Before this change calling core/command gave the error
error: response object is required expecting *http.ResponseWriter value for key "_response" (was *http.response)
This was because the http.ResponseWriter is an interface not an object.
Removing the `*` fixes the problem.
This also indicates that this bit of code wasn't properly tested.
This includes an HDFS docker image to use with the integration tests.
Co-authored-by: Ivan Andreev <ivandeex@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Nick Craig-Wood <nick@craig-wood.com>
Before this change, if one connection was authenticating this would
block any others from authenticating.
This was due to ssh.NewServerConn not being called in a go routine
after the Accept call.
This is fixed by running the ssh authentication in a go routine.
Thanks to @FiloSottile for advice on how to fix this.
See: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/43521
The current authentication scheme works without creating
a public download endpoint for a private bucket as in the B2 official blog.
On the contrary, if the existing authorization header gets duplicated
in the Cloudflare Workers script, one might receive 401 Unauthorized errors.
Implemented empty folder flag for ncdu browser interface. If there is
empty folder in the list the flag e is prepended before size. If there
is no empty folder this flag is ommited. It has the same behaviour as
original ncdu browser. (https://dev.yorhel.nl/ncdu/man)
Before this change the webdav backend didn't truncate Range requests
to the size of the object. Most webdav providers are OK with this (it
is RFC compliant), but it causes 4shared to return 500 internal error.
Because Range requests are used in mounting, this meant that mounting
didn't work for 4shared.
This change truncates the Range request to the size of the object.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/cant-copy-use-files-on-webdav-mount-4shared-that-have-foreign-characters/21334/
When a directory cannot be walk-ed because of a permissions error
- or any error for that matter -, ncdu mode keeps track of the error
and highlights directories that could not be read.
Previously, the error would cause ncdu to abort.
Now, directories with unreadable sub-directories are displayed in yellow and
a message warns that the total may be underestimated.
Unreadable directories themselves are displayed in red along with the error message