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01:00 - 18:0018:00 - 23:00

01:25
So I am here
Just fetching the recent changes
fge
fge
Fail fast deletion is done ;)
Ok, let me over write the changes on my test file
fge
fge
Javadoc not yet, however
Just git stash them and forget the stash
git stash?
I always do :

git fetch upstream
git merge upstream/master
fge
fge
Merge?
You should rebase
Just git pull --rebase upstream/master
All in one go
Anyway, since fail fast deletion is done you can just restart from upstream/master now ;)
01:29
wait, what I am missing here
why rebase instead of merge?
fge
fge
Because I like history to be as linear as possible is all
Even when I develop new features on a separate branch I periodically rebase onto master to see whether there are any conflicts
And at the moment I am feature frenzy
Anyway, look at how I've done fail fast deletion
It will give you an idea
are you sure the command is
git pull --rebase upstream/master
fge
fge
Yes
'upstream/master' does not appear to be a git repository
fge
fge
Uhm
git pull --rebase upstream master, then?
01:35
I just realized I had never commited the FailDastDeletion test
:S
fge
fge
Nevermind that -- I've done it :)
how to stash unstaged changes???
fge
fge
git stash -u
(-u == --untracked)
brb in 5 minutes
fge
fge
In the meantime, look at how FailFastDeletion is done -- and for the other deletion mode, we will make use of .addSuppressed() in Throwable
01:37
yeah
I am on it
just pulled the latest code
fge
fge
Heh, I have made a mistake
Can you spot it?
(in a test)
you have an unused Path path; :P
is it with the symlinks?
fge
fge
01:53
The unused path is one mistake, yes
What with the symlinks?
Over here, I am trying to resolve something, which still doesn't exist. Does the path created willl have any issue?
symlink = withSymlink.resolve("symlink");
This may not be where the issue lies, its just a stupid question
fge
fge
Resolution will just perform resolution according to path resolution rules
`final FileVisitor<Path> visitor
= new FailFastDeletionVisitor(withSymlink);`
fge
fge
It won't care whether the created path will actually point to an actual entry
Well, that should delete the symlink
should you not pass the symlink path instead of the dir path?
fge
fge
01:56
And not the target file
No, I wanted to pass the directory
fge
fge
Remember, it's recursive
So, it is going to visit the symlink
And the goal here is to check that indeed, it is going to delete the symlink and not its target
ohh yeah
so the Assert statements are all fine
fge
fge
True enough, one could also create a symlink to a non existent target and check that deletion succeeds even in this case
Well, no, one is not
Try not to pull yet (I've fixed it) -- can you spot which one?
wait, lemme check\
1. Symlinktarget exist - We want this
fge
fge
01:59
Hint: that is not a logic problem
That's a programming problem
2. symlink file should not exist, yes we want it to get deleted
ohh
owww
fge
fge
Found it? ;)
yeah
lolz
there is no need of isTrue()
fge
fge
No, that is not it
.isTrue() IS needed
And that is the error in the last test
Anyway, the last changes fix it so --> pull --rebase
@fge can you check properly, where have you applied the isTrue()
fge
fge
02:03
Everywhere but in the last test
i dont really think it is needed
fge
fge
It IS needed
Try and write in a test assertThat(false);
In my case its everywhere
fge
fge
And run that test
Ah, so you did pull the latest changes already
fge
fge
02:04
But anyway, if PathAssert were improved we could write assertThat(somePath).exists().isSymbolicLink(); etc
(would be a good exercise for developing custom assertions)
Isn't this enough for checking assertion assertThat(Files.exists(symlinkTarget))?
fge
fge
No it isn't
Look at the return type of assertThat()
It only creates an assertion object
oww
then I have found another error
assertThat(Files.notExists(fileToDelete));
fge
fge
Which is why I asked you to pull the latest changes
This is the error I fixed
i see
finally i found something
ahh
fge
fge
02:07
So --> git pull --rebase origin master
Err
s,origin,upstream,
Well, whatever my remote is named
But yeah, could be a good exercise to improve PathAssert
So that we could write assertThat(somePath).exists().isDirectory().hasPermissions("rwxr-x---") or the like
That could even be a library to submit to the author: assertj-jsr202
yeah, nice
fge
fge
But we digress
On to recursive deletion but this time "try hard" -- damn, I cannot find a suitable name
Have you seen the DeletionMode enum that I created?
