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improve recursion and fix various issues with unstowing / --dotfiles #107

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merged 13 commits into from
Apr 7, 2024

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@aspiers aspiers commented Apr 7, 2024

Closes #33.

There was a ton of duplication which is not maintainable, so refactor
everything into a single test which still covers the differences.

This in turn revealed some issues in the unstowing logic:

- We shouldn't conflict if we find a file which isn't a link or a
  directory; we can just skip over it.

- Unstowing with `--dotfiles` was using the wrong variable to obtain
  the package path, and as a result having to perform an unnecessary
  call to `adjust_dotfile()`.

So fix those at the same time.
Stow walks the package and target tree hierarchies by using mutually
recursive pairs of functions:

- `stow_contents()` and `stow_node()`
- `unstow_contents()` and `unstow_node()`

As Stow runs its planning from the target directory (`plan_*()` both
call `within_target_do()`), previously the parameters for these
included:

- `$target_subpath` (or `$target_subdir` in the `*_node()` functions):
  the relative path from the target top-level directory to the target
  subdirectory (initially `.` at the beginning of recursion).  For
  example, this could be `dir1/subdir1/file1`.

- `$source`: the relative path from the target _subdirectory_ (N.B. _not_
  top-level directory) to the package subdirectory.  For example, if
  the relative path to the Stow directory is `../stow`, this could be
  `../../../stow/pkg1/dir1/subdir1/file1`.  This is used when stowing
  to construct a new link, or when unstowing to detect whether the
  link can be unstowed.

Each time it descends into a further subdirectory of the target and
package, it appends the new path segment onto both of these, and also
prefixes `$source` with another `..`.  When the `--dotfiles` parameter
is enabled, it adjusts `$target_subdir`, performing the `dot-foo` =>
`.foo` adjustment on all segments of the path in one go.  In this
case, `$target_subpath` could be something like `.dir1/subdir1/file1`,
and the corresponding `$source` could be something like
`../../../stow/pkg1/dot-dir1/subdir1/file1`.

However this doesn't leave an easy way to obtain the relative path
from the target _top-level_ directory to the package subdirectory
(i.e. `../stow/pkg1/dot-dir1/subdir1/file1`), which is needed for
checking its existence and if necessary iterating over its contents.

The current implementation solves this by including an extra `$level`
parameter which tracks the recursion depth, and uses that to strip the
right number of leading path segments off the front of `$source`.
(In the above example, it would remove `../..`.)

This implementation isn't the most elegant because:

- It involves adding things to `$source` and then removing them again.

- It performs the `dot-` => `.` adjustment on every path segment
  at each level, which is overkill, since when recursing down a level,
  only adjustment on the final subdirectory is required since the higher
  segments have already had any required adjustment.

  This in turn requires `adjust_dotfile` to be more complex than it
  needs to be.

  It also prevents a potential future where we might want Stow to
  optionally start iterating from within a subdirectory of the whole
  package install image / target tree, avoiding adjustment at higher
  levels and only doing it at the levels below the starting point.

- It requires passing an extra `$level` parameter which can be
  automatically calculated simply by counting the number of slashes
  in `$target_subpath`.

So change the `$source` recursion parameter to instead track the
relative path from the top-level package directory to the package
subdirectory or file being considered for (un)stowing, and rename it
to avoid the ambiguity caused by the word "source".

Also automatically calculate the depth simply by counting the number
of slashes, and reconstruct `$source` when needed by combining the
relative path to the Stow directory with the package name and
`$target_subpath`.

Closes #33.
This should make it harder for Stow to do the right thing.
If the target directory as a file named X and a package has a
directory named X, or vice-versa, then it is impossible for Stow
to stow that entry X from the package, even if --adopt is supplied.

However we were previously only handling the former case, and not the
latter, and the test for the former was actually broken.  So fix
stow_contents() to handle both cases correctly, fix the broken test,
and add a new test for the latter case.
We use the term "directory" (or "dir" for short) rather than "folder".
Also explicitly say whether a test is stowing or unstowing, and fix
the odd typo.
Unstowing with `--dotfiles` didn't work with `--compat`, because when
traversing the target tree rather than the package tree, there was no
mechanism for mapping a `.foo` file or directory back to its original
`dot-foo` and determine whether it should be unstowed.

So add a reverse `unadjust_dotfile()` mapping mechanism to support
this.
@aspiers aspiers merged commit 143dbf8 into master Apr 7, 2024
5 checks passed
@aspiers aspiers deleted the improve-dotfiles-fix branch April 7, 2024 16:56
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Dotfiles option doesn't work with directories
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