Before this change rclone used the relative path from the current
working directory.
It appears that WS FTP doesn't like this and the openssh sftp tool
also uses absolute paths which is a good reason for switching to
absolute paths.
This change reads the current working directory at startup and bases
all file requests from there.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/sftp-ssh-fx-failure-directory-not-found/17436
Before this change the --local-no-updated flag would not error if the
files changed in size during the transfer. The file could still be
read beyond the size advertised though which caused problems with
certain backends.
After this change we attempt to provide a consistent view of the file
once it has been opened.
Once the file has had stat() called on it for the first time we
- Only transfer the size that stat gave
- Only checksum the size that stat gave
- Don't update the stat info for the file
This means that files that are extending can be transferred - rclone
will transfer the length it saw the first time it listed the file.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/transport-connection-broken/16494/21
In this commit
5c5ad6220 drive: fix --drive-impersonate with cached root_folder_id
We disabled the use of root_folder_id with --drive-impersonate to fix
a problem with a cached root_folder_id giving the wrong results.
This, alas, broke one users setup with a root_folder_id of
appDataFolder. Since this is identifiable and definitely couldn't have
been cached, we can safely skip this check in this case.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-gdrive-no-longer-returning-anything/17215/10
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.
Before this fix rclone would continually try to delete non empty
segment containers which made deleting lots of files very slow.
This fix makes rclone just try the delete once and then carry on which
was the original intent of the code before the retry logic got put in.
Before this change if the server sent us xml like this
```
<D:propstat>
<D:prop>
<g0:quota-available-bytes/>
<g0:quota-used-bytes/>
</D:prop>
<D:status>HTTP/1.1 404 Not Found</D:status>
</D:propstat>
```
Rclone would read the empty XML items as containing 0
After this fix we make sure that we have a value before using it.
Before this fix rclone v1.51 and 1.52 would incorrectly use the cached
root_folder_id when the --drive-impersonate flag was in use. This
meant that rclone could be looking up the wrong directory ID with
unpredictable results - usually all files apparently being missing.
This fix makes rclone look up the root_folder_id always when using
--drive-impersonate. It does this by clearing the root_folder_id and
making a NOTICE message that it is ignoring the cached value.
It also stops rclone caching the root_folder_id when using
--drive-impersonate.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-gdrive-no-longer-returning-anything/17215
Adding the expires parameter gives settings_error/not_authorized/.. errors.
The expires setting isn't in the documentation so this commit removes
it for now.
For SSH authentication, `key_pem` should both override `key_file`
and not require other SSH authentication methods to be set.
Prior to this fix, rclone would attempt to use an ssh-agent
when `key_pem` was the only SSH authentication method set.
Fixes#4240
Before this change we were setting the headers on the PUT
request for normal and multipart uploads. For normal uploads this caused the error
403 Forbidden: There were headers present in the request which were not signed
After this fix we set the headers in the object upload request itself
as the s3 SDK expects.
This means that we only support a limited range of headers
- Cache-Control
- Content-Disposition
- Content-Encoding
- Content-Language
- Content-Type
- X-Amz-Tagging
- X-Amz-Meta-
Note for the last of those are for setting custom metadata in the form
"X-Amz-Meta-Key: value".
This now works for multipart uploads and single part uploads
See also #59
This provides two things:
* It gives Storj insight into which uplink clients are using the
network.
* It facilitate rclone participating in the Tardigrade Open Source
Partner Program https://tardigrade.io/partner/
* s3: add `max_upload_parts` support
This allows to configure a maximum amount of chunks used to upload file:
- Support Scaleway which has a limit of 1k chunks currently
- Reduce a cost on S3 when each request costs some money at the expense of memory used
Co-authored-by: Nick Craig-Wood <nick@craig-wood.com>
This adds expire and unlink fields to the PublicLink interface.
This fixes up the affected backends and removes unlink parameters
where they are present.
This factors copy out of SetModTime and Copy so it can be called from
both places.
This also reworks all the multipart uploading to use sync.Errgroup and
memory pooling like the other backends. This makes it more memory
efficient and handle errors better.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/copying-files-within-a-b2-bucket/16680/10
Before this change, attempting to upload a single file into an s3
bucket which did not have create permission gave AccessDenied: Access
Denied error when it tried to create the bucket.
This was masked until e2bf91452a was
fixed.
This fix marks the bucket as OK if a fetch on an object indicates it
is OK. This stops rclone thinking it has to create the bucket in the
first place.
Fixes#4297
This is caused by a bug in Google drive where, in some circumstances
querying for "(A in parents) or (B in parents)" returns nothing
whereas querying for "A in parents" and "B in parents" separately
works fine.
This has been reported here:
https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/149522397
This workaround detects this condition by seeing if a listing for more
than one directory at once returns nothing.
If it does then it retries each one individually.
This can potentially have a false positive if the user has multiple
empty directories which are queried at once. The consequence of this
will be that ListR is disabled for a while until the directories are
found to be actually empty in which case it will be re-enabled.
Fixes#3114 and Fixes#4289