# -*- coding: utf-8 -*- # Copyright 2011 Google Inc. All Rights Reserved. # Copyright 2011, Nexenta Systems Inc. # # Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); # you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. # You may obtain a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, # WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. # See the License for the specific language governing permissions and # limitations under the License. """Implementation of Unix-like cp command for cloud storage providers.""" from __future__ import absolute_import import os import time import traceback from gslib import copy_helper from gslib.cat_helper import CatHelper from gslib.command import Command from gslib.command_argument import CommandArgument from gslib.commands.compose import MAX_COMPONENT_COUNT from gslib.copy_helper import CreateCopyHelperOpts from gslib.copy_helper import GZIP_ALL_FILES from gslib.copy_helper import ItemExistsError from gslib.copy_helper import Manifest from gslib.copy_helper import PARALLEL_UPLOAD_TEMP_NAMESPACE from gslib.copy_helper import SkipUnsupportedObjectError from gslib.cs_api_map import ApiSelector from gslib.exception import CommandException from gslib.name_expansion import NameExpansionIterator from gslib.storage_url import ContainsWildcard from gslib.util import CreateLock from gslib.util import DEBUGLEVEL_DUMP_REQUESTS from gslib.util import GetCloudApiInstance from gslib.util import IsCloudSubdirPlaceholder from gslib.util import MakeHumanReadable from gslib.util import NO_MAX from gslib.util import RemoveCRLFFromString from gslib.util import StdinIterator _SYNOPSIS = """ gsutil cp [OPTION]... src_url dst_url gsutil cp [OPTION]... src_url... dst_url gsutil cp [OPTION]... -I dst_url """ _SYNOPSIS_TEXT = """ SYNOPSIS """ + _SYNOPSIS _DESCRIPTION_TEXT = """ DESCRIPTION The gsutil cp command allows you to copy data between your local file system and the cloud, copy data within the cloud, and copy data between cloud storage providers. For example, to copy all text files from the local directory to a bucket you could do: gsutil cp *.txt gs://my-bucket Similarly, you can download text files from a bucket by doing: gsutil cp gs://my-bucket/*.txt . If you want to copy an entire directory tree you need to use the -r option: gsutil cp -r dir gs://my-bucket If you have a large number of files to transfer you might want to use the gsutil -m option, to perform a parallel (multi-threaded/multi-processing) copy: gsutil -m cp -r dir gs://my-bucket You can pass a list of URLs (one per line) to copy on stdin instead of as command line arguments by using the -I option. This allows you to use gsutil in a pipeline to upload or download files / objects as generated by a program, such as: some_program | gsutil -m cp -I gs://my-bucket or: some_program | gsutil -m cp -I ./download_dir The contents of stdin can name files, cloud URLs, and wildcards of files and cloud URLs. """ _NAME_CONSTRUCTION_TEXT = """ HOW NAMES ARE CONSTRUCTED The gsutil cp command strives to name objects in a way consistent with how Linux cp works, which causes names to be constructed in varying ways depending on whether you're performing a recursive directory copy or copying individually named objects; and whether you're copying to an existing or non-existent directory. When performing recursive directory copies, object names are constructed that mirror the source directory structure starting at the point of recursive processing. For example, if dir1/dir2 contains the file a/b/c then the command: gsutil cp -r dir1/dir2 gs://my-bucket will create the object gs://my-bucket/dir2/a/b/c. In contrast, copying individually named files will result in objects named by the final path component of the source files. For example, again assuming dir1/dir2 contains a/b/c, the command: gsutil cp dir1/dir2/** gs://my-bucket will create the object gs://my-bucket/c. The same rules apply for downloads: recursive copies of buckets and bucket subdirectories produce a mirrored filename structure, while copying individually (or wildcard) named objects produce flatly named files. Note that in the above example the '**' wildcard matches all names anywhere under dir. The wildcard '*' will match names just one level deep. For more details see "gsutil help wildcards". There's an additional wrinkle when working with subdirectories: the resulting names depend on whether the destination subdirectory exists. For example, if gs://my-bucket/subdir exists as a subdirectory, the command: gsutil cp -r dir1/dir2 gs://my-bucket/subdir will create the object gs://my-bucket/subdir/dir2/a/b/c. In contrast, if gs://my-bucket/subdir does not exist, this same gsutil cp command will create the object gs://my-bucket/subdir/a/b/c. Note: If you use the `Google Cloud Platform Console `_ to create folders, it does so by creating a "placeholder" object that ends with a "/" character. gsutil skips these objects when downloading from the cloud to the local file system, because attempting to create a file that ends with a "/" is not allowed on Linux and MacOS. Because of this, it is recommended that you not create objects that end with "/" (unless you don't need to be able to download such objects using gsutil). """ _SUBDIRECTORIES_TEXT = """ COPYING TO/FROM SUBDIRECTORIES; DISTRIBUTING TRANSFERS ACROSS MACHINES You can use gsutil to copy to and from subdirectories by using a command like: gsutil cp -r dir gs://my-bucket/data This will cause