Sorry, DeletionRecursiveOption
And it is badly named
Yea, that should be DeletionMode
And KEEP_GOING looks fine
Anyway, the goal here is to try and keep deleting entries even if one fails
HOWEVER, if at least one deletion operation fails, we throw an operation at the end
And for this, we are going to use Throwable#addSuppressed()
keep deleting (even if we encounter failure)
ok
fge
fge
The plan is simple: we create a new exception class instance in the constructor; if we encounter a failure, we .addSuppressed() the exception to the exception; when we are done with the file visitor, we checked whether any exceptions were suppressed; if there were, we throw the created exception
Now, we need a name for that exception
And it should extend IOException at least
FailToDeleteException :P
CouldNotDeleteException
DeletionFailedException
fge
fge
02:19
I thought about RecursiveDeletionException
Or RecursiveDeletionFailureException, but that's starting to be very long a name
Well, I guess RecursiveDeletionException is fine
hmm
sounds good
fge
fge
Just in case you didn't know about it --> this is what I mean by "suppressing"; and this is how it will be checked, and tested
Well then, first, this exception needs to be created
And a skeleton for the FileVisitor (I guess we'll stick with KeepGoingDeletionVisitor since I can't think of a better name)
I hope we will keep the new exception in a separate class
fge
fge
Well, that will be a separate exception class, yes
There's already a separate package (which is missing an 's' at the end, I just noticed)
ohh
we already have one
Creating the exception class
fge
fge
02:30
tries to figure out in which situation an IOException can be thrown in preVisitDirectory()
when we do not have read access?
fge
fge
Well, given the descriptions that would lead us to .visitFileFailed()
fge
fge
I guess this is only in the event that you perform operations in there which can lead to an I/O exception...
Because in a scenario of pure walking I cannot see how this can happen at all
And indeed, the exception here is not an argument but a thrown exception
Well, anyway
No worries
That's not our problem
In fact, in this visitor we won't be throwing any exception, just collecting them
hm
@fge Should I rename DeletionRecursiveOption to DeletionMode ?
fge
fge
02:37
Yes please
Make that a separate commit
:S
Just changing the name should be a separate commit?
should I commit it now?
The file is being used in MoreFiles.java
changes done
fge
fge
@ItachiUchiha yes
Of course it should be
If you bundle that in another commit, there is no way to trace back why it has been done
One change, one commit
Commits which do more than one thing are evil
(and they complicate conflict resolutions when you have one)
While we are at it, rename "exception" to "exceptions" and make that a separate commit too
the package name?
fge
fge
Yes
just the package name com.github.fge.filesystem.exception to com.github.fge.filesystem.exceptions?
fge
fge
02:48
YEs
I just saw your PR; you could have bundled that package renaming with it ;)
Well, nevermind, if you perform the renaming and push to the same branch it will appear in the PR
7 mins ago, by fge
Commits which do more than one thing are evil
fge
fge
Commits, yes
fge
fge
A PR can consist of several commits ;)
got it
I hate CMD
I <3 Terminal
fge
fge
02:50
Install cygwin...
on it
what is to be done about this?
