Before this change, drive would mistakenly identify a folder with a
training slash as a file when passed to NewObject.
This was picked up by the integration tests
In an earlier patch
d5afcf9e34 crypt: try not to return "unexpected EOF" error
This introduced a bug for 0 length files which this fixes which only
manifests if the io.Reader returns data and EOF which not all readers
do.
This was failing in the integration tests.
Before this change using /path/to/file.rclonelink would not find the
file when using -l/--links.
This fixes the problem by doing another stat call if the file wasn't
found without the suffix if -l/--links is in use.
It will also give an error if you refer to a symlink without its
suffix which will not work because the limit to a single file
filtering will be using the file name without the .rclonelink suffix.
need ".rclonelink" suffix to refer to symlink when using -l/--links
Before this change it would use the symlink as a directory which then
would fail when listed.
See: #6855
golang.org/x/oauth2/jws is deprecated: this package is not intended for public use and
might be removed in the future. It exists for internal use only. Please switch to another
JWS package or copy this package into your own source tree.
github.com/golang-jwt/jwt/v4 seems to be a good alternative, and was already
an implicit dependency.
This changes crypt's use of sync.Pool: Instead of storing slices
it now stores pointers pointers fixed sized arrays.
This issue was reported by staticcheck:
SA6002 - Storing non-pointer values in sync.Pool allocates memory
A sync.Pool is used to avoid unnecessary allocations and reduce
the amount of work the garbage collector has to do.
When passing a value that is not a pointer to a function that accepts
an interface, the value needs to be placed on the heap, which means
an additional allocation. Slices are a common thing to put in sync.Pools,
and they're structs with 3 fields (length, capacity, and a pointer to
an array). In order to avoid the extra allocation, one should store
a pointer to the slice instead.
See: https://staticcheck.io/docs/checks#SA6002
This change provides the ability to pass `env_auth` as a parameter to
the drive provider. This enables the provider to pull IAM
credentials from the environment or instance metadata. Previously if no
auth method was given it would default to requesting oauth.
Before this change, change notify would pick up files which were
shared with us as well as file within the drive.
When using an encrypted mount this caused errors like:
ChangeNotify was unable to decrypt "Plain file name": illegal base32 data at input byte 5
The fix tells drive to restrict changes to the drive in use.
Fixes#6771
Before this change the code wasn't taking into account the error
io.ErrUnexpectedEOF that io.ReadFull can return properly. Sometimes
that error was being returned instead of a more specific and useful
error.
To fix this, io.ReadFull was replaced with the simpler
readers.ReadFill which is much easier to use correctly.
Apparently the abort multipart upload call doesn't return while
multipart uploads are in progress on iDrive e2.
This means that if we CTRL-C a multpart upload rclone hangs until the
all parts uploading have completed. However since rclone is uploading
multiple parts at once this doesn't happen until after the entire file
is uploaded.
This was fixed by cancelling the upload context which causes all the
uploads to stop instantly.
When using ssh-agent to hold multiple keys, it is common practice to configure
openssh to use a specific key by setting the corresponding public key as
the `IdentityFile`. This change makes a similar behavior possible in rclone
by having it parse the `key_file` config as the public key when
`key_use_agent` is `true`.
rclone already attempted this behavior before this change, but it assumed that
`key_file` is the private key and that the public key is specified in
`${key_file}.pub`. So for parity with the openssh behavior, this change makes
rclone first attempt to read the public key from `${key_file}.pub` as before
(for the sake of backward compatibility), then fall back to reading it from
`key_file`.
Fixes#6791
Before this change, we would upload files as single part uploads even
if the source MD5SUM was not available.
AWS won't let you upload a file to a locket bucket without some sort
of hash protection of the upload which we don't have with no MD5SUM.
So we switch to multipart upload when the source does not have an
MD5SUM.
This means that if --s3-disable-checksum is set or we are copying from
a source with no MD5SUMs we will copy with multipart uploads.
This patch changes all uploads, not just those to locked buckets
because having no MD5SUM protection on uploads is undesirable.
Fixes#6846