The .lck file filename length needs to be less than 255 bytes (not symbols) on
linux, and it was still too long on this test, because of the
subdir=測試_Русский_{spc}_{spc}_ě_áñ
Before this change, chunker would erroneously consider two different paths to be
equal if, due to special characters, they normalized to equal-folding strings in
Standard Encoding, but not otherwise. This caused base objects to get moved when
they should not have been. This change fixes the issue, which was discovered on
the bisync integration tests.
Ideally it should also be fixed when the base Fs is non-local, but there's not an
easy way at the moment to reference the wrapped Fs's encoding, at least without
breaking encapsulation.
Before this change, calling NewFs on a composite multi-chunk file with
--chunker-meta-format "none"
would fail due to f.base pointing to the wrong Fs. This change fixes the issue,
which was discovered on the bisync integration tests.
Before this change, the decoder looked only for `io.EOF`, and if any other error
was returned, it could cause an infinite loop. This change fixes the issue by
breaking for any non-nil error.
Before this change when setting permissions from the metadata rclone
would stop on the first error.
This change causes rclone to attempt to set all the permissions and
return an error summary at the end.
This enables compatibility with versions of git-annex currently
available on GitHub's "ubuntu-latest" image, aka Ubuntu 22.04 Jammy.
Currently, Jammy is shipping git-annex 8.20210223-2ubuntu2.
https://packages.ubuntu.com/jammy/git-annex
Issue #7625
This commit implements milestone 2.1 for the gitannex subcommand:
https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/7625#issuecomment-1951403856
This rewrite makes a few improvements over the old shell script:
(1) It no longer uses the system's rclone.conf. Now, it writes the
rclone.conf file in an ephemeral directory.
(2) It no longer makes any assumptions about the contents of /tmp.
However, it now assumes that an rclone built from the HEAD commit is on
the PATH. It makes a best-effort attempt to verify this assumption, but
I'm not sure it's bulletproof.
I'm hoping that writing this in Go will enable more cross-platform
support in the future, but for now we're still restricted to Unixy
systems due to reliance on the HOME environment variable.
Issue #7625
Before this change, calling SetModTime on owncloud and nextcloud would
inadvertently erase the object's stored hashes. This change fixes the issue,
which was discovered by the bisync integration tests.
In this commit we merged an unreliable test
e053c8a1c0 copy: fix nil pointer dereference when corrupted on transfer with nil dst
It is a good idea but very hard to implement so it always works.
Hence this disables it for the moment.
Before this change, the --metadata-mapper was called twice if an object was
uploaded via multipart upload with --metadata and --onedrive-metadata-permissions
"write" or "read,write". This change fixes the issue.
- fix parsing of connection string remotes (comma in name)
- skip remotes that can't upload empty files
- Mkdir the test case subdir before cache.Get-ing it
(only storj seems to need this... bug?)
Several fixes for the bisync integration tests:
- use unique initdir and datadir for each subtest so concurrent tests don't interfere with each other
- remove dots from dir names for bucket backends
- ignore messages specific to cache backend
- skip fix-case tests on backends that can't fix-case
- don't expect "{hashtype} differ" messages on backends with no hash types
- print timestamps in UTC local
More fixes will still be needed, but this should hopefully fix a good portion of them.
Help people handle an issue which might be difficult to understand
otherwise.
If you have recursive shortcuts (pointing to a parent folder) in a
google drive, rclone is doing infinite recursion, never ending and
filling the disk. Even if you ask not to get shortcuts content.