## Tests
New integration test for the read/write parts of the other filers. The
integration test cannot be shared just yet because the Files API doesn't
include support for creating/listing/removing directories yet.
## Changes
The ini library omits the default section header and in doing so breaks
compatibility with Python's config parser. It raises:
```
Error: MissingSectionHeaderError: File contains no section headers.
```
This commit makes sure the DEFAULT section header is included.
If the config file doesn't include a DEFAULT section itself, we include
a comment describing its purpose.
## Tests
New tests pass. Manually confirmed the DEFAULT section header is
included.
---------
Co-authored-by: PaulCornellDB <paul.cornell@databricks.com>
## Changes
Local file reads on Windows require the file handle to be closed after
using it. This commit includes an interface change to return an
`io.ReadCloser` from `Read` to accommodate this.
## Tests
The existing integration tests for the filer interface all pass.
## Changes
This change replaces usage of the `repofiles` package with the `filer`
package to consolidate WSFS code paths.
The `repofiles` package implemented the following behavior. If a file at
`foo/bar.txt` was created and removed, the directory `foo` was kept
around because we do not perform directory tracking. If subsequently, a
file at `foo` was created, it resulted in an `fs.ErrExist` because it is
impossible to overwrite a directory. It would then perform a recursive
delete of the path if this happened and retry the file write.
To make this use case work without resorting to a recursive delete on
conflict, we need to implement directory tracking as part of sync. The
approach in this commit is as follows:
1. Maintain set of directories needed for current set of files. Compare
to previous set of files. This results in mkdir of added directories and
rmdir of removed directories.
2. Creation of new directories should happen prior to writing files.
Otherwise, many file writes may race to create the same parent
directories, resulting in additional API calls. Removal of existing
directories should happen after removing files.
3. Making new directories can be deduped across common prefixes where
only the longest prefix is created recursively.
4. Removing existing directories must happen sequentially, starting with
the longest prefix.
5. Removal of directories is a best effort. It fails only if the
directory is not empty, and if this happens we know something placed a
file or directory manually, outside of sync.
## Tests
* Existing integration tests pass (modified where it used to assert
directories weren't cleaned up)
* New integration test to confirm the inability to remove a directory
doesn't fail the sync run
## Changes
This includes the following changes:
* Move profile loading code to libs/databrickscfg and add tests
* Update prompt label to reflect workspace/account profiles
* Start prompt in search mode by default
* Custom error if `~/.databrickscfg` doesn't exist
* Custom error if `~/.databrickscfg` doesn't contain profiles
* Use stderr for prompt so that stdout redirection works (e.g. with `jq` or `jless`)
## Tests
* New unit tests pass
* Manual tests for both workspace and account commands
* Search-by-default is really nice if you have many profiles
## Changes
This PR:
1. Adds the export-dir command
2. Changes filer.Read to return an error if a user tries to read a
directory
3. Adds returning internal file structures from filer.Stat().Sys()
## Tests
Integration tests and manually
## Changes
This PR adds a new line break to JSON rendering using cmdio. This is
useful when we call `cmdio.Render` multiple times
## Tests
Manually
Co-authored-by: Pieter Noordhuis <pieter.noordhuis@databricks.com>
## Changes
This captures the recursive deletion of a directory tree in the filer interface.
Prompted by #433.
## Tests
Integration tests pass (ran the filer ones on AWS and Azure).
## Changes
This enables the use of `io/fs` functions `fs.Glob` and `fs.WalkDir`
with filers.
We can't use `fs.FS` as the standard interface instead of `filer.Filer` because:
1. It was made for reading from filesystems only, not writing
2. It doesn't take a context for the core functions
Therefore a wrapper will do.
## Tests
* Added unit tests to cover the adapter through a fake filer.
* Manually ran `fs.WalkDir` against both WSFS and DBFS filers.
## Changes
- added saving profile to `~/.databrickscfg` whenever we do `databricks
auth login`.
- we either match profile by account id / canonical host or introduce
the new one from deployment name.
- fail on multiple profiles with matching accounts or workspace hosts.
- overriding `~/.databrickscfg` keeps the (valid) comments, but
reformats the file.
## Tests
<!-- How is this tested? -->
- `make test`
- `go run main.go auth login --account-id XXX --host
https://accounts.cloud.databricks.com/`
- `go run main.go auth token --account-id XXX --host
https://accounts.cloud.databricks.com/`
- `go run main.go auth login --host https://XXX.cloud.databricks.com/`
## Changes
The pattern `errors.Is(err, fs.ErrNotExist)` is common to check for an
error type.
Errors can implement `Is(error) bool` with a custom equivalence checker.
## Tests
New asserts all pass in the integration test.
Adds a DBFS implementation of the `filer.Filer` interface.
The integration tests are reused between the workspace filesystem and
DBFS implementations to ensure identical behavior.