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DataLad extension for code execution in get commands

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DataLad extension for code execution in get commands

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CAUTION: Work-in-Progress!

This DataLad extension provides facilities to register arbitrary commands for files in git-annex, which are then executed if datalad get is called on those files (and they are not yet present).

How do I use this?

This extension provides a new high-level datalad command called getexec which can be used to register commands on files.

In the following we will assume that we have the extension installed and are inside a DataLad dataset.

As a simple example, we can register a command that writes "Hello World!" into a text file called "test.txt":

datalad getexec --path test.txt -- 'bash' '-c' 'printf "Hello World!" > "$1"' 'test-cmd'

As a result of this, we now have the file "test.txt" with it's expected content. Since we told git-annex that we can recreate this file with the specified bash call, we can now safely drop the file and then automatically get it recreated:

datalad drop test.txt
datalad get test.txt

Since our registered program might depend on some other annex'ed files we can specify those dependencies as well:

datalad getexec --path depends-on-test.txt -i test.txt -- 'bash' '-c' '(cat test.txt; printf "\nMore Text.") > "$1"' 'test-cmd'

This way, if datalad get is called on "depends-on-test.txt" git-annex will make sure, that "test.txt" is present before executing the registered command. Therefore, the following will work:

datalad drop test.txt
datalad drop depends-on-test.txt
datalad get depends-on-test.txt

There are some limitations to what commands can be registered. First of all, there is no shell interpretation happening; the command is essentially passed verbatim to python's subprocess.run. This is why the examples above look a bit more complex with the call to bash. In the above examples, each quoted part after -- becomes one element in the list passed to subprocess.run. In practice, it would be a good idea to externalize the command into e.g. a shell script and have a single argument in the getexec call.

Second, the command is expected to always produce a single output file, the location of which is passed as the first (and only) argument to the command. This is the $1 in the bash calls above.

Lastly, since the command is executed in the context of a get, the resulting file is always expected to remain the same. This means that two consecutive calls to the command need to produce files with identical checksums, otherwise git-annex will complain. Essentially, the command is expected to behave somewhat like a pure function. If this does not fit your use-case you are probably looking for DataLad's builtin run and rerun.

How does it work?

This extension works by implementing a new git-annex special remote which kind of abuses the URL handling of git-annex. The special remote takes responsibility of all URLs with a scheme of "getexec:"; encoded inside of these URLs then is the necessary information to re-execute the registered command. The DataLad part of the extension simply takes the user input, generates a matching URL for it and then registers the URL with git-annex.

When geting a file that is not currently present, git-annex will do it's usual thing to determine from where to fetch the data. If git-annex determines that the special remote of this extension should provide the data then it will rerun the registered command.

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