schema
change, but we weren't previously doing it via File>Import.
* Collection needs to be closed prior to backup even when not downgrading
* Backups -> BackupLimits
* Some improvements to backup_task
- backup_inner now returns the error instead of logging it, so that
the frontend can discover the issue when they await a backup (or create
another one)
- start_backup() was acquiring backup_task twice, and if another thread
started a backup between the two locks, the task could have been accidentally
overwritten without awaiting it
* Backups no longer require a collection close
- Instead of closing the collection, we ensure there is no active
transaction, and flush the WAL to disk. This means the undo history
is no longer lost on backup, which will be particularly useful if we
add a periodic backup in the future.
- Because a close is no longer required, backups are now achieved with
a separate command, instead of being included in CloseCollection().
- Full sync no longer requires an extra close+reopen step, and we now
wait for the backup to complete before proceeding.
- Create a backup before 'check db'
* Add File>Create Backup
https://forums.ankiweb.net/t/anki-mac-os-no-backup-on-sync/6157
* Defer checkpoint until we know we need it
When running periodic backups on a timer, we don't want to be fsync()ing
unnecessarily.
* Skip backup if modification time has not changed
We don't want the user leaving Anki open overnight, and coming back
to lots of identical backups.
* Periodic backups
Creates an automatic backup every 30 minutes if the collection has been
modified.
If there's a legacy checkpoint active, tries again 5 minutes later.
* Switch to a user-configurable backup duration
CreateBackup() now uses a simple force argument to determine whether
the user's limits should be respected or not, and only potentially
destructive ops (full download, check DB) override the user's configured
limit.
I considered having a separate limit for collection close and automatic
backups (eg keeping the previous 5 minute limit for collection close),
but that had two downsides:
- When the user closes their collection at the end of the day, they'd
get a recent backup. When they open the collection the next day, it
would get backed up again within 5 minutes, even though not much had
changed.
- Multiple limits are harder to communicate to users in the UI
Some remaining decisions I wasn't 100% sure about:
- If force is true but the collection has not been modified, the backup
will be skipped. If the user manually deleted their backups without
closing Anki, they wouldn't get a new one if the mtime hadn't changed.
- Force takes preference over the configured backup interval - should
we be ignored the user here, or take no backups at all?
Did a sneaky edit of the existing ftl string, as it hasn't been live
long.
* Move maybe_backup() into Collection
* Use a single method for manual and periodic backups
When manually creating a backup via the File menu, we no longer make
the user wait until the backup completes. As we continue waiting for
the backup in the background, if any errors occur, the user will get
notified about it fairly quickly.
* Show message to user if backup was skipped due to no changes
+ Don't incorrectly assert a backup will be created on force
* Add "automatic" to description
* Ensure we backup prior to importing colpkg if collection open
The backup doesn't happen when invoked from 'open backup' in the profile
screen, which matches Anki's previous behaviour. The user could
potentially clobber up to 30 minutes of their work if they exited to
the profile screen and restored a backup, but the alternative is we
create backups every time a backup is restored, which may happen a number
of times if the user is trying various ones. Or we could go back to a
separate throttle amount for this case, at the cost of more complexity.
* Remove the 0 special case on backup interval; minimum of 5 minutes
https://github.com/ankitects/anki/pull/1728#discussion_r830876833
Accidentally introduced by the search refactoring in #1600, this lead
to a query that matched items outside of the selected notes, eg
(n.id in (1506029488152) and c.ord = 43 or c.ord = 4)
Closes#1727
* Write media files in chunks
* Test media file writing
* Add iter `ReadDirFiles`
* Remove ImportMediaError, fail fatally instead
Partially reverts commit f8ed4d89ba.
* Compare hashes of media files to be restored
* Improve `MediaCopier::copy()`
* Restore media files atomically with tempfile
* Make downgrade flag an enum
* Remove SchemaVersion::Latest in favour of Option
* Remove sha1 comparison again
* Remove unnecessary repr(u8) (dae)
The old Python code was only checking for NFC encoding, but we should
check for other issues like special filenames on windows (eg con.mp3)
- On export, the user is told to use Check Media if their media has
invalid filenames.
- On import, legacy packages will be transparently normalized. Since we're
doing the checks on export as well, any invalid names in a v3 package
are an error.
* Fix legacy colpkg import; disable v3 import/export; add roundtrip test
The test has revealed we weren't decompressing the media files on v3
import. That's easy to fix, but means all files need decompressing
even when they already exist, which is not ideal - it would be better
to store size/checksum in the metadata instead.
