This is somewhat limited in that it only resolves symlinks when files
are opened. This will work fine for the intended use in rclone mount,
but is inadequate for the other servers probably.
This also
- move in use options (Opt) from vfsflags to vfscommon
- change os.FileMode to vfscommon.FileMode in parameters
- rework vfscommon.FileMode and add tests
Before this change, renaming a directory d failed to rename its key in
d.parent.items, which caused trouble later when doing Dir.Stat on a
subdirectory. This change fixes the issue.
Before this change, the VFS layer did not properly handle unicode normalization,
which caused problems particularly for users of macOS. While attempts were made
to handle it with various `-o modules=iconv` combinations, this was an imperfect
solution, as no one combination allowed both NFC and NFD content to
simultaneously be both visible and editable via Finder.
After this change, the VFS supports `--no-unicode-normalization` (default `false`)
via the existing `--vfs-case-insensitive` logic, which is extended to apply to both
case insensitivity and unicode normalization form.
This change also adds an additional flag, `--vfs-block-norm-dupes`, to address a
probably rare but potentially possible scenario where a directory contains
multiple duplicate filenames after applying case and unicode normalization
settings. In such a scenario, this flag (disabled by default) hides the
duplicates. This comes with a performance tradeoff, as rclone will have to scan
the entire directory for duplicates when listing a directory. For this reason,
it is recommended to leave this disabled if not needed. However, macOS users may
wish to consider using it, as otherwise, if a remote directory contains both NFC
and NFD versions of the same filename, an odd situation will occur: both
versions of the file will be visible in the mount, and both will appear to be
editable, however, editing either version will actually result in only the NFD
version getting edited under the hood. `--vfs-block-norm-dupes` prevents this
confusion by detecting this scenario, hiding the duplicates, and logging an
error, similar to how this is handled in `rclone sync`.
A subtle bug where dir modification time is not updated when the dir already exists
in the cache. It is only noticeable when some clients use dir modification time to
invalidate cache.
This changes hasVirtual to an atomic struct variable that's updated on
add or delete from the virtual map.
This keeps it up to date and avoids deadlocks.
Signed-off-by: Anagh Kumar Baranwal <6824881+darthShadow@users.noreply.github.com>
This empties the directory cache after twice the directory cache
period to release memory.
Signed-off-by: Anagh Kumar Baranwal <6824881+darthShadow@users.noreply.github.com>
Before this change, if you renamed a directory containg files yet to
be uploaded then deleted the directory the files would still be
uploaded.
This fixes the problem by changing the directory path in all the file
objects in a directory when it is renamed. This wasn't necessary until
we introduced virtual files and directories which lived beyond the
directory flush mechanism.
Fixes#6809
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.
Before this fix, doing CTRL-C and CTRL-V on a file in Windows explorer
caused the **source** and the the destination to be truncated to 0.
This is because Windows opens the source file with Create with flags
`O_RDWR|O_CREATE|O_EXCL` but doesn't write to it - it only reads from
it. Rclone was taking the call to Create as a signal to always make a
new file, but this is incorrect.
This fix reads an existing file from the directory if it exists when
Create is called rather than always creating a new one. This fixes the
problem.
Fixes#5181
Before this change, if a directory was renamed and it or any children
had virtual entries in it they weren't flushed.
The consequence of this was that the directory path got out sync with
the actual position of the directory in the tree, leading to listings
of the old directory rather than the new one.
The fix renames any directories remaining after the ForgetAll to have
the correct path which fixes the problem.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/after-a-directory-renmane-using-mv-files-are-not-visible-any-longer/22797
Before this change, if a file was created on a remote but deleted
externally from that remote then there was potential for the delete to
never be noticed.
The sequence of events was:
- Create file on VFS - creates virtual directory entry
- File deleted externally to remote before the directory refreshed
- Now the file has a virtual add but is not in the listings so will never disappear
This patch fixes it by removing all virtual directory entries except
the following when the directory is re-read.
- On remotes which can't have empty directories: virtual directory
adds are not flushed. These will remain virtual as long as the
directory is empty.
- For virtual file add: files that are in the process of being
uploaded are not flushed
This patch also adds the distinction between virtually added files and
directories.
It also refactors the virtual directory logic to make it easier to follow.
Fixes#4446
Before this fix we took the directory lock to read the ModTime of the
directory. This was causing locking on directories which were being
re-read from the backend.
This commit gives the modtime its own lock so it can be read even when
the directory is being updated.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/high-cpu-load-with-rclone-mount/17604
In this commit (released in v1.52.0)
6ca7198f mount: fix disappearing cwd problem
SetSys was introduced to cache node lookups.
Unfortunately taking the vfs.(*Dir) lock in SetSys causes any FUSE
operations on a directory to pile up behind slow directory listings.
In some situations this leads to very high load.
This commit fixes it by using atomic operations to read and write the
Sys value make it independent of the lock.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/high-cpu-load-with-rclone-mount/17604
See: #4104
Rclone adds virtual directory entries to the directory cache when it
creates a file or directory.
Before this change these dropped out of the directory cache when the
directory cache was reloaded. This meant that when the directory cache
expired:
- On bucket based backends, empty directories would disappear
- When using VFS writeback, files in the process of uploading would disappear
This is fixed by keeping track of the virtual entries in each
directory. The virtual entries are removed when they become real - ie
the object is read back from the listing.
This also keeps tracks of deletes in the same way so if a file is
deleted, it will not re-appear when the directory cache is reloaded if
the deletion hasn't finished yet.
As part of this we take a copy of the directory path as calling
d.Path() violates the total locking order.
See the comment at the top of file.go for details
Before this change, change notify polls would clear the directory
cache recursively. So uploading a file to the root would clear the
entire directory cache.
After this change we just invalidate the directory cache of the parent
directory of the item and if the item was a directory we invalidate it
too.
Before this change when we renamed a directory this cleared the
directory cache for the parent directory too.
If the directory was remaining in the same parent this wasn't
necessary and caused the empty directory to fall out of the cache.
Fixes#3597
- Change rclone/fs interfaces to accept context.Context
- Update interface implementations to use context.Context
- Change top level usage to propagate context to lover level functions
Context propagation is needed for stopping transfers and passing other
request-scoped values.
Before this change we locked the root directory, recursively fetched
the listing, applied it then unlocked the root directory.
After this change we recursively fetch the listing then apply it with
the root directory locked which shortens the time that the root
directory is locked greatly.
With the original method and the new method the subdirectories are
left unlocked and so potentially could be changed leading to
inconsistencies. This change makes the potential for inconsistencies
slightly worse by leaving the root directory unlocked at a gain of a
much more responsive system while runing vfs/refresh.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-rc-vfs-refresh-locking-directory-being-refreshed/9004
Before this change when doing Mkdir the VFS layer could add the new
item to an unread directory which caused confusion.
It could also do mkdir on a file when run on a bucket based remote
which would temporarily overwrite the file with a directory.
Fixes#2993
Previously to this change, backends without the optional interface
DirMove could not rename directories.
This change uses the new operations.DirMove call to implement renaming
directories which will fall back to Move/Copy as necessary.
Reduce the number of nodes purged from the dir-cache when ForgetPath is
called. This is done by only forgetting the cache of the received path
and invalidating the parent folder cache by resetting *Dir.read.
The parent will read the listing on the next access and reuse the
dir-cache of entries in *Dir.items.
vfs/refresh will walk the directory tree for the given paths and
freshen the directory cache. It will use the fast-list capability
of the remote when enabled.
The purpose of this is to make it easier to maintain and eventually to
allow the rclone backends to be re-used in other projects without
having to use the rclone configuration system.
The new code layout is documented in CONTRIBUTING.