fge
fge
Looking, wait a minute
Well, I guess you can make sense of the categories
Just unselect the ones you don't want installed (I believe the "recycle sign" helps with that; can't remember, I haven't seen a Windows install for a while)
lolz
I need to install Ubuntu on this machine ASAP
fge
fge
Make sure you install git, though
/ Takes a note
I selected all
Lame internet speed
Makes me regret my decision
fge
fge
02:59
Well, that won't prevent you from committing the package renaming and pushing it, right? ;)
won't merge before seeing that change, there
Does this message sound too long ""Renamed package com.github.fge.filesystem.exception to com.github.fge.filesystem.exceptions"
fge
fge
Just "Rename package: exception -> exceptions" is enough
The commit was added automatically to the PR
:D
fge
fge
Told you ;)
Merged
/ Curses his internet connection as it is still downloading the package
fge
fge
03:09
Well, next is to create a skeleton for the new visitor
yes, lets be quick with this
I gotta leave in about 15 mins
Job calling..
anyways
so where were we
I have created the exception class
fge
fge
OK
and a constructor with message argument
fge
fge
Message?
It doesn't need one
It needs a path (the victim) and an instance of RecursiveDeletionException
It is MoreFiles.deleteRecursive() which will create the exception instance and pass it to the visitor
I am talking about the RecursiveDeletionException class
fge
fge
03:12
Ah
Just create all constructors inherited from IOException
Even if we only ever use one, that's OK
(this is what I usually do; and yes, it means that I don't use 75% of the constructors for these, but they don't hurt when they're unused, so...)
fge
fge
Yup
Apart from the formatting (but I'll fix that), that's OK
i have already fixed it
the indentation?
fge
fge
I'll fix that, not to worry
The visitor, now :p
fge
fge
03:16
Like the FailFastDeletionVisitor, the FileSystemProvider will be extracted from the Path given as an argument
Fuck, I forgot the exact name of the file
Looks at fge with innocent eyes
fge
fge
KeepGoingDeletionVisitor, you mean?
done ;)
fge
fge
Paste?
fge
fge
03:22
You need to add a RecursiveDeletionException argument (although, given the use which will be made of it, that could as well be passed as a Throwable, but...)
And make that a private final instance variable, just like the provider
Err
The Path
Added recursiveException = new RecursiveDeletionException(); in the constructor
private final RecursiveDeletionException recursiveException;
I actually did that before reading your comment :P
Yay, getting hold of few things
fge
fge
Just name it exception
:(
ok
done
err... i really gotta take a leave now :(
fge
fge
OK, so, as to the content of the methods; they will be as in FailFast, except that you try/catch all provider operations and do exception.addSuppressed(e)
I was having fun
fge
fge
03:25
And in the failed method, instead of throwing you also .addSuppressed
Grrr :p
PR please? I'll take it from here
No...
I wanna do it
can't you take something else ?
fge
fge
Ahwell, OK...
Pleads with innocent eyes
yay!!!!!!!!!!!!!1
fge
fge
That would be "pleads"
fge
fge
03:33
Well, have fun at work but don't forget me :p
Well there is no question of forgetting anyone, coz I will still be online from work :P
c ya
 
10 hours later…
13:20
hi @fge
lets get started?
fge
fge
13:31
OK
Sorry, but I did intModeToPosix, I needed it
And I have a problem right now -- there's a bug in memoryfs
It doesn't respect the umask and I need that :(
@fge Oh okay, if I can be of any help?
fge
fge
I'm trying to think of a way to circumvent that
Okay sure
fge
fge
In the meanwhile, there is something a little complex which you may be interested in
The problem of file overwriting
Yeah sure.
What's the goal and what exactly we need?
fge
fge
13:34
Explanation: a lot of people today get it wrong
They will overwrite the file directly
But that's not what should be done
If the write fails, you lose both the contents of the original file and the new contents
What should be done is: write the contents to another file, ensure that it is safely written, and then safely replace the old file
Is that so? I have tried it so many times and it doesn't happen like this
Got it
fge
fge
Well, you have never had a write fail on you I gather ;)
@fge A few times
fge
fge
And you lost the contents of the original in this case, right?
@fge Nope. Original remained as it is
I am talking about Windows 7
fge
fge
13:37
Hmmthen you didn't actually write into the file
Never failed or tried to get fail on unix stuff
Well, I understand your point and that's a good thing to do.