* Switch media and meta to protobuf; re-enable v3 import/export
- Fixed media not being decompressed on import
- The uncompressed size and checksum is now included for each media
entry, so that we can quickly check if a given file needs to be extracted.
We're still just doing a naive size comparison on colpkg import at the
moment, but we may want to use a checksum in the future, and will need
a checksum for apkg imports.
- Checksums can't be efficiently encoded in JSON, so the media list
has been switched to protobuf to reduce the the space requirements.
- The meta file has been switched to protobuf as well, for consistency.
This will mean any colpkg files exported with beta7 will be
unreadable.
* Avoid integer version comparisons
* Re-enable v3 test
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-authored-by: RumovZ <gp5glkw78@relay.firefox.com>
* Add export_colpkg() method to Collection
More discoverable, and easier to call from unit tests
* Split import/export code out into separate folders
Currently colpkg/*.rs contain some routines that will be useful for
apkg import/export as well; in the future we can refactor them into a
separate file in the parent module.
* Return a proper error when media import fails
This tripped me up when writing the earlier unit test - I had called
the equivalent of import_colpkg()?, and it was returning a string error
that I didn't notice. In practice this should result in the same text
being shown in the UI, but just skips the tooltip.
* Automatically create media folder on import
* Move roundtrip test into separate file; check collection too
* Remove zstd version suffix
Prevents a warning shown each time Rust Analyzer is used to check the
code.
Co-authored-by: RumovZ <gp5glkw78@relay.firefox.com>
* Implement colpkg exporting on backend
* Use exporting logic in backup.rs
* Refactor exporting.rs
* Add backend function to export collection
* Refactor backend/collection.rs
* Use backend for colpkg exporting
* Don't use default zip compression for media
* Add exporting progress
* Refactor media file writing
* Write dummy collections
* Localize dummy collection note
* Minimize dummy db size
* Use `NamedTempFile::new()` instead of `new_in`
* Drop redundant v2 dummy collection
* COLLECTION_VERSION -> PACKAGE_VERSION
* Split `lock_collection()` into two to drop flag
* Expose new colpkg in GUI
* Improve dummy collection message
* Please type checker
* importing-colpkg-too-new -> exporting-...
* Compress the media map in the v3 package (dae)
On collections with lots of media, it can grow into megabytes.
Also return an error in extract_media_file_names(), instead of masking
it as an optional.
* Store media map as a vector in the v3 package (dae)
This compresses better (eg 280kb original, 100kb hashmap, 42kb vec)
In the colpkg import case we don't need random access. When importing
an apkg, we will need to be able to fetch file data for a given media
filename, but the existing map doesn't help us there, as we need
filename->index, not index->filename.
* Ensure folders in the media dir don't break the file mapping (dae)
* Extend maximum answer time...
Previously the time allowed to answer a question was capped at 10 minutes.
While this makes sense for fact recall, it limits the utility of Anki when
used for solving problems that can take more time to work through. This
extends the maximum answer time to 2 hours, which seems to be a reasonable
upper limit for solving a math or algorithm question.
* Add warning when max answer time exceeds 10 minutes
* Move warning below input field
* Start using WithFloating for SelectedTagBadge
* Adjust arrow on WithFloating for all directions
* Move TagOptionsBadge to its own sub directory
* Show autocomplete menu via WithFloating
* Have WithFloating return asReference instead of initializing its own reference element
* Add html: overflow: hidden for editor
* Replace ButtonToolbar with generic div
* Move scroll logic into autocomplete item + restrict Popover width to 95vw
* Fix autocomplete menu after pressing enter after selecting
- should not trigger an autocomplete choose
* Overlap TagInput perfectly with Tag
* Satisfy formatter
* Fix autocompletion item scrolling too much
* Remove unused Tag.svelte focusable prop
* Remove console.log
* Fix floating arrow is a diamond in dark mode
* Set autocompletion menu to 80vw
The _pb2 files are built for both the host and target architectures
(which seems superfluous - we may be able to fix that in the future).
Our script wrote the files into the build folder and then moved them
into the correct place, but because builds are not sandboxed on Windows,
the two actions were racy, and could cause each other to fail. Solved
by writing the files directly into their target locations.
Ideally this would have been in beta 6 :-) No add-ons appear to be
using customstudy.py/taglimit.py though, so it should hopefully not be
disruptive.
In the earlier custom study changes, we didn't get around to addressing
issue #1136. Now instead of trying to determine the maximum increase
to allow (which doesn't work correctly with nested decks), we just
present the total available to the user again, and let them decide. There's
plenty of room for improvement here still, but further work here might
be better done once we look into decoupling deck limits from deck presets.
