Commit Graph

9 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Jakob Borg
6f0acacbd2 fix(sqlite): actually always insert blocks for local files (fixes #10388) (#10411)
Due to a thinko, this optimisation was wildly incorrect and would read
to lack of block reuse when syncing files.

(We do not insert a blocklist per device, but only a single one. We
can't use the fact of whether the insert happened as a criteria for
inserting blocks.)

Signed-off-by: Jakob Borg <jakob@kastelo.net>
2025-09-23 12:46:31 +00:00
Jakob Borg
9ee208b441 chore(sqlite): use normalised tables for file names and versions (#10383)
This changes the files table to use normalisation for the names and
versions. The idea is that these are often common between all remote
devices, and repeating an integer is more efficient than repeating a
long string. A new benchmark bears this out; for a database with 100k
files shared between 31 devices, with some worst case assumption on
version vector size, the database is reduced in size by 50% and the test
finishes quicker:

    Current:
        db_bench_test.go:322: Total size: 6263.70 MiB
    --- PASS: TestBenchmarkSizeManyFilesRemotes (1084.89s)

    New:
        db_bench_test.go:326: Total size: 3049.95 MiB
    --- PASS: TestBenchmarkSizeManyFilesRemotes (776.97s)

The other benchmarks end up about the same within the margin of
variability, with one possible exception being that RemoteNeed seems to
be a little slower on average:

                                          old files/s   new files/s
    Update/n=RemoteNeed/size=1000-8            5.051k        4.654k
    Update/n=RemoteNeed/size=2000-8            5.201k        4.384k
    Update/n=RemoteNeed/size=4000-8            4.943k        4.242k
    Update/n=RemoteNeed/size=8000-8            5.099k        3.527k
    Update/n=RemoteNeed/size=16000-8           3.686k        3.847k
    Update/n=RemoteNeed/size=30000-8           4.456k        3.482k

I'm not sure why, possibly that query can be optimised anyhow.

Signed-off-by: Jakob Borg <jakob@kastelo.net>
2025-09-12 09:27:41 +00:00
Jakob Borg
c918299eab refactor(db): slightly improve insert performance (#10318)
This just removes an unnecessary foreign key constraint, where we
already do the garbage collection manually in the database service.
However, as part of getting here I tried a couple of other variants
along the way:

- Changing the order of the primary key from `(hash, blocklist_hash,
idx)` to `(blocklist_hash, idx, hash)` so that inserts would be
naturally ordered. However this requires a new index `on blocks (hash)`
so that we can still look up blocks by hash, and turns out to be
strictly worse than what we already have.
- Removing the primary key entirely and the `WITHOUT ROWID` to make it a
rowid table without any required order, and an index as above. This is
faster when the table is small, but becomes slower when it's large (due
to dual indexes I guess).

These are the benchmark results from current `main`, the second
alternative below ("Index(hash)") and this proposal that retains the
combined primary key ("combined"). Overall it ends up being about 65%
faster.

<img width="764" height="452" alt="Screenshot 2025-08-29 at 14 36 28"
src="https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/bff3f9d1-916a-485f-91b7-b54b477f5aac"
/>

Ref #10264
2025-08-29 15:26:23 +02:00
Jakob Borg
836045ee87 feat: switch logging framework (#10220)
This updates our logging framework from legacy freetext strings using
the `log` package to structured log entries using `log/slog`. I have
updated all INFO or higher level entries, but not yet DEBUG (😓)... So,
at a high level:

There is a slight change in log levels, effectively adding a new warning
level:

- DEBUG is still debug (ideally not for users but developers, though
this is something we need to work on)
- INFO is still info, though I've added more data here, effectively
making Syncthing more verbose by default (more on this below)
- WARNING is a new log level that is different from the _old_ WARNING
(more below)
- ERROR is what was WARNING before -- problems that must be dealt with,
and also bubbled as a popup in the GUI.

A new feature is that the logging level can be set per package to
something other than just debug or info, and hence I feel that we can
add a bit more things into INFO while moving some (in fact, most)
current INFO level warnings into WARNING. For example, I think it's
justified to get a log of synced files in INFO and sync failures in
WARNING. These are things that have historically been tricky to debug
properly, and having more information by default will be useful to many,
while still making it possible get close to told level of inscrutability
by setting the log level to WARNING. I'd like to get to a stage where
DEBUG is never necessary to just figure out what's going on, as opposed
to trying to narrow down a likely bug.