dir and all of its files and nested subdirectories to be copied under the specified destination, resulting in objects with names like gs://my-bucket/data/dir/a/b/c. Similarly you can download from bucket subdirectories by using a command like: gsutil cp -r gs://my-bucket/data dir This will cause everything nested under gs://my-bucket/data to be downloaded into dir, resulting in files with names like dir/data/a/b/c. Copying subdirectories is useful if you want to add data to an existing bucket directory structure over time. It's also useful if you want to parallelize uploads and downloads across multiple machines (potentially reducing overall transfer time compared with simply running gsutil -m cp on one machine). For example, if your bucket contains this structure: gs://my-bucket/data/result_set_01/ gs://my-bucket/data/result_set_02/ ... gs://my-bucket/data/result_set_99/ you could perform concurrent downloads across 3 machines by running these commands on each machine, respectively: gsutil -m cp -r gs://my-bucket/data/result_set_[0-3]* dir gsutil -m cp -r gs://my-bucket/data/result_set_[4-6]* dir gsutil -m cp -r gs://my-bucket/data/result_set_[7-9]* dir Note that dir could be a local directory on each machine, or it could be a directory mounted off of a shared file server; whether the latter performs acceptably will depend on a number of factors, so we recommend experimenting to find out what works best for your computing environment. """ _COPY_IN_CLOUD_TEXT = """ COPYING IN THE CLOUD AND METADATA PRESERVATION If both the source and destination URL are cloud URLs from the same provider, gsutil copies data "in the cloud" (i.e., without downloading to and uploading from the machine where you run gsutil). In addition to the performance and cost advantages of doing this, copying in the cloud preserves metadata (like Content-Type and Cache-Control). In contrast, when you download data from the cloud it ends up in a file, which has no associated metadata. Thus, unless you have some way to hold on to or re-create that metadata, downloading to a file will not retain the metadata. Copies spanning locations and/or storage classes cause data to be rewritten in the cloud, which may take some time (but still will be faster than downloading and re-uploading). Such operations can be resumed with the same command if they are interrupted, so long as the command parameters are identical. Note that by default, the gsutil cp command does not copy the object ACL to the new object, and instead will use the default bucket ACL (see "gsutil help defacl"). You can override this behavior with the -p option (see OPTIONS below). One additional note about copying in the cloud: If the destination bucket has versioning enabled, by default gsutil cp will copy only live versions of the source object(s). For example: gsutil cp gs://bucket1/obj gs://bucket2 will cause only the single live version of gs://bucket1/obj to be copied to gs://bucket2, even if there are archived versions of gs://bucket1/obj. To also copy archived versions, use the -A flag: gsutil cp -A gs://bucket1/obj gs://bucket2 The gsutil -m flag is disallowed when using the cp -A flag, to ensure that version ordering is preserved. """ _CHECKSUM_VALIDATION_TEXT = """ CHECKSUM VALIDATION At the end of every upload or download the gsutil cp command validates that the checksum it computes for the source file/object matches the checksum the service computes. If the checksums do not match, gsutil will delete the corrupted object and print a warning message. This very rarely happens, but if it does, please contact gs-team@google.com. If you know the MD5 of a file before uploading you can specify it in the Content-MD5 header, which will cause the cloud storage service to reject the upload if the MD5 doesn't match the value computed by the service. For example: % gsutil hash obj Hashing obj: Hashes [base64] for obj: Hash (crc32c): lIMoIw== Hash (md5): VgyllJgiiaRAbyUUIqDMmw== % gsutil -h Content-MD5:VgyllJgiiaRAbyUUIqDMmw== cp obj gs://your-bucket/obj Copying file://obj [Content-Type=text/plain]... Uploading gs://your-bucket/obj: 182 b/182 B If the checksum didn't match the service would instead reject the upload and gsutil would print a message like: BadRequestException: 400 Provided MD5 hash "VgyllJgiiaRAbyUUIqDMmw==" doesn't match calculated MD5 hash "7gyllJgiiaRAbyUUIqDMmw==". Even if you don't do this gsutil will delete the object if the computed checksum mismatches, but specifying the Content-MD5 header has several advantages: 1. It prevents the corrupted object from becoming visible at all, whereas otherwise it would be visible for 1-3 seconds before gsutil deletes it. 2. If an object already exists with the given name, specifying the Content-MD5 header will cause the existing object never to be replaced, whereas otherwise it would be replaced by the corrupted object and then deleted a few seconds later. 3. It will definitively prevent the corrupted object from being left in the cloud, whereas the gsutil approach of deleting after the upload completes could fail if (for example) the gsutil process gets ^C'd between upload and deletion request. 