fs.CountError is called when an error is encountered. The method was
calling GlobalStats().Error(err) which incremented the error at the
global stats level. This led to calls to core/stats with group= filter
returning an error count of 0 even if errors actually occured.
This change requires the context to be provided when calling
fs.CountError. Doing so, we can retrieve the correct StatsInfo to
increment the errors from.
Fixes#5865
There were a lot of instances of this lint error
printf: non-constant format string in call to github.com/rclone/rclone/fs.Logf (govet)
Which were fixed by re-arranging the arguments and adding "%s".
There were quite a few genuine bugs which were found too.
The --metadata-mapper was being called twice for files that rclone
needed to stream to disk,
This happened only for:
- files bigger than --upload-streaming-cutoff
- on backends which didn't support PutStream
This also meant that these were being logged as two transfers which
was a little strange.
This fixes the problem by not using operations.Copy to upload the file
once it has been streamed to disk, instead using the Put method on the
backend.
This should have no effect on reliability of the transfers as we retry
Put if possible.
This also tidies up the Rcat function to make the different ways of
uploading the data clearer and make it easy to see that it gets
verified on all those paths.
See #7848
Before this change on files which have unknown length (like Google
Documents) the SrcFsType would be set to "memoryFs".
This change fixes the problem by getting the Copy function to pass the
src Fs into a variant of Rcat.
Fixes#7848
Before this change, the MoveCaseInsensitive logic in operations.move made the
assumption that dst != nil && remote != "". After this change, it should work
correctly when either one is present without the other.
This change officially adds bisync to the nightly integration tests for all
backends.
This will be part of giving us the confidence to take bisync out of beta.
A number of fixes have been added to account for features which can differ on
different backends -- for example, hash types / modtime support, empty
directories, unicode normalization, and unimportant differences in log output.
We will likely find that more of these are needed once we start running these
with the full set of remotes.
Additionally, bisync's extremely sensitive tests revealed a few bugs in other
backends that weren't previously covered by other tests. Fixes for those issues
have been submitted on the following separate PRs (and bisync test failures will
be expected until they are merged):
- #7670 memory: fix deadlock in operations.Purge
- #7688 memory: fix incorrect list entries when rooted at subdirectory
- #7690 memory: fix dst mutating src after server-side copy
- #7692 dropbox: fix chunked uploads when size <= chunkSize
Relatedly, workarounds have been put in place for the following backend
limitations that are unsolvable for the time being:
- #3262 drive is sometimes aware of trashed files/folders when it shouldn't be
- #6199 dropbox can't handle emojis and certain other characters
- #4590 onedrive API has longstanding bug for conflictBehavior=replace in
server-side copy/move
Before this change operations.SetDirModTime could return the error
"optional feature not implemented" when attempting to set modification
times on crypted sftp backends.
This was because crypt wraps the directories using fs.DirWrapper but
these return fs.ErrorNotImplemented for the SetModTime method.
The fix is to recognise that error and fall back to using the
DirSetModTime method on the backend which does work.
Fixes#7673
Before this change, operations.DirMove would fail when moving a directory, if
the src and dest were on different upstreams of a combine remote.
The issue only affected operations.DirMove, and not sync.MoveDir, because they
checked for server-side-move support in different ways.
MoveDir checks by just trying it and seeing what error comes back. This works
fine for combine because combine returns fs.ErrorCantDirMove which MoveDir
understands what to do with.
DirMove, however, only checked whether the function pointer is nil. This is an
unreliable way to check for combine, because combine does advertise support for
DirMove, despite not always being able to do it.
This change fixes the issue by checking the returned error in a manner similar
to sync.MoveDir and falling back to individual file moves (copy + delete)
depending on which error was returned.
Before this change, directory modtimes (and metadata) were always synced from
src to dst, even if already in sync (i.e. their modtimes already matched.) This
potentially required excessive API calls, made logs noisy, and was potentially
problematic for backends that create "versions" or otherwise log activity
updates when modtime/metadata is updated.
After this change, a new DirsEqual function is added to check whether dirs are
equal based on a number of factors such as ModifyWindow and sync flags in use.
If the dirs are equal, the modtime/metadata update is skipped.
For backends that require setDirModTimeAfter, the "after" sync is performed only
for dirs that could have been changed by the sync (i.e. dirs containing files
that were created/updated.)
Note that dir metadata (other than modtime) is not currently considered by
DirsEqual, consistent with how object metadata is synced (only when objects are
unequal for reasons other than metadata).
To sync dir modtimes and metadata unconditionally (the previous behavior), use
--ignore-times.
This should be more efficient for the purposes of --fix-case, as operations.DirMove
accepts `srcRemote` and `dstRemote` arguments, while sync.MoveDir does not.
This also factors the two-step-move logic to operations.DirMoveCaseInsensitive, so
that it is reusable by other commands.
Before this change, operations.moveOrCopyFile had a special section to detect
and handle changing case of a file on a case insensitive remote, but
operations.Move did not. This caused operations.Move to fail for certain
backends that are incapable of renaming a file in-place to an equal-folding name.
(Not all case-insensitive backends have this limitation -- for example, Dropbox
does but macOS local does not.)
After this change, the special two-part-move section from
operations.moveOrCopyFile is factored out to its own function,
moveCaseInsensitive, which is then called from both operations.moveOrCopyFile
and operations.Move.
Before this change it wasn't possible to see where transfers were
going from and to in core/stats and core/transferred.
When use in rclone mount in particular this made interpreting the
stats very hard.
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.
After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.
The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.
If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)
Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)
Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)
Many other details are explained in the included docs.