So, in order to accomplish this, we need to write a replace(Path path1, Path path2) where path2 will replace path1?
fge
fge
No, that's not what we are going to do
By Path I mean the file
fge
fge
We are going to create an object which will wrap a path which the user wants to modify
This object needs to give access to an InputStream and Reader to read the contents of the file, and an OutputStream and Writer which will point to a temporary file which will be created for him/her
The user performs his/her stuff, and when the object is .close()d, the rename happens
We need to be able to detect as well whether atomic moves are supported
If they are we will use them because it is safer
Okay
fge
fge
13:45
So, we will need an abstract class with common elements for both scenarios; a static factory method in this abstract class, taking only the target file as an argument, will test for atomic move support; according to the test, a different implementation of the class will be provided
Either with, or without atomic moves at the end
The temporary file will be created in the same directory as the file to be modified
With a name that needs to be made up
And... That's about it
That's quite some work ;)
First, an interface needs to be defined
And I can't think of a name at the moment
Yep
And I am trying to think how exactly I am gonna design it
fge
fge
The critical part of it is .close()
Ah, also, it is NOT required to be thread safe
This will be documented
Okay sure
fge
fge
Ah, no, hold on, the static factory method will in fact take two arguments; the second will be the encoding to use
(if the user reads text)
Encoding mandatory
Emmmm
Okay
fge
fge
13:50
I've seen enough bugs due to the user forgetting to specify the encoding when reading/writing text
But right now, the interface
I have a little idea, waiting for yours ;)
Okay sure
My idea will not be as good as yours
fge
fge
Yay, new hat
Well, you can't know before you try ;)
Well, I will put everything that is in my mind so that you could see, which way I am thinking :P
We can create an interface named Moveable. The interface will have following methods:

isSameDirectory(File f);//is f in same directory as this?
isFileExists();// which will tell if the file exists
isEnoughSpace();//Don't know if we need that but sometimes memory can be the issue
move();//move the file
isFile()//if it's a file
isDirectory();//if it's a directory
well, move will be like this: move(File f);//move this to f
fge
fge
14:05
Uh, why? Files already has nearly all of these; as to enough space, the FileStore can have that information (if the fs supports it)
Rather, the tests for these will be in the method which will return an instance; we won't care about ENOSPC however
By the time we get this information, if we ever get it, it will be obsolete
What is more, the API does not tell what return value should be returned if the FileStore does not support it
No, let's suppose that all checks have already been done
This is not this interface's role to do that
Its only role is to provide access to the original file, the file to write to, and to safely rename when the user closes it
Hmm okay
14:30
Well
Can not come up with any idea :(
@fge I am back..
@Ita
May be you can help my mind putting in the right direction?
@fge have you committed anything after my PR?
Seems you have
Should I fetch and merge, or should I stash and pull. Errrr..
@Mr.777 temme
14:34
@fge The group's name should be Three Musketeers :P
lolz
I used to have a Whatsapp group with the same name
@ItachiUchiha Need to design an interface whose role is to provide access to the original file(the file which will be replaced), the file (which is going to replace) and then rename the file after it's done.
:D
@Mr.777 you need an interface with public methods to access the files
lol :P
interface only have public methods :P
there you go, you already know what to do :P
14:43
hahahahahha thanks a lot for helping me so muchhhhhh, you actually spoon fed me :P
fge
fge
Sorry, I'm busy debugging memoryfs :(
fge
fge
15:40
Aah, good, I fixed the umask bug
Congrats
16:07
@fge lemme know when we can continue
yeah plz :(
fge
fge
Argh, sorry :p
I'm preparing the pull request for memoryfs
well that wont take much time
fge
fge
Uhwell, the code is rather a mess
fge
fge
16:40
Sorry, it takes quite long
Junit sucks
Why do @BeforeClass and @AfterClass have to be static?
That makes no sense at all
16:54
RO plz
inb4 everyone begs for RO
17:25
OakBot Online.
Shutting down. See you later.
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01:00 - 18:0018:00 - 23:00

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