This commit reorganises the oauth code to use our own config struct
which has all the info for the normal oauth method and also the client
credentials flow method.
It updates all backends which use lib/oauthutil to use the new config
struct which shouldn't change any functionality.
It also adds code for dealing with the client credential flow config
which doesn't require the use of a browser and doesn't have or need a
refresh token.
Co-authored-by: Nick Craig-Wood <nick@craig-wood.com>
This changes the OpenWriterAt implementation to make client/fd
handling atomic.
This PR stabilizes the situation of bigger files and multi-threaded
uploads. The root cause boils down to the old "fun" property of
pclouds fileops API: sessions are bound to TCP connections. This
forces us to use a http client with only a single connection
underneath.
With large files, we reuse the same connection for each chunk. If that
connection interrupts (e.g. because we are talking through the
internet), all chunks will fail. The probability for latter one
increases with larger files.
As the point of the whole multi-threaded feature was to speed-up large
files in the first place, this change pulls the client creation (and
hence connection handling) into each chunk. This should stabilize the
situation, as each chunk (and retry) gets its own connection.
Since `tokenRenewer` adds a Shutdown method, we should call it to
clean up resources.
changes backends:
onedrive,box,pcloud,amazonclouddrive,hidrive,jottacloud,sharefile
,premiumizeme
Signed-off-by: rkonfj <rkonfj@gmail.com>
This introduces a new fs.Option flag, Sensitive and uses this along
with IsPassword to redact the info in the config file for support
purposes.
It adds this flag into backends where appropriate. It was necessary to
add oauthutil.SharedOptions to some backends as they were missing
them.
Fixes#5209
Before this change rclone send pre-1970 timestamps as negative
numbers. pCloud ignores these and sets them as todays date.
This change sends the timestamps as unsigned 64 bit integers (which is
how the binary protocol sends them) and pCloud accepts the (actually
negative) timestamp like this.
This is possible now that we no longer support go1.12 and brings
rclone into line with standard practices in the Go world.
This also removes errors.New and errors.Errorf from lib/errors and
prefers the stdlib errors package over lib/errors.
This was started in
3626f10f26 pcloud: add sha256 support - fixes#5496
But this support turned out to be incomplete and caused the
integration tests to fail.
This is a very large change which turns the post Config function in
backends into a state based call and response system so that
alternative user interfaces can be added.
The existing config logic has been converted, but it is quite
complicated and folloup commits will likely be needed to fix it!
Follow up commits will add a command line and API based way of using
this configuration system.
Before this change when the context was cancelled (due to
--max-duration for example) this could deadlock when uploading
multipart uploads.
This change fixes the problem by introducing another go routine to
monitor the context and close the pipe with an error when the context
errors.
This change checks the context whenever rclone might retry, and
doesn't retry if the current context has an error.
This fixes the pathological behaviour of `--max-duration` refusing to
exit because all the context deadline exceeded errors were being
retried.
This unfortunately meant changing the shouldRetry logic in every
backend and doing a lot of context propagation.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/add-flag-to-exit-immediately-when-max-duration-reached/22723
This is done by making fs.Config private and attaching it to the
context instead.
The Config should be obtained with fs.GetConfig and fs.AddConfig
should be used to get a new mutable config that can be changed.
This adds a context.Context parameter to NewFs and related calls.
This is necessary as part of reading config from the context -
backends need to be able to read the global config.
When using `rclone authorize` the hostname doesn't get set in the
config file.
This commit allows it to be set in the configurator and gives the user
a hint that it needs setting.
This was only working for files in the root directory and wasn't
looking at the encoding.
This is fixed to use NewObject which takes both things into account
and it makes the share by ID instead of by path.
This problem was spotted by the integration tests.
1. adds SharedOptions data structure to oauthutil
2. adds config.ConfigToken option to oauthutil.SharedOptions
3. updates the backends that have oauth functionality
Fixes#2849
- add a directory to the optional Purge interface
- fix up all the backends
- add an additional integration test to test for the feature
- use the new feature in operations.Purge
Many of the backends had been prepared in advance for this so the
change was trivial for them.
Pcloud appears to have opened up a new region and they are returning
the hostname in the oauth callback, thus
GET /?code=XXX&locationid=1&hostname=api.pcloud.com&state=XXX HTTP/1.1
GET /?code=XXX&locationid=2&hostname=eapi.pcloud.com&state=XXX HTTP/1.1
This isn't documented yet, however pCloud have confirmed that this is
the correct interpretation.
Rclone now reads the "hostname" parameter in the oauth callback and
stores it in the config file. It uses it for all subequent API calls.
Before this change there was lots of duplicated code in all the
dircache using backends to support DirMove.
This change factors this code into the dircache library.
Dircache was changed to:
- Remove special cases for the root directory
- Remove Fatal errors
- Call FindRoot on behalf of the user wherever possible
- Bring up to modern Go standards
Backends were changed to:
- Remove calls to FindRoot
- Change calls to FindRootAndPath to FindPath
- Don't make special cases for the root
This fixes several corner cases, for example removing a non existent
directory if FindRoot hasn't been called.