Before this change, a file would sometimes be silently deleted instead of
renamed on macOS, due to its unique handling of unicode normalization. Rclone
already had a SameObject check in place for case insensitivity before deleting
the source (for example if "hello.txt" was renamed to "HELLO.txt"), but had no
such check for unicode normalization. After this change, the delete is skipped
on macOS if the src and dst filenames normalize to the same NFC string.
Example of the previous behavior:
~ % rclone touch /Users/nielash/rename_test/ö
~ % rclone lsl /Users/nielash/rename_test/ö
0 2023-11-21 17:28:06.170486000 ö
~ % rclone moveto /Users/nielash/rename_test/ö /Users/nielash/rename_test/ö -vv
2023/11/21 17:28:51 DEBUG : rclone: Version "v1.64.0" starting with parameters ["rclone" "moveto" "/Users/nielash/rename_test/ö" "/Users/nielash/rename_test/ö" "-vv"]
2023/11/21 17:28:51 DEBUG : Creating backend with remote "/Users/nielash/rename_test/ö"
2023/11/21 17:28:51 DEBUG : Using config file from "/Users/nielash/.config/rclone/rclone.conf"
2023/11/21 17:28:51 DEBUG : fs cache: adding new entry for parent of "/Users/nielash/rename_test/ö", "/Users/nielash/rename_test"
2023/11/21 17:28:51 DEBUG : Creating backend with remote "/Users/nielash/rename_test/"
2023/11/21 17:28:51 DEBUG : fs cache: renaming cache item "/Users/nielash/rename_test/" to be canonical "/Users/nielash/rename_test"
2023/11/21 17:28:51 DEBUG : ö: Size and modification time the same (differ by 0s, within tolerance 1ns)
2023/11/21 17:28:51 DEBUG : ö: Unchanged skipping
2023/11/21 17:28:51 INFO : ö: Deleted
2023/11/21 17:28:51 INFO :
Transferred: 0 B / 0 B, -, 0 B/s, ETA -
Checks: 1 / 1, 100%
Deleted: 1 (files), 0 (dirs)
Elapsed time: 0.0s
2023/11/21 17:28:51 DEBUG : 5 go routines active
~ % rclone lsl /Users/nielash/rename_test/
~ %
Before this change, changing the case of a file on a case insensitive remote
would fatally panic when `--dry-run` was set, due to `moveOrCopyFile`
attempting to access the non-existent `tmpObj` it (would normally have)
created. After this change, the panic is avoided by skipping this step during
a `--dry-run` (with the usual "skipped as --dry-run is set" log message.)
Logger instruments the Sync routine with a status report for each file pair,
making it possible to output a list of the synced files, along with their
attributes and sigil categorization (match/differ/missing/etc.)
It is very customizable by passing in a custom LoggerFn, options, and
io.Writers to be written to. Possible uses include:
- allow sync to write path lists to a file, in the same format as rclone check
- allow sync to output a --dest-after file using the same format flags as lsf
- receive results as JSON when calling sync from an internal function
- predict the post-sync state of the destination
For usage examples, see bisync.WriteResults() or sync.SyncLoggerFn()
Before this change, lsf's time format was hard-coded to "2006-01-02 15:04:05",
regardless of the Fs's precision. After this change, a new optional
--time-format flag is added to allow customizing the format (the default is
unchanged).
Examples:
rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format 'Jan 2, 2006 at 3:04pm (MST)'
rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format '2006-01-02 15:04:05.000000000'
rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format '2006-01-02T15:04:05.999999999Z07:00'
rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format RFC3339
rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format DateOnly
rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format max
--time-format max will automatically truncate '2006-01-02 15:04:05.000000000'
to the maximum precision supported by the remote.
Before this change we were only counting moves as checks. This means
that when using `rclone move` the `Transfers` stat did not count up
like it should do.
This changes introduces a new primitive operations.MoveTransfers which
counts moves as Transfers for use where that is appropriate, such as
rclone move/moveto. Otherwise moves are counted as checks and their
bytes are not accounted.
See: #7183
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/stats-one-line-date-broken-in-1-64-0-and-later/43263/
Before this change we showed both server side moves and server side
copies as bytes transferred.
This made a nice easy to use stats display, but also caused confusion
for users who saw unrealistic transfer times. It also caused a problem
with --max-transfer and chunker which renames each chunk after
uploading which was counted as a transfer byte.
This patch instead accounts the server side move and copy statistics
as a seperate lines in the stats display which will only appear if
there are any server side moves / copies. This is also output in the
rc.
This gives users something to look at when transfers are running which
was the point of the original change but it now means that transfer
bytes represents data transfers through this rclone instance only.
Fixes#7183
Before this change, the overlapping check could erroneously give this
error on case insensitive file systems:
Failed to sync: destination and parameter to --backup-dir mustn't overlap
The code was fixed and re-worked to be simpler and more reliable.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/backup-dir-cannot-be-in-root-even-when-excluded/39844/
Before this change the new partial downloads code was causing symlinks
to be copied as regular files.
This was because the partial isn't named .rclonelink so the local
backend saves it as a normal file and renaming it to .rclonelink
doesn't cause it to become a symlink.
This fixes the problem by not copying .rclonelink files using the
partials mechanism but reverting to the previous --inplace behaviour.
This could potentially be fixed better in the future by changing the
local backend Move to change files to and from symlinks depending on
their name. However this was deemed too complicated for a point
release.
This also adds a test in the local backend. This test should ideally
be in operations but it isn't easy to put it there as operations knows
nothing of symlinks.
Fixes#7101
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/reggression-in-v1-63-0-links-drops-the-rclonelink-extension/39483
The