And use it for fixed and dynamic index. Please note that this
changes checksums for fixed indexes, so restore older backups
will fails now (not backward compatible).
To support incremental backups (where not all chunks are sent to the
server), a new parameter "reuse-csum" is introduced on the
"create_fixed_index" API call. When set and equal to last backups'
checksum, the backup writer clones the data from the last index of this
archive file, and only updates chunks it actually receives.
In incremental mode some checks usually done on closing an index cannot
be made, since they would be inaccurate.
Signed-off-by: Stefan Reiter <s.reiter@proxmox.com>
the last chunk does not have to be as big as the chunk_size,
just use the already available 'chunk_end' function which does the
correct thing
this fixes restoration of images whose sizes are not a multiple of
'chunk_size' as well
Signed-off-by: Dominik Csapak <d.csapak@proxmox.com>
The -sys, -tools and -api crate have now been merged into
the proxmx crate directly. Only macro crates are separate
(but still reexported by the proxmox crate in their
designated locations).
When we need to depend on "parts" of the crate later on
we'll just have to use features.
The reason is mostly that these modules had
inter-dependencies which really make them not independent
enough to be their own crates.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
proxmox::tools now has a Uuid module using the native
libuuid.
Adds build dependency: libuuid1 (which is a Pre-Depends of
util-linux, so always installed anyway).
Drops uuid + 16 more crate dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>
We want to be able to iterate through digests of index
files, but without always having to distinguish between
dynamic and fixed types, so add a trait we can use as a
trait object.
Unfortunately the iterator needs to yield copies as
iterators cannot yield values with life times when
represented as trait objects (Box<dyn Iterator<Item = ?>>)
Signed-off-by: Wolfgang Bumiller <w.bumiller@proxmox.com>