4. It supports a customer-to-service integrity check handoff. For example, if you have a content production pipeline that generates data to be uploaded to the cloud along with checksums of that data, specifying the MD5 computed by your content pipeline when you run gsutil cp will ensure that the checksums match all the way through the process (e.g., detecting if data gets corrupted on your local disk between the time it was written by your content pipeline and the time it was uploaded to GCS). Note: The Content-MD5 header is ignored for composite objects, because such objects only have a CRC32C checksum. """ _RETRY_HANDLING_TEXT = """ RETRY HANDLING The cp command will retry when failures occur, but if enough failures happen during a particular copy or delete operation the cp command will skip that object and move on. At the end of the copy run if any failures were not successfully retried, the cp command will report the count of failures, and exit with non-zero status. Note that there are cases where retrying will never succeed, such as if you don't have write permission to the destination bucket or if the destination path for some objects is longer than the maximum allowed length. For more details about gsutil's retry handling, please see "gsutil help retries". """ _RESUMABLE_TRANSFERS_TEXT = """ RESUMABLE TRANSFERS gsutil automatically performs a resumable upload whenever you use the cp command to upload an object that is larger than 8 MiB. You do not need to specify any special command line options to make this happen. If your upload is interrupted you can restart the upload by running the same cp command that you ran to start the upload. Until the upload has completed successfully, it will not be visible at the destination object and will not replace any existing object the upload is intended to overwrite. However, see the section on PARALLEL COMPOSITE UPLOADS, which may leave temporary component objects in place during the upload process. Similarly, gsutil automatically performs resumable downloads (using standard HTTP Range GET operations) whenever you use the cp command, unless the destination is a stream. In this case, a partially downloaded temporary file will be visible in the destination directory. Upon completion, the original file is deleted and overwritten with the downloaded contents. Resumable uploads and downloads store state information in files under ~/.gsutil, named by the destination object or file. If you attempt to resume a transfer from a machine with a different directory, the transfer will start over from scratch. See also "gsutil help prod" for details on using resumable transfers in production. """ _STREAMING_TRANSFERS_TEXT = """ STREAMING TRANSFERS Use '-' in place of src_url or dst_url to perform a streaming transfer. For example: long_running_computation | gsutil cp - gs://my-bucket/obj Streaming uploads using the JSON API (see "gsutil help apis") are buffered in memory part-way back into the file and can thus retry in the event of network or service problems. Streaming transfers using the XML API do not support resumable uploads/downloads. If you have a large amount of data to upload (say, more than 100 MiB) it is recommended that you write the data to a local file and then copy that file to the cloud rather than streaming it (and similarly for large downloads). WARNING: When performing streaming transfers gsutil does not compute a checksum of the uploaded or downloaded data. Therefore, we recommend that users either perform their own validation of the data or use non-streaming transfers (which perform integrity checking automatically). """ _SLICED_OBJECT_DOWNLOADS_TEXT = """ SLICED OBJECT DOWNLOADS gsutil uses HTTP Range GET requests to perform "sliced" downloads in parallel when downloading large objects from Google Cloud Storage. This means that disk space for the temporary download destination file will be pre-allocated and byte ranges (slices) within the file will be downloaded in parallel. Once all slices have completed downloading, the temporary file will be renamed to the destination file. No additional local disk space is required for this operation. This feature is only available for Google Cloud Storage objects because it requires a fast composable checksum (CRC32C) that can be used to verify the data integrity of the slices. And because it depends on CRC32C, using sliced object downloads also requires a compiled crcmod (see "gsutil help crcmod") on the machine performing the download. If compiled crcmod is not available, a non-sliced object download will instead be performed. Note: since sliced object downloads cause multiple writes to occur at various locations on disk, this mechanism can degrade performance for disks with slow seek times, especially for large numbers of slices. While the default number of slices is set small to avoid this problem, you can disable sliced object download if necessary by setting the "sliced_object_download_threshold" variable in the .boto config file to 0. """ _PARALLEL_COMPOSITE_UPLOADS_TEXT = """ PARALLEL COMPOSITE UPLOADS gsutil can automatically use `object composition `_ to perform uploads in parallel for large, local files being uploaded to Google Cloud Storage. If enabled (see next paragraph), a large file will be split into component pieces that are uploaded in parallel and then composed in the cloud (and the temporary components finally deleted). No additional local disk space is required for this operation. Using parallel composite uploads presents a tradeoff between upload performance and download configuration: If you enable parallel composite uploads your uploads will run faster, but someone will need to install a compiled crcmod (see "gsutil help crcmod") on every machine where objects are downloaded by gsutil