Tags and available cards are fetched prior to showing the dialog now,
and will show a progress dialog if things take a while.
Tags are stored in an aux var now, so they don't inflate the deck
object size.
tools/mypy-watch now prints .py paths relative to the workspace root,
which makes it easy to click on them to jump to the relevant file/line
in VS Code.
* Add forget prompt with options
- Restore original position
- Reset reps and lapses
* Restore position when resetting for export
* Add config context to avoid passing keys
* Add routine to fetch defaults; use method-specific enum (dae)
* Keep original position by default (dae)
* Fix code completion for forget dialog (dae)
Needs to be a symbolic link to the generated file
* Add zstd dep
* Implement backend backup with zstd
* Implement backup thinning
* Write backup meta
* Use new file ending anki21b
* Asynchronously backup on collection close in Rust
* Revert "Add zstd dep"
This reverts commit 3fcb2141d2be15f907269d13275c41971431385c.
* Add zstd again
* Take backup col path from col struct
* Fix formatting
* Implement backup restoring on backend
* Normalize restored media file names
* Refactor `extract_legacy_data()`
A bit cumbersome due to borrowing rules.
* Refactor
* Make thinning calendar-based and gradual
* Consider last kept backups of previous stages
* Import full apkgs and colpkgs with backend
* Expose new backup settings
* Test `BackupThinner` and make it deterministic
* Mark backup_path when closing optional
* Delete leaky timer
* Add progress updates for restoring media
* Write restored collection to tempfile first
* Do collection compression in the background thread
This has us currently storing an uncompressed and compressed copy of
the collection in memory (not ideal), but means the collection can be
closed without waiting for compression to complete. On a large collection,
this takes a close and reopen from about 0.55s to about 0.07s. The old
backup code for comparison: about 0.35s for compression off, about
8.5s for zip compression.
* Use multithreading in zstd compression
On my system, this reduces the compression time of a large collection
from about 0.55s to 0.08s.
* Stream compressed collection data into zip file
* Tweak backup explanation
+ Fix incorrect tab order for ignore accents option
* Decouple restoring backup and full import
In the first case, no profile is opened, unless the new collection
succeeds to load.
In the second case, either the old collection is reloaded or the new one
is loaded.
* Fix number gap in Progress message
* Don't revert backup when media fails but report it
* Tweak error flow
* Remove native BackupLimits enum
* Fix type annotation
* Add thinning test for whole year
* Satisfy linter
* Await async backup to finish
* Move restart disclaimer out of backup tab
Should be visible regardless of the current tab.
* Write restored collection in chunks
* Refactor
* Write media in chunks and refactor
* Log error if removing file fails
* join_backup_task -> await_backup_completion
* Refactor backup.rs
* Refactor backup meta and collection extraction
* Fix wrong error being returned
* Call sync_all() on new collection
* Add ImportError
* Store logger in Backend, instead of creating one on demand
init_backend() accepts a Logger rather than a log file, to allow other
callers to customize the logger if they wish.
In the future we may want to explore using the tracing crate as an
alternative; it's a bit more ergonomic, as a logger doesn't need to be
passed around, and it plays more nicely with async code.
* Sync file contents prior to rename; sync folder after rename.
* Limit backup creation to once per 30 min
* Use zstd::stream::copy_decode
* Make importing abortable
* Don't revert if backup media is aborted
* Set throttle implicitly
* Change force flag to minimum_backup_interval
* Don't attempt to open folders on Windows
* Join last backup thread before starting new one
Also refactor.
* Disable auto sync and backup when restoring again
* Force backup on full download
* Include the reason why a media file import failed, and the file path
- Introduce a FileIoError that contains a string representation of
the underlying I/O error, and an associated path. There are a few
places in the code where we're currently manually including the filename
in a custom error message, and this is a step towards a more consistent
approach (but we may be better served with a more general approach in
the future similar to Anyhow's .context())
- Move the error message into importing.ftl, as it's a bit neater
when error messages live in the same file as the rest of the messages
associated with some functionality.
* Fix importing of media files
* Minor wording tweaks
* Save an allocation
I18n strings with replacements are already strings, so we can skip the
extra allocation. Not that it matters here at all.
* Terminate import if file missing from archive
If a third-party tool is creating invalid archives, the user should know
about it. This should be rare, so I did not attempt to make it
translatable.
* Skip multithreaded compression on small collections
Co-authored-by: Damien Elmes <gpg@ankiweb.net>