Code wise:

- Our logging object, generally known as `l` in each package, is now a
new adapter object that provides the old API on top of the newer one.
(This should go away once all old log entries are migrated.) This is
only for `l.Debugln` and `l.Debugf`.
- There is a new level tracker that keeps the log level for each
package.
- There is a nested setup of handlers, since the structure mandated by
`log/slog` is slightly convoluted (imho). We do this because we need to
do formatting at a "medium" level internally so we can buffer log lines
in text format but with separate timestamp and log level for the API/GUI
to consume.
- The `debug` API call becomes a `loglevels` API call, which can set the
log level to `DEBUG`, `INFO`, `WARNING` or `ERROR` per package. The GUI
is updated to handle this.
- Our custom `sync` package provided some debugging of mutexes quite
strongly integrated into the old logging framework, only turned on when
`STTRACE` was set to certain values at startup, etc. It's been a long
time since this has been useful; I removed it.
- The `STTRACE` env var remains and can be used the same way as before,
while additionally permitting specific log levels to be specified,
`STTRACE=model:WARN,scanner:DEBUG`.
- There is a new command line option `--log-level=INFO` to set the
default log level.
- The command line options `--log-flags` and `--verbose` go away, but
are currently retained as hidden & ignored options since we set them by
default in some of our startup examples and Syncthing would otherwise
fail to start.

Sample format messages:

```
2009-02-13 23:31:30 INF A basic info line (attr1="val with spaces" attr2=2 attr3="val\"quote" a=a log.pkg=slogutil)
2009-02-13 23:31:30 INF An info line with grouped values (attr1=val1 foo.attr2=2 foo.bar.attr3=3 a=a log.pkg=slogutil)
2009-02-13 23:31:30 INF An info line with grouped values via logger (foo.attr1=val1 foo.attr2=2 a=a log.pkg=slogutil)
2009-02-13 23:31:30 INF An info line with nested grouped values via logger (bar.foo.attr1=val1 bar.foo.attr2=2 a=a log.pkg=slogutil)
2009-02-13 23:31:30 WRN A warning entry (a=a log.pkg=slogutil)
2009-02-13 23:31:30 ERR An error (a=a log.pkg=slogutil)
```

---------

Co-authored-by: Ross Smith II <ross@smithii.com>
2025-08-07 11:19:36 +02:00
Jakob Borg
7c07610ab2 fix: allow deleted files to win conflict resolution (#10207)
We've always, since the introduction of conflicts, had the policy that
deletes lose against any other change, for safety's sake. This is a
problem, however, because it means the sort order of versions is not a
total order.

That is, given two versions `A` and `B` that are currently in conflict,
we will sort them in a given order (let's say `A, B`, so `A < B` for
ordering purposes: we say "A wins over B" or "A is newer than B") and
consider the first in the list the winner. The loser (who has `B` on
disk) will process the conflict at some point and move the file to a
conflict copy and announce `A'` as the resolved conflict. The winner
(with `A` on disk) doesn't do anything.

However, if `A` is deleted the ordering changes. We still have `A < B`
and, of course, `Adel < A` (this is not even a conflict, just linear
order). In most sane systems this would imply the ordering `Adel < A <
B`, however in our case we in fact have `B < Adel` because any version
wins over a deleted one, so there is no logical ordering at all of the
files at this point. `Adel < A < B < Adel ???` In practice the deleted
version may end up at the head or the tail of the list, depending on the
order we do the compares.

Hence, at this point, "whatever" happens and it's not guaranteed to make
any sense. 😬

I propose that we resolve this my simply letting deletes be versions
like anything else and maintain a total ordering based on just version
vectors with the existing tie breakers like always. That means a delete
can win in a conflict situation, and the result should be that the file
is moved to a conflict copy on the losing device. I think this retains
the data safety to almost the same degree as previously, while removing
probably an entire class of strange out of sync bugs...

---

(A potential wrinkle here is that, ideally, we wouldn't even create the
conflict copy when the delete and the losing version represent the same
data -- same as when we handle normal modification conflicts. However,
the deleted FileInfo doesn't carry any information on what the contents
were, so we can't do that right now. A possible future extension would
be to carry the block list hash of the deleted data in the deleted
FileInfo and use that for this purpose, but I don't want to complicate
this PR with that. The block list hash itself also isn't a
protocol-defined thing at the moment, it's something implementation
dependent that we just use locally.)
2025-07-06 15:22:03 +02:00
Simon Frei
7b319111d3 fix: track invalid files in LocalFlags to fix global count (#10170)
Move the "invalid" bit to a local flag, making it easier to track in counts etc.
2025-06-13 07:33:31 +02:00
Jakob Borg
ef6d561c66 chore(sqlite): linter complaints 2025-06-06 13:45:44 +02:00
Jakob Borg
05210d0325 fix(db): wrong prepare method 2025-04-07 10:58:14 +02:00
Jakob Borg
cf1cf85ce6 chore(db): use one SQLite database per folder (#10042)
This changes the database structure to use one database per folder, with
a small main database to coordinate. Reverts the prior change to buffer
all files in memory when pulling, meaning there is now a phase where the
WAL file will grow significantly, at least for initial sync of folders
with many directories.

---------

Co-authored-by: bt90 <btom1990@googlemail.com>
2025-04-06 14:30:43 +02:00