or other Python applications. For some distributions this is easy (e.g., it comes pre-installed on MacOS), but in other cases some users have found it difficult. Because of this, at present parallel composite uploads are disabled by default. Google is actively working with a number of the Linux distributions to get crcmod included with the stock distribution. Once that is done we will re-enable parallel composite uploads by default in gsutil. Parallel composite uploads should not be used with NEARLINE storage class buckets, because doing this would incur an early deletion charge for each component object. To try parallel composite uploads you can run the command: gsutil -o GSUtil:parallel_composite_upload_threshold=150M cp bigfile gs://your-bucket where bigfile is larger than 150 MiB. When you do this notice that the upload progress indicator continuously updates for several different uploads at once (corresponding to each of the sections of the file being uploaded in parallel), until the parallel upload completes. If after trying this you want to enable parallel composite uploads for all of your future uploads (notwithstanding the caveats mentioned earlier), you can uncomment and set the "parallel_composite_upload_threshold" config value in your .boto configuration file to this value. Note that the crcmod problem only impacts downloads via Python applications (such as gsutil). If all users who need to download the data using gsutil or other Python applications can install crcmod, or if no Python users will need to download your objects, it makes sense to enable parallel composite uploads (see above). For example, if you use gsutil to upload video assets, and those assets will only ever be served via a Java application, it would make sense to enable parallel composite uploads on your machine (there are efficient CRC32C implementations available in Java). If a parallel composite upload fails prior to composition, re-running the gsutil command will take advantage of resumable uploads for the components that failed, and the component objects will be deleted after the first successful attempt. Any temporary objects that were uploaded successfully before gsutil failed will still exist until the upload is completed successfully. The temporary objects will be named in the following fashion: %s where is a numerical value, and is an MD5 hash (not related to the hash of the contents of the file or object). To avoid leaving temporary objects around, you should make sure to check the exit status from the gsutil command. This can be done in a bash script, for example, by doing: if ! gsutil cp ./local-file gs://your-bucket/your-object; then << Code that handles failures >> fi Or, for copying a directory, use this instead: if ! gsutil cp -c -L cp.log -r ./dir gs://bucket; then << Code that handles failures >> fi One important caveat is that files uploaded using parallel composite uploads are subject to a maximum number of components limit. For example, if you upload a large file that gets split into %d components, and try to compose it with another object with %d components, the operation will fail because it exceeds the %d component limit. If you wish to compose an object later and the component limit is a concern, it is recommended that you disable parallel composite uploads for that transfer. Also note that an object uploaded using parallel composite uploads will have a CRC32C hash, but it will not have an MD5 hash (and because of that, users who download the object must have crcmod installed, as noted earlier). For details see "gsutil help crc32c". Parallel composite uploads can be disabled by setting the "parallel_composite_upload_threshold" variable in the .boto config file to 0. """ % (PARALLEL_UPLOAD_TEMP_NAMESPACE, 10, MAX_COMPONENT_COUNT - 9, MAX_COMPONENT_COUNT) _CHANGING_TEMP_DIRECTORIES_TEXT = """ CHANGING TEMP DIRECTORIES gsutil writes data to a temporary directory in several cases: - when compressing data to be uploaded (see the -z and -Z options) - when decompressing data being downloaded (when the data has Content-Encoding:gzip, e.g., as happens when uploaded using gsutil cp -z or gsutil cp -Z) - when running integration tests (using the gsutil test command) In these cases it's possible the temp file location on your system that gsutil selects by default may not have enough space. If gsutil runs out of space during one of these operations (e.g., raising "CommandException: Inadequate temp space available to compress " during a gsutil cp -z operation), you can change where it writes these temp files by setting the TMPDIR environment variable. On Linux and MacOS you can do this either by running gsutil this way: TMPDIR=/some/directory gsutil cp ... or by adding this line to your ~/.bashrc file and then restarting the shell before running gsutil: export TMPDIR=/some/directory On Windows 7 you can change the TMPDIR environment variable from Start -> Computer -> System -> Advanced System Settings -> Environment Variables. You need to reboot after making this change for it to take effect. (Rebooting is not necessary after running the export command on Linux and MacOS.) """ _COPYING_SPECIAL_FILES_TEXT = """ COPYING SPECIAL FILES gsutil cp does not support copying special file types such as sockets, device files, named pipes, or any other non-standard files intended to represent an operating system resource. You should not run gsutil cp with sources that include such files (for example, recursively