This commit reorganises the oauth code to use our own config struct
which has all the info for the normal oauth method and also the client
credentials flow method.
It updates all backends which use lib/oauthutil to use the new config
struct which shouldn't change any functionality.
It also adds code for dealing with the client credential flow config
which doesn't require the use of a browser and doesn't have or need a
refresh token.
Co-authored-by: Nick Craig-Wood <nick@craig-wood.com>
Since `tokenRenewer` adds a Shutdown method, we should call it to
clean up resources.
changes backends:
onedrive,box,pcloud,amazonclouddrive,hidrive,jottacloud,sharefile
,premiumizeme
Signed-off-by: rkonfj <rkonfj@gmail.com>
Most useful is the addition of the file created timestamp, but also a timestamp for
when the file was uploaded.
Currently supporting a rather minimalistic set of metadata items, see PR #6359 for
some thoughts about possible extensions.
This introduces a new fs.Option flag, Sensitive and uses this along
with IsPassword to redact the info in the config file for support
purposes.
It adds this flag into backends where appropriate. It was necessary to
add oauthutil.SharedOptions to some backends as they were missing
them.
Fixes#5209
Previously, with standard auth, the username would be stored in config - but only after
entering the non-standard device/mountpoint sequence during config (a feature introduced
with #5926). Regardless of that, rclone always requests the username from the api at
startup (NewFS).
In #6270 (commit 9dbed02329) this was changed to always
store username in config (consistency), and then also use it to avoid the repeated
customer info request in NewFs (performance). But, as reported in #6309, it did not work
with legacy auth, where user enters username manually, if user entered an email address
instead of the internal username required for api requests. This change was therefore
recently reverted.
The current commit takes another step back to not store the username in config during
the non-standard device/mountpoint config sequence (consistentcy). The username will
now only be stored in config when using legacy auth, where it is an input parameter.
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).
strings.ReplaceAll(s, old, new) is a wrapper function for
strings.Replace(s, old, new, -1). But strings.ReplaceAll is more
readable and removes the hardcoded -1.
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
Jottacloud have several different apis and endpoints using a mix of different
timestamp formats. In existing code the list operation (after the recent liststream
implementation) uses format from golang's time.RFC3339 constant. Uploads (using the
allocate api) uses format from a hard coded constant with value identical to golang's
time.RFC3339. And then we have the classic JFS time format, which is similar to RFC3339
but not identical, using a different constant. Also the naming is a bit confusing,
since the term api is used both as a generic term and also as a reference to the
newer format used in the api subdomain where the allocate endpoint is located.
This commit refactors these things a bit.
Now using the utility function for deduplication that was newly implemented to
fix an issue with server-side copy. This function uses the original, and generic,
"jfs" api (and its "cphash" feature), instead of the newer "allocate" api dedicated
for uploads. Both apis support similar deduplication functionaly that we rely on for
the SetModTime operation. One advantage of using the jfs variant is that the allocate
api is specialized for uploads, an initial request performs modtime-only changes and
deduplication if possible but if not possible it creates an incomplete file revision
and returns a special url to be used with a following request to upload missing content.
In the SetModTime function we only sent the first request, using metadata from existing
remote file but different timestamps, which lead to a modtime-only change. If, for some
reason, this should fail it would leave the incomplete revision behind. Probably not
a problem, but the jfs implementation used with this commit is simpler and
a more "standalone" request which either succeeds or fails without expecting additional
requests.
A strange feature (probably bug) in the api used by the server-side copy implementation
in Jottacloud backend is that if the destination file is in trash, the copy request
succeeds but the destination will still be in trash! When this situation occurs in
rclone, the copy command will fail with "Failed to copy: object not found" because
rclone verifies that the file info in the response from the copy request is valid,
and since it is marked as deleted it is treated as invalid.
This commit works around this problem by looking for this situation in the response
from the copy operation, and send an additional request to a built-in deduplication
endpoint that will restore the file from trash.
Fixes#6112
The existing code in rclone set the value "offline_access+openid",
when encoded in body it will become "offline_access%2Bopenid". I think
this is wrong. Probably an artifact of "double urlencoding" mixup -
either in rclone or in the jottacloud cli tool version it was sniffed
from? It does work, though. The token received will have scopes "email
offline_access" in it, and the same is true if I change to only
sending "offline_access" as scope.
If a proper space delimited list of "offline_access openid"
is used in the request, the response also includes openid scope:
"openid email offline_access". I think this is more correct and this
patch implements this.
See: #6107
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.
This changes the interface to NewObject so that if NewObject is called
on a directory then it should return fs.ErrorIsDir if possible without
doing any extra work, otherwise fs.ErrorObjectNotFound.
Tested on integration test server with:
go run integration-test.go -tests backend -run TestIntegration/FsMkdir/FsPutFiles/FsNewObjectDir -branch fix-stat -maxtries 1
This is a very large change which turns the post Config function in
backends into a state based call and response system so that
alternative user interfaces can be added.
The existing config logic has been converted, but it is quite
complicated and folloup commits will likely be needed to fix it!
Follow up commits will add a command line and API based way of using
this configuration system.
This change checks the context whenever rclone might retry, and
doesn't retry if the current context has an error.
This fixes the pathological behaviour of `--max-duration` refusing to
exit because all the context deadline exceeded errors were being
retried.
This unfortunately meant changing the shouldRetry logic in every
backend and doing a lot of context propagation.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/add-flag-to-exit-immediately-when-max-duration-reached/22723