Before this changed we unconditionally fetched the MimeType. On Some
backends like s3 and swift this takes an extra transaction which meant
that `lsf` on those backends was needlessly slow.
This adds an internal option so `lsf` can declare whether it wants
MimeTypes or not depending on whether the user asked for them and an
external flag `--no-mimetype` for `lsjson`.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/reliably-setup-incremental-updates/14006/8
This is a timing dependent test and to make it long enough so that it
would work with the remotes would make it too long for local tests.
The code paths are identical for local vs non-local so just run on
local.
This fixes the integration tests.
This gives you more control over how long rclone will run for, making
it easier to script backups, e.g. via cron. Once the `--max-duration`
time limit is reached, no new transfers will be initiated, but those
already in-flight will be allowed to complete.
Fixes#985
When a file has its modtime set while it is open we delay setting the
modtime until the file is closed.
The file is then uploaded in Flush. In Release we check the cached
file has been uploaded by comparing modtimes and or hashes and upload
it again if it has changed.
Before this change we forgot to change the time on the cached file
when we updated the time file on the object, so this mean that Release
reset the time to the wrong time and uploaded the file again on
remotes which don't support hashes (eg crypt).
The fix was to set the modtime of the cached file at the same time we
set the modtime of the remote object. This means that the files check
as identical in Release so it doesn't try to upload the file.
This means that we avoid a double upload and the modtime is correct.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/modification-time-with-vfs-cache/13906/8
Before this change the expect/continue timeout was set to
--conntimeout which was 60s by default which is too long to wait.
This was noticed when using s3 with a proxy which apparently didn't
support expect / continue properly.
Set --expect-continue-timeout 0 to disable expect/continue.
Before this change we used non multipart uploads for files of unknown
size (streaming and uploads in mount). This is slower and less
reliable and is not recommended by Google for files smaller than 5MB.
After this change we use multipart resumable uploads for all files of
unknown length. This will use an extra transaction so is less
efficient for files under the chunk size, however the natural
buffering in the operations.Rcat call specified by
`--streaming-upload-cutoff` will overcome this.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/upload-behaviour-and-speed-when-using-vfs-cache/9920/