Before this change if a directory entry could be listed but not
lstat-ed then rclone would give an error and abort the directory
listing with the error
failed to read directory entry: failed to read directory "XXX": lstat XXX
This change makes sure that the directory listing carries on even
after this kind of error.
The sync will be failed but it will carry on.
This problem was caused by a programming error setting the err
variable in an outer scope when it should have been using a local err
variable.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/sync-aborts-if-even-one-single-unreadable-folder-is-encountered/39653
Implement a Partialuploads feature flag to mark backends for which
uploads are not atomic.
This is set for the following backends
- local
- ftp
- sftp
See #3770
Before this change using /path/to/file.rclonelink would not find the
file when using -l/--links.
This fixes the problem by doing another stat call if the file wasn't
found without the suffix if -l/--links is in use.
It will also give an error if you refer to a symlink without its
suffix which will not work because the limit to a single file
filtering will be using the file name without the .rclonelink suffix.
need ".rclonelink" suffix to refer to symlink when using -l/--links
Before this change it would use the symlink as a directory which then
would fail when listed.
See: #6855
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
In this commit
8d1fff9a82 local: obey file filters in listing to fix errors on excluded files
We introduced the concept of local backend filters.
Unfortunately the filters were being applied before we had resolved
the symlink to point to a directory. This meant that symlinks pointing
to directories were filtered out when they shouldn't have been.
This was fixed by moving the filter check until after the symlink had
been resolved.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/copy-links-not-following-symlinks-on-1-60-0/34073/7
In this commit
8d1fff9a82 local: obey file filters in listing to fix errors on excluded files
We started using filters in the local backend so the user could short
circuit troublesome files/directories at a low level.
However this caused a number of integration tests to fail. This turned
out to be in backends wrapping the local backend. For example the
combine backend test failed because it changes the paths passed to the
local backend so they no longer match the paths in the current filter.
To fix this, a new feature flag `FilterAware` was added and the
UseFilter context flag is only passed to backends which support it. As
the wrapping backends don't support the flag, this fixes the problems
in the integration tests.
In future the wrapping backends could modify the active filters to
match the path modifications and then they could set the FilterAware
flag.
See #6376
Before this change, if rclone was run with `-M` on a filesystem
without xattr support, it would error out.
This patch makes rclone detect the not supported errors and disable
xattrs from then on. It prints one ERROR level message about this.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/metadata-update-local-s3/32277/7
Before this fix if a file was updated, but to the same length and
timestamp then the local backend would return the wrong (cached)
hashes for the object.
This happens regularly on a crypted local disk mount when the VFS
thinks files have been changed but actually their contents are
identical to that written previously. This is because when files are
uploaded their nonce changes so the contents of the file changes but
the timestamp and size remain the same because the file didn't
actually change.
This causes errors like this:
ERROR: file: Failed to copy: corrupted on transfer: md5 crypted
hash differ "X" vs "Y"
This turned out to be because the local backend wasn't clearing its
cache of hashes when the file was updated.
This fix clears the hash cache for Update and Remove.
It also puts a src and destination in the crypt message to make future
debugging easier.
Fixes#4031
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 replaces built-in os.MkdirAll with a patched version that stops the recursion
when reaching the volume part of the path. The original version would continue recursion,
and for extended length paths end up with \\? as the top-level directory, and the error
message would then be something like:
mkdir \\?: The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect.
This change fixes the bug described below:
if a file is removed while the local backend List() runs,
the call will flag an accounting error.
The bug manifests itself if local backend is the Sync target
due to intrinsic concurrency.
The odds to hit this bug depend on --checkers and --transfers.
Chunker over local backend is affected even more because
updating a composite object with a smaller size content
translates into removing chunks on the underlying file system
and involves a number of List() calls.
macOS stores files in NFD form and transferring them like this to some
systems causes the Korean language to display incorrectly.
This adds the flag --local-unicode-normalization to optionally
normalize the file names to NFC.
This also removes the (long deprecated) --local-no-unicode-normalization flag
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/support-for-korean-jaso-conversion/19435
It was discovered on some Android systems, the stat size of a symlink
is different to the size that readlink returns.
This was giving errors like this
transport connection broken: http: ContentLength=30 with Body length 28
There are enough exceptions to the size of readlink being different to
the size of stat that this patch now always does readlink to work out
the size of a symlink.
Since symlinks are relatively uncommon this shouldn't affect
performance too much and will mean that the size is always correct.
This deprecates the --local-zero-size-links flag which is now
effectively always enabled.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/problem-with-symlinks-and-links/23840/
Some virtual filesystems (such as Google Drive File Stream) may
incorrectly set the actual file size equal to the preallocated space,
causing checksum and file size checks to fail.
This flag can be used to disable preallocation for local backends of
this type.
Assume the Stat size of links is zero (and read them instead)
On some virtual filesystems (such ash LucidLink), reading a link size via a
Stat call always returns 0.
However, on unix it reads as the length of the text in the link. This may
cause errors like this when syncing:
Failed to copy: corrupted on transfer: sizes differ 0 vs 13
Setting this flag causes rclone to read the link and use that as the size of
the link instead of 0 which in most cases fixes the problem.
Fixes#4950
Signed-off-by: Riccardo Iaconelli <riccardo@kde.org>
Before this change a circular symlink would cause rclone to error out from the listings.
After this change rclone will skip a circular symlink and carry on the listing,
producing an error at the end.
Fixes#4743
This adds a context.Context parameter to NewFs and related calls.
This is necessary as part of reading config from the context -
backends need to be able to read the global config.
Before this change rclone returned the size from the Stat call of the
link. On Windows this reads as 0 always, however on unix it reads as
the length of the text in the link. This caused errors like this when
syncing:
Failed to copy: corrupted on transfer: sizes differ 0 vs 13
This change causes Windows platforms to read the link and use that as
the size of the link instead of 0 which fixes the problem.
- add a directory to the optional Purge interface
- fix up all the backends
- add an additional integration test to test for the feature
- use the new feature in operations.Purge
Many of the backends had been prepared in advance for this so the
change was trivial for them.
If this option is enabled, rclone will not set modtime of uploaded files and
the backend will return ModTimeNotSupported as its Precision.
Normally rclone updates modification time of files after they are done
uploading. This can cause permissions issues on Linux platforms when
rclone is copying to a CIFS mount where the user rclone is
running as does not own the file uploaded. If this option is enabled,
rclone will no longer update the modtime after copying a file.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/chtimes-error-on-local-mounted-copy/17784
Before this change the --local-no-updated flag would not error if the
files changed in size during the transfer. The file could still be
read beyond the size advertised though which caused problems with
certain backends.
After this change we attempt to provide a consistent view of the file
once it has been opened.
Once the file has had stat() called on it for the first time we
- Only transfer the size that stat gave
- Only checksum the size that stat gave
- Don't update the stat info for the file
This means that files that are extending can be transferred - rclone
will transfer the length it saw the first time it listed the file.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/transport-connection-broken/16494/21
Before this change the local backend was returning file not found
errors for post transfer hashes for files which were moved. This was
caused by the routine which checks for the object being changed.
After this change we ignore file not found errors while checking to
see if the object has changed. If the hash has to be computed then a
file not found error will be thrown when it is opened, otherwise the
cached hash will be returned.
Before this change rclone didn't use sparse files on Windows. This
means that when you downloaded a file with multithread download it
wrote the entire file with zeros first on the first write not at the
start of the file.
This change makes the file be sparse on Windows. Linux/macOS files
were already sparse.