This option sets GID manually. aria2 identifies each download by the
ID called GID. The GID must be hex string of 16 characters, thus
[0-9a-zA-Z] are allowed and leading zeros must not be stripped. The
GID all 0 is reserved and must not be used. The GID must be unique,
otherwise error is reported and the download is not added. This
option is useful when restoring the sessions saved using
--save-session option. If this option is not used, new GID is
generated by aria2.
This change replaces the current 64 bit sequential GID with 64 bits
random bytes GID in an attempt to support persistent GID. Internally,
the GID is stored as uint64_t. For human representation and RPC
interface, GID is represented as 16 bytes hex string. For console
readout, 16 bytes are too long, so it is abbreviated to first 6 bytes.
When querying GID in RPC calls, user can speicfy the prefix of GID as
long as the prefix is shared by more than 1 GID entries.
If more than 1 simultaneous downloads are going on, use more compact
format in readout. Currently, at most 5 download stats are displayed.
util::abbrevSize() is rewritten to support "Gi" unit and provides more
compact abbreviation.
Not realeasing these resources does not hurt the correctness of the
program, but memory leak detection tool, such as valgrind, reports it
as potential memory leak. It is better to distinguish it from the real
ones.
The old implementation starts to find faster host when the number of
missing segment becomes 1. Because of --min-split-size option, before
the number of missing segment becomes 1, the number of connection
becomes 1 and it can be slow. In this case, we have to wait until the
last segment is reached. The new implementation starts to find faster
host when the remaining length is less than --min-split-size * 2, to
mitigate the problem stated above.
If we receive small data (e.g., 1 or 2 bytes), cache entry becomes a
headache. To mitigate this problem, we allocate cache buffer at least
4KiB and append the data to the contagious cache data.
This option enables disk cache. If SIZE is 0, the disk cache is
disabled. This feature caches the downloaded data in memory, which
grows to at most SIZE bytes. The cache storage is created for aria2
instance and shared by all downloads. The one advantage of the disk
cache is reduce the disk seek time because the data is written in
larger unit and it is reordered by the offset of the file. If the
underlying file is heavily fragmented it is not the case.
I tried CreateFile but the subsequent ReadFile fails with Access
Denied if sparse file is read on NTFS. I mostly reverted previous
changes and use _wsopen with read/write share enabled instead of
CreateFile.
This change also includes --enable-mmap support for MinGW32
build. Memory mapped file may be useful for 64-bits OS and lots of
RAM. Currently, FlushViewOfFile is not called during the download, so
it is slightly vulnerable against sudden power loss. I found lots of
read when resuming download due to page fault. So for now it is useful
for the initial download. I recommend not to use
--file-allocation=prealloc with --enable-mmap for MinGW32, because it
triggers page faults even in the initial download. Anyway, the option
is experimental.
Currently, message translation is done at launchpad. All PO files can
be exported from there. The merge process from launchpad is done when
new release. First download export file from launchpad And use
import-po script to import PO files into po directory.