copying the root directory on Linux that includes /dev ). If you do, gsutil cp may fail or hang. """ _OPTIONS_TEXT = """ OPTIONS -a canned_acl Sets named canned_acl when uploaded objects created. See "gsutil help acls" for further details. -A Copy all source versions from a source buckets/folders. If not set, only the live version of each source object is copied. Note: this option is only useful when the destination bucket has versioning enabled. -c If an error occurs, continue to attempt to copy the remaining files. If any copies were unsuccessful, gsutil's exit status will be non-zero even if this flag is set. This option is implicitly set when running "gsutil -m cp...". Note: -c only applies to the actual copying operation. If an error occurs while iterating over the files in the local directory (e.g., invalid Unicode file name) gsutil will print an error message and abort. -D Copy in "daisy chain" mode, i.e., copying between two buckets by hooking a download to an upload, via the machine where gsutil is run. This stands in contrast to the default, where data are copied between two buckets "in the cloud", i.e., without needing to copy via the machine where gsutil runs. By default, a "copy in the cloud" when the source is a composite object will retain the composite nature of the object. However, Daisy chain mode can be used to change a composite object into a non-composite object. For example: gsutil cp -D -p gs://bucket/obj gs://bucket/obj_tmp gsutil mv -p gs://bucket/obj_tmp gs://bucket/obj Note: Daisy chain mode is automatically used when copying between providers (e.g., to copy data from Google Cloud Storage to another provider). -e Exclude symlinks. When specified, symbolic links will not be copied. -I Causes gsutil to read the list of files or objects to copy from stdin. This allows you to run a program that generates the list of files to upload/download. -L Outputs a manifest log file with detailed information about each item that was copied. This manifest contains the following information for each item: - Source path. - Destination path. - Source size. - Bytes transferred. - MD5 hash. - UTC date and time transfer was started in ISO 8601 format. - UTC date and time transfer was completed in ISO 8601 format. - Upload id, if a resumable upload was performed. - Final result of the attempted transfer, success or failure. - Failure details, if any. If the log file already exists, gsutil will use the file as an input to the copy process, and will also append log items to the existing file. Files/objects that are marked in the existing log file as having been successfully copied (or skipped) will be ignored. Files/objects without entries will be copied and ones previously marked as unsuccessful will be retried. This can be used in conjunction with the -c option to build a script that copies a large number of objects reliably, using a bash script like the following: until gsutil cp -c -L cp.log -r ./dir gs://bucket; do sleep 1 done The -c option will cause copying to continue after failures occur, and the -L option will allow gsutil to pick up where it left off without duplicating work. The loop will continue running as long as gsutil exits with a non-zero status (such a status indicates there was at least one failure during the gsutil run). Note: If you're trying to synchronize the contents of a directory and a bucket (or two buckets), see "gsutil help rsync". -n No-clobber. When specified, existing files or objects at the destination will not be overwritten. Any items that are skipped by this option will be reported as being skipped. This option will perform an additional GET request to check if an item exists before attempting to upload the data. This will save retransmitting data, but the additional HTTP requests may make small object transfers slower and more expensive. -p Causes ACLs to be preserved when copying in the cloud. Note that this option has performance and cost implications when using the XML API, as it requires separate HTTP calls for interacting with ACLs. (There are no such performance or cost implications when using the -p option with the JSON API.) The performance issue can be mitigated to some degree by using gsutil -m cp to cause parallel copying. Note that this option only works if you have OWNER access to all of the objects that are copied. You can avoid the additional performance and cost of using cp -p if you want all objects in the destination bucket to end up with the same ACL by setting a default object ACL on that bucket instead of using cp -p. See "help gsutil defacl". Note that it's not valid to specify both the -a and -p options together. -R, -r The -R and -r options are synonymous. Causes directories, buckets, and bucket subdirectories to be copied recursively. If you neglect to use this option for an upload, gsutil will copy any files it finds and skip any directories. Similarly, neglecting to specify this option for a download will cause gsutil to copy any objects at the current bucket directory level, and skip any subdirectories. -U Skip objects with unsupported object types instead of failing. Unsupported object types are Amazon S3 Objects in the GLACIER storage class. -v Requests that the version-specific URL for each uploaded object be printed. Given this URL you can make future upload requests that are safe in the face of concurrent updates, because Google Cloud Storage will refuse to perform the update if the current object version doesn't match the version-specific URL. See "gsutil help versions" for more details. -z Applies gzip content-encoding to file uploads with the given extensions. This is useful when uploading files with compressible content (such as .js, .css, or .html files) because it saves network bandwidth and space in Google Cloud Storage, which in turn reduces storage costs. When you specify the -z option, the data from your files is compressed before it is uploaded, but your actual files are left uncompressed on the local disk. The uploaded objects retain the Content-Type and name of the original files but are given a Content-Encoding header with the value "gzip" to indicate that the object data stored are compressed on the Google Cloud Storage servers. For example, the following command: gsutil cp -z html -a public-read cattypes.html gs://mycats will do all of the following: - Upload as the object gs://mycats/cattypes.html (cp command) - Set the Content-Type to text/html (based on file extension) - Compress the data in the file cattypes.html (-z option) - Set the Content-Encoding to gzip (-z option) - Set the ACL to public-read (-a option) - If a user tries to view cattypes.html in a browser, the browser will know to uncompress the data based on the Content-Encoding header, and to render it as HTML based on the Content-Type header. Note that if you download an object with Content-Encoding:gzip gsutil will decompress the content before writing the local file. -Z Applies gzip content-encoding to file uploads. This option works like the -z option described above, but it applies to all uploaded files, regardless of extension. Warning: If you use this option and some of the source files don't compress well (e.g., that's often true of binary data), this option may result in files taking up more space in the cloud than they would if left uncompressed. """ _DETAILED_HELP_TEXT = '\n\n'.join([_SYNOPSIS_TEXT, _DESCRIPTION_TEXT, _NAME_CONSTRUCTION_TEXT, _SUBDIRECTORIES_TEXT, _COPY_IN_CLOUD_TEXT, _CHECKSUM_VALIDATION_TEXT, _RETRY_HANDLING_TEXT, _RESUMABLE_TRANSFERS_TEXT, _STREAMING_TRANSFERS_TEXT, _SLICED_OBJECT_DOWNLOADS_TEXT, _PARALLEL_COMPOSITE_UPLOADS_TEXT, _CHANGING_TEMP_DIRECTORIES_TEXT, _COPYING_SPECIAL_FILES_TEXT, _OPTIONS_TEXT]) CP_SUB_ARGS = 'a:AcDeIL:MNnprRtUvz:Z' def _CopyFuncWrapper(cls, args, thread_state=None): cls.CopyFunc(args, thread_state=thread_state) def _CopyExceptionHandler(cls, e): """Simple exception handler to allow post-completion status.""" cls.logger.error(str(e)) cls.op_failure_count += 1 cls.logger.debug('\n\nEncountered exception while copying:\n%s\n', traceback.format_exc()) def _RmExceptionHandler(cls, e): """Simple exception handler to allow post-completion status.""" cls.logger.error(str(e)) class CpCommand(Command): """Implementation of gsutil cp command. Note that CpCommand is run for both gsutil cp and gsutil mv. The latter happens by MvCommand calling CpCommand and passing the hidden (undocumented) -M option. This allows the copy and remove needed for each mv to run together (rather than first running all the cp's and then all the rm's, as we originally had implemented), which in turn avoids the following problem with removing the wrong objects: starting with a bucket containing only the object gs://bucket/obj, say the user does: gsutil mv gs://bucket/* gs://bucket/d.txt If we ran all the cp's and then all the rm's and we didn't expand the wildcard first, the cp command would first copy gs://bucket/obj to gs://bucket/d.txt, and the rm command would then remove that object. In the implementation prior to gsutil release 3.12 we avoided this by building a list of objects to process and then running the copies and then the removes; but building the list up front limits scalability (compared with the current approach of processing the bucket listing iterator on the fly). """ # Command specification. See base class for documentation. command_spec = Command.CreateCommandSpec( 'cp', command_name_aliases=['copy'], usage_synopsis=_SYNOPSIS, min_args=1, max_args=NO_MAX, # -t is deprecated but leave intact for now to avoid breakage. supported_sub_args=CP_SUB_ARGS, file_url_ok=True, provider_url_ok=False, urls_start_arg=0, gs_api_support=[ApiSelector.XML, ApiSelector.JSON], gs_default_api=ApiSelector.JSON, supported_private_args=['testcallbackfile='], argparse_arguments=[ CommandArgument.MakeZeroOrMoreCloudOrFileURLsArgument() ] ) # Help specification. See help_provider.py for documentation. help_spec = Command.HelpSpec( help_name='cp', help_name_aliases=['copy'], help_type='command_help', help_one_line_summary='Copy files and objects', help_text=_DETAILED_HELP_TEXT, subcommand_help_text={}, ) # pylint: disable=too-many-statements def CopyFunc(self, name_expansion_result, thread_state=None): """Worker function for performing the actual copy (and rm, for mv).""" gsutil_api = GetCloudApiInstance(self, thread_state=thread_state) copy_helper_opts = copy_helper.GetCopyHelperOpts() if copy_helper_opts.perform_mv: cmd_name = 'mv' else: cmd_name = self.command_name src_url = name_expansion_result.source_storage_url exp_src_url = name_expansion_result.expanded_storage_url src_url_names_container = name_expansion_result.names_container have_multiple_srcs = name_expansion_result.is_multi_source_request if src_url.IsCloudUrl() and src_url.IsProvider(): raise CommandException( 'The %s command does not allow provider-only source URLs (%s)' % (cmd_name, src_url)) if have_multiple_srcs: copy_helper.InsistDstUrlNamesContainer( self.exp_dst_url, self.have_existing_dst_container, cmd_name) # Various GUI tools (like the GCS web console) create placeholder objects # ending with '/' when the user creates an empty directory. Normally these # tools should delete those placeholders once objects have been written # "under" the directory, but sometimes the placeholders are left around. We # need to filter them out here, otherwise if the user tries to rsync from # GCS to a local directory it will result in a directory/file conflict # (e.g., trying to download an object called "mydata/" where the local # directory "mydata" exists). if IsCloudSubdirPlaceholder(exp_src_url): # We used to output the message 'Skipping cloud sub-directory placeholder # object...' but we no longer do so because it caused customer confusion. return if copy_helper_opts.use_manifest and self.manifest.WasSuccessful( exp_src_url.url_string): return if copy_helper_opts.perform_mv: if name_expansion_result.names_container: # Use recursion_requested when performing name expansion for the # directory mv case so we can determine if any of the source URLs are # directories (and then use cp -r and rm -r to perform the move, to # match the behavior of Linux mv (which when moving a directory moves # all the contained files). self.recursion_requested = True # Disallow wildcard src URLs when moving directories, as supporting it # would make the name transformation too complex and would also be # dangerous (e.g., someone could accidentally move many objects to the # wrong name, or accidentally overwrite many objects). if ContainsWildcard(src_url.url_string): raise CommandException('The mv command disallows naming source ' 'directories using wildcards') if (self.exp_dst_url.IsFileUrl() and not os.path.exists(self.exp_dst_url.object_name) and have_multiple_srcs): os.makedirs(self.exp_dst_url.object_name) dst_url = copy_helper.ConstructDstUrl( src_url, exp_src_url, src_url_names_container, have_multiple_srcs, self.exp_dst_url, self.have_existing_dst_container, self.recursion_requested) dst_url = copy_helper.FixWindowsNaming(src_url, dst_url) copy_helper.CheckForDirFileConflict(exp_src_url, dst_url) if copy_helper.SrcDstSame(exp_src_url, dst_url): raise CommandException('%s: "%s" and "%s" are the same file - ' 'abort.' % (cmd_name, exp_src_url, dst_url)) if dst_url.IsCloudUrl() and dst_url.HasGeneration(): raise CommandException('%s: a version-specific URL\n(%s)\ncannot be ' 'the destination for gsutil cp - abort.' % (cmd_name, dst_url)) elapsed_time = bytes_transferred = 0 try: if copy_helper_opts.use_manifest: self.manifest.Initialize( exp_src_url.url_string, dst_url.url_string) (elapsed_time, bytes_transferred, result_url, md5) = ( copy_helper.PerformCopy( self.logger, exp_src_url, dst_url, gsutil_api, self, _CopyExceptionHandler, allow_splitting=True, headers=self.headers, manifest=self.manifest, gzip_exts=self.gzip_exts)) if copy_helper_opts.use_manifest: if md5: self.manifest.Set(exp_src_url.url_string, 'md5', md5) self.manifest.SetResult( exp_src_url.url_string, bytes_transferred, 'OK') if copy_helper_opts.print_ver: # Some cases don't return a version-specific URL (e.g., if destination # is a file). self.logger.info('Created: %s', result_url) except ItemExistsError: message = 'Skipping existing item: %s' % dst_url self.logger.info(message) if copy_helper_opts.use_manifest: self.manifest.SetResult(exp_src_url.url_string, 0, 'skip', message) except SkipUnsupportedObjectError, e: message = ('Skipping item %s with unsupported object type %s' % (exp_src_url.url_string, e.unsupported_type)) self.logger.info(message) if copy_helper_opts.use_manifest: self.manifest.SetResult(exp_src_url.url_string, 0, 'skip', message) except copy_helper.FileConcurrencySkipError, e: self.logger.warn('Skipping copy of source URL %s because destination URL ' '%s is already being copied by another gsutil process ' 'or thread (did you specify the same source URL twice?) ' % (src_url, dst_url)) except Exception, e: # pylint: disable=broad-except if (copy_helper_opts.no_clobber and copy_helper.IsNoClobberServerException(e)): message = 'Rejected (noclobber): %s' % dst_url self.logger.info(message) if copy_helper_opts.use_manifest: self.manifest.SetResult( exp_src_url.url_string, 0, 'skip', message) elif self.continue_on_error: message = 'Error copying %s: %s' % (src_url, str(e)) self.op_failure_count += 1 self.logger.error(message) if copy_helper_opts.use_manifest: self.manifest.SetResult( exp_src_url.url_string, 0, 'error', RemoveCRLFFromString(message)) else: if copy_helper_opts.use_manifest: self.manifest.SetResult( exp_src_url.url_string, 0, 'error', str(e)) raise else: if copy_helper_opts.perform_mv: self.logger.info('Removing %s...', exp_src_url) if exp_src_url.IsCloudUrl(): gsutil_api.DeleteObject(exp_src_url.bucket_name, exp_src_url.object_name, generation=exp_src_url.generation, provider=exp_src_url.scheme) else: os.unlink(exp_src_url.object_name) with self.stats_lock: self.total_elapsed_time += elapsed_time self.total_bytes_transferred += bytes_transferred # Command entry point. def RunCommand(self): copy_helper_opts = self._ParseOpts() self.total_elapsed_time = self.total_bytes_transferred = 0 if self.args[-1] == '-' or self.args[-1] == 'file://-': return CatHelper(self).CatUrlStrings(self.args[:-1]) if copy_helper_opts.read_args_from_stdin: if len(self.args) != 1: raise CommandException('Source URLs cannot be specified with -I option') url_strs = StdinIterator() else: if len(self.args) < 2: raise CommandException('Wrong number of arguments for "cp" command.') url_strs = self.args[:-1] (self.exp_dst_url, self.have_existing_dst_container) = ( copy_helper.ExpandUrlToSingleBlr(self.args[-1], self.gsutil_api, self.debug, self.project_id)) name_expansion_iterator = NameExpansionIterator( self.command_name, self.debug, self.logger, self.gsutil_api, url_strs, self.recursion_requested or copy_helper_opts.perform_mv, project_id=self.project_id, all_versions=self.all_versions, continue_on_error=self.continue_on_error or self.parallel_operations) # Use a lock to ensure accurate statistics in the face of # multi-threading/multi-processing. self.stats_lock = CreateLock() # Tracks if any copies failed. self.op_failure_count = 0 # Start the clock. start_time = time.time() # Tuple of attributes to share/manage across multiple processes in # parallel (-m) mode. shared_attrs = ('op_failure_count', 'total_bytes_transferred') # Perform copy requests in parallel (-m) mode, if requested, using # configured number of parallel processes and threads. Otherwise, # perform requests with sequential function calls in current process. self.Apply(_CopyFuncWrapper, name_expansion_iterator, _CopyExceptionHandler, shared_attrs, fail_on_error=(not self.continue_on_error)) self.logger.debug( 'total_bytes_transferred: %d', self.total_bytes_transferred) end_time = time.time() self.total_elapsed_time = end_time - start_time # Sometimes, particularly when running unit tests, the total elapsed time # is really small. On Windows, the timer resolution is too small and # causes total_elapsed_time to be zero. try: float(self.total_bytes_transferred) / float(self.total_elapsed_time) except ZeroDivisionError: self.total_elapsed_time = 0.01 self.total_bytes_per_second = (float(self.total_bytes_transferred) / float(self.total_elapsed_time)) if self.debug >= DEBUGLEVEL_DUMP_REQUESTS: # Note that this only counts the actual GET and PUT bytes for the copy # - not any transfers for doing wildcard expansion, the initial # HEAD/GET request performed to get the object metadata, etc. if self.total_bytes_transferred != 0: self.logger.info( 'Total bytes copied=%d, total elapsed time=%5.3f secs (%sps)', self.total_bytes_transferred, self.total_elapsed_time, MakeHumanReadable(self.total_bytes_per_second)) if self.op_failure_count: plural_str = 's' if self.op_failure_count > 1 else '' raise CommandException('%d file%s/object%s could not be transferred.' % ( self.op_failure_count, plural_str, plural_str)) return 0 def _ParseOpts(self): perform_mv = False # exclude_symlinks is handled by Command parent class, so save in Command # state rather than CopyHelperOpts. self.exclude_symlinks = False no_clobber = False # continue_on_error is handled by Command parent class, so save in Command # state rather than CopyHelperOpts. self.continue_on_error = False daisy_chain = False read_args_from_stdin = False print_ver = False use_manifest = False preserve_acl = False canned_acl = None # canned_acl is handled by a helper function in parent # Command class, so save in Command state rather than CopyHelperOpts. self.canned = None self.all_versions = False self.skip_unsupported_objects = False # Files matching these extensions should be gzipped before uploading. gzip_arg_exts = None gzip_arg_all = None test_callback_file = None # self.recursion_requested initialized in command.py (so can be checked # in parent class for all commands). self.manifest = None if self.sub_opts: for o, a in self.sub_opts: if o == '-a': canned_acl = a self.canned = True if o == '-A': self.all_versions = True if o == '-c': self.continue_on_error = True elif o == '-D': daisy_chain = True elif o == '-e': self.exclude_symlinks = True elif o == '--testcallbackfile': # File path of a pickled class that implements ProgressCallback.call. # Used for testing transfer interruptions and resumes. test_callback_file = a elif o == '-I': read_args_from_stdin = True elif o == '-L': use_manifest = True self.manifest = Manifest(a) elif o == '-M': # Note that we signal to the cp command to perform a move (copy # followed by remove) and use directory-move naming rules by passing # the undocumented (for internal use) -M option when running the cp # command from mv.py. perform_mv = True elif o == '-n': no_clobber = True elif o == '-p': preserve_acl = True elif o == '-r' or o == '-R': self.recursion_requested = True elif o == '-U': self.skip_unsupported_objects = True elif o == '-v': print_ver = True elif o == '-z': gzip_arg_exts = [x.strip() for x in a.split(',')] elif o == '-Z': gzip_arg_all = GZIP_ALL_FILES if preserve_acl and canned_acl: raise CommandException( 'Specifying both the -p and -a options together is invalid.') if self.all_versions and self.parallel_operations: raise CommandException( 'The gsutil -m option is not supported with the cp -A flag, to ' 'ensure that object version ordering is preserved. Please re-run ' 'the command without the -m option.') if gzip_arg_exts and gzip_arg_all: raise CommandException( 'Specifying both the -z and -Z options together is invalid.') self.gzip_exts = gzip_arg_exts or gzip_arg_all return CreateCopyHelperOpts( perform_mv=perform_mv, no_clobber=no_clobber, daisy_chain=daisy_chain, read_args_from_stdin=read_args_from_stdin, print_ver=print_ver, use_manifest=use_manifest, preserve_acl=preserve_acl, canned_acl=canned_acl, skip_unsupported_objects=self.skip_unsupported_objects, test_callback_file=test_callback_file)