Existing version did save username in config, but only when entering the custom
device/mountpoint sequence in config. Regardless of that, it did always look up the
username at startup with an api request.
This commit improves it so that the username will always be stored in config,
and when using standard authentication it picks it from the login token instead of
requesting it from the remote api, and also in fs constructor it picks it from config
instead of requesting it from remote api (again).
The SDK doesn't wrap errors in a Go standard way so they can't be
unwrapped and tested for - eg fatal error.
The code looks for a Serialization or RequestError and returns the
unwrapped underlying error if possible.
This fixes the fs/operations integration tests checking for fatal
errors being returned.
In this commit
e5974ac4b0 s3: use PutObject from the aws SDK to upload single part objects
rclone was made to upload objects to s3 using PUT requests rather than
using signed uploads.
However this change missed the fact that there is a supported way to
do this in the SDK using the SetStreamingBody method on the Request.
This therefore reverts a lot of the previous commit to do with making
an unsigned connection and other complication and uses the SDK
facility.
Before this fix GetFreeSpace returned math.MaxInt64 for remotes which
don't support reading free space, however this is used in various
comparison routines as a too large value, meaning that remotes of size
math.MaxInt64 were never being selected.
This fixes GetFreeSpace to return math.MaxInt64 - 1 so then can be selected.
It also fixes GetUsedSpace the same way however as the default for not
supported was 0 this was very unlikely to have ever caused a problem.
By default, rclone always requests read and write permissions. No matter what settings you configure in the AAD application. This option allows to explicitly request readonly permissions
Migrated read only option to access scope option and set disable_site_permission option to hidden.