Adds a flag, --progress-terminal-title, that when used with --progress,
will print the string `ETA: %s` to the terminal title.
This also adds WriteTerminalTitle to lib/terminal
Before this change we sorted transfers in the stats list solely on
time started. However if --check-first was in use then lots of
transfers could be started in the same millisecond. Because Windows
time resolution is only 1mS this caused the entries to sort equal and
bounce around in the list.
This change fixes the sort so that if the time is equal it uses the
name which should stabilize the order.
Fixes#4599
Before this change the code which summed up the existing transfers
over all the stats groups forgot to add the old transfer time and old
transfers in.
This meant that the speed and elapsedTime got increasingly inaccurate
over time due to the transfers being culled from the list but their
time not being accounted for.
This change adds the old transfers into the sum which fixes the
problem.
This was only a problem over the rc.
Fixes#4569
Before ths fix --cutoff-mode soft and cautious would emit a Fatal
error which stopped the sync immediately.
This fix introduces a new error which is checked in the sync error
processing which stops the sync gracefully.
Fixes#4576
The deadlock was caused in transfermap.go by calling mu.RLock() in one
function then calling it again in a sub function. Normally this is
fine, however this leaves a window where mu.Lock() can be called. When
mu.Lock() is called it doesn't allow the second mu.RLock() and
deadlocks.
Thead 1 Thread 2
String():mu.RLock()
del():mu.Lock()
sortedSlice():mu.RLock() - DEADLOCK
Lesson learnt: don't try using locks recursively ever!
This patch fixes the problem by removing the second mu.RLock(). This
was done by factoring the code that was calling it into the
transfermap.go file so all the locking can be seen at once which was
ultimately the cause of the problem - the code which used the locks
was too far away from the rest of the code using the lock.
This problem was introduced in:
bfa5715017 fs/accounting: sort transfers by start time
Which hasn't been released in a stable version yet
This is preparation for getting the Accounting to check the context,
buf first we need to get it in place. Since this is one of those
changes that makes lots of noise, this is in a seperate commit.
This was caused by using the stats group from the context passed in by the rcd
rather than the global stats group.
Signed-off-by: Gary Kim <gary@garykim.dev>
During a copy/sync command, if an operation fails due to a network
issue and is retried, the underlying io.Reader is re-initialised,
but the stats for bytes already read are not reset, leading to incorrect
stats. THis was fixed by resetting the bytes read when an Account is
re-initialized.
Before this change we checked the transfer was out of range only
before the Read call. This means that we returned all the data to the
reader before declaring an error. This means that some backends wrote
the file even though an error was returned.
This fix checks the transfer after the Read as well, and chops the
excess characters off the read data if we are over the limit so that
we don't ever deliver all the data.
This fixes the tests introduced as part of 6f1766dd9e and #2672
on backends other than local.
Before this change the exit code for transfer limit exceeded was
incorrect. This was because the `resolveExitCode` function unwraps the
error thus reading the underlying error which is not the same as the
error it was comparing to (`ErrorMaxTransferLimitReached`).
This change fixes it by splitting the error definition in two so that
when the Fatal error is unwrapped we match against
`ErrorMaxTransferLimitReached` however when we return the error we
return `ErrorMaxTransferLimitReachedFatal`.
Before this change, the elapsed time shown with the --progress flag
would not print ".0s" so the elapsed time.
This change will make it so that the line width is kept a bit more
consistent by always printing to a fixed-point.
This does change the displayed value when the elapsed time
is less than 1s, in which it used to be that the value would be shown
in ms or smaller units.
Signed-off-by: Gary Kim <gary@garykim.dev>
Without the fix we can have a race, example:
```
Write at 0x00c000432039 by goroutine 187:
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.(*StatsInfo).Error()
fs/accounting/stats.go:495 +0x3f1
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.(*StatsInfo).Error-fm()
fs/accounting/stats.go:477 +0x55
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/walk.listRwalk.func1()
fs/walk/walk.go:162 +0xd2
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/walk.walk.func2()
fs/walk/walk.go:402 +0x30f
Previous read at 0x00c000432039 by goroutine 184:
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.(*statsGroups).sum()
fs/accounting/stats_groups.go:351 +0xcae
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.rcTransferredStats()
fs/accounting/stats_groups.go:132 +0x1f4
```
Fixes#3844
Before this change if an operation was retried on operations.Copy and
the operation was large enough to use an async buffer then an async
buffer was leaked on the retry. This leaked memory, a file handle and
a go routine.
After this change if Account.WithBuffer is called and there is already
a buffer, then a new one won't be allocated.
rclone library users might be intrested in changing default value to
other, or even disabling it. With current version it's impossible which
leads to races when number of uploaded objects exceeds default limit.
Fixes#3732
For few commands, RClone counts a error multiple times. This was fixed by
creating a new error type which keeps a flag to remember if the error has
already been counted or not. The CountError function now wraps the original
error eith the above new error type and returns it.
This was broken in e337cae0c5 when we deleted the transfers
immediately.
This is fixed by keeping a merged slice of time ranges of completed
transfers and adding those to the current transfers.
In 53a1a0e3ef we introduced a problem where if there was an
error on the file being transferred then the file was re-opened and
the old one wasn't closed.
This was partially fixed in bfbddab46b however this didn't
address the case of the old file being closed.
This is now fixed by
- marking the file as open again in UpdateReader
- moving the stopping the accounting machinery to a new method Done
Before this change, using -P occasionally deadlocked on the Transfer
mutex when Transfer.Done() was called with a non nil error and the
StatsInfo mutex since they mutually call each other.
This was fixed by making sure that the Transfer mutex is always
released before calling any StatsInfo methods.
This improves on: 6f87267b34Fixes#3505
Before this change, using -P occasionally deadlocked on the transfer
mutex and the stats mutex since they call each other via the progress
printing.
This is fixed by shortening the locking windows and converting the
mutex to a RW mutex.
core/stats can return two different schemas in 'transferring' field.
One is object with fields the other is just plain string.
This is confusing, unnecessary and makes defining response schema
more difficult. It also returns `lastError` as value which can be
rendered differently depending on source of error.
This change standardizes 'transferring' filed to always return
object but with reduced fields if they are not available.
Former string item is converted to {name:remote_name} object.
'lastError' is forced to be a string as in some cases it can be encoded
as an object.
Introduce stats groups that will isolate accounting for logically
different transferring operations. That way multiple accounting
operations can be done in parallel without interfering with each other
stats.
Using groups is optional. There is dedicated global stats that will be
used by default if no group is specified. This is operating mode for CLI
usage which is just fire and forget operation.
For running rclone as rc http server each request will create it's own
group. Also there is an option to specify your own group.
This is done to make clear ownership over accounting object and prepare
for removing global stats object.
Stats elapsed time calculation has been altered to account for actual
transfer time instead of stats creation time.
- 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.
This fixes several things wrong with the layout of the stats.
Transfers which haven't started are printed in the same format as
those which have so the stats with `--progress` don't show horrible
artifacts.
Checkers and transfers now get a ": checkers" and ": transfers" label
on the end of the stats line. Transfers will have the transfer stats
when the transfer has started instead of this.
There was a bug in the routine which shortened the file names (it
always produces strings 1 too long). This is now fixed with a test.
The formatting string was wrong with a fixed width of 45 - this is now
replaces with the value of `--stats-file-name-length`.
This also meant that there were unecessary leading spaces in the file
names. So the default `--stats-file-name-length` was raised to 45
from 40.
Before this change the moving average for the individual file stats
would start at 0 and only converge to the correct value over 15-30
seconds.
This change starts the weighting period as 1 and moves it up once per
sample which gets the average to a better value instantly.
Previous to this change package used for this
github.com/VividCortex/ewma took a 0 average to mean reset the
statistics. This happens quite often when transferring files though a
buffer.
Replace that implementation with a simple home grown one (with about
the same constant), without that feature.
--max-backlog controls the queue length.
Add statistics for the check/upload/rename queues.
This means that checking can complete before the uploads which will
give rclone the ability to show exactly what is outstanding.
A deadlock could occur since we have now put a mutex on GetBytes from
StatsInfo.String (s.mu) - progress (acc.statmu) and read (acc.statmu)
- GetBytes (s.mu).
Fix this by giving stringSet its own locking and excluding the call
which caused the deadlock from the mutex in StatsInfo.String.