- 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 fix rclone didn't wait for the stats to be finished before
exiting, so the final new line was never printed.
After this change rclone will wait for the stats routine to cease
before exiting.
OSX FUSE only supports 32 bit number of blocks which means that block
counts have been wrapping. This causes f_bavail to be 0 which in turn
causes problems with programs like borg backup.
Fixes#2356
By default the timeout is 60s which isn't long enough for long
transactions. The symptoms are rclone just quitting for no reason.
Supplying the --daemon-timeout flag fixes this causing the kernel to
wait longer for rclone.
Before this change we would unconditionally set the OSXFUSE options
noappledouble and noapplexattr.
However the noapplexattr options caused problems with copies in the
Finder.
Now the default for noapplexattr is false so we don't add the option
by default and the user can override the defaults using the
--noappledouble and --noapplexattr flags.
Before this change rclone would set the volume name from the
remote:path normally. However this has `:` and `/` in which make it
difficult to use in macOS.
Now rclone will remove the special characters and replace them with
spaces. It also allows the volume name to be set with the --volname
flag.
This stops the cache cleaner running unnecessarily and saves
resources.
This also helps with issue #2227 which was caused by a second mount
deleting objects in the first mounts cache.
The written out list of tests was replaced with a nested test for
mount and cmount. The tests for each VFS cache mode were also replaced
with nested tests which makes the output and the code much cleaner.
This flag allows the attribute caching in the kernel to be controlled.
The default is 0s - no caching - which is recommended for filesystems
which can change outside the control of the kernel.
Previously this was at the default meaning it was 60s for mount and 1s
for cmount. This showed strange effects when files changed on the
remote not via the kernel. For instance Caddy would serve corrupted
files for a while when serving from an rclone mount when a file
changed on the remote.
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.
The filesystem does a certain amount of things asynchronously waiting
for the file to be released after writing it means everything should
be in a consistent state.