Before this change if a file was uploaded to a backend which didn't
support modtimes, the time of the file read after the upload had
completed would change to the time the file was uploaded on the
backend.
When using `--vfs-cache-mode writes` or `full` this time would be
different by the `--vfs-write-back` delay which would cause
applications to think the file had been modified.
This changes uses the last modification time read by the OS as a
virtual modtime for backends which don't support setting modtimes. It
does not change the modtime to that actually uploaded.
This means that as long as the file remains in the directory cache it
will have the expected modtime.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/saving-files-causes-wrong-modified-time-to-be-set-for-a-few-seconds-on-webdav-mount-with-bitrix24/36451
The recent changes to remove race conditions from --max-delete have
made these tests fail on chunker with s3 because they do copy then
delete and the deletes are being counted in the --max-delete(-size)
counts.
This fixes the azureblob backend so it builds again after the SDK
changes.
This doesn't update bazil.org/fuse because it doesn't build on FreeBSD
https://github.com/bazil/fuse/issues/295
If using rclone move and --check-first and --order-by then rclone uses
the transfer routine to delete files to ensure perfect ordering.
This will cause the transfer stats to have a larger than expected
number of items in it so we don't enable this by default.
Fixes#6033
Before this fix, a dangling symlink was erroring the sync. It was
writing an ERROR log and causing rclone to exit with an error. The
List method wasn't returning an error though.
This fix makes sure that we don't log or report a global error on a
file/directory that has been excluded.
This feature was first implemented in:
a61d219bc local: fix -L/--copy-links with filters missing directories
Then fixed in:
8d1fff9a8 local: obey file filters in listing to fix errors on excluded files
This commit also adds test cases for the failure modes of those commits.
See #6376
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
Before this change, if a "--drive-stop-on-upload-limit" was set,
rclone would not stop the upload if a "storageQuotaExceeded" error occurred.
This fix now checks for the "storageQuotaExceeded" error
and "--drive-stop-on-upload-limit", and fails fast.
This change provides the ability to pass `env_auth` as a parameter to
the google cloud storage provider. This enables the provider to pull IAM
credentials from the environment or instance metadata. Previously if no
auth method was given it would default to requesting oauth.
This ensures the virtual terminal processing mode is enabled on the rclone process
for Windows 10 consoles (by using Windows Console API functions GetConsoleMode/SetConsoleMode
and flag ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING), which adds native support for ANSI/VT100
escape sequences. This mode is default in many cases, e.g. when using the Windows
Terminal application, but in other cases it is not, and the default can also be
controlled with registry setting (see below), and therefore configuring it on the process
seem to be the only reliable way of ensuring it is enabled when supported.
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Console]
"VirtualTerminalLevel"=dword:00000001
Since rclone version 1.61.0 the tree command uses ANSI color sequences in output by
default, but this lead to issues in Windows terminals that were not handling these (#6668).
This commit ensures the tree command uses the terminal package for output. It relies on
go-colorable to properly handle ANSI color sequences: If stdout is connected to a terminal
the escape sequences are decoded and the text are written with color formatting using
Windows Console API. If stdout is not connected to a terminal, e.g. redirected to file,
the escape sequences are stripped off. The tree command has its own method for writing
directly to a file, specified with flag --output, and then the output is not passed
through the terminal package and must therefore be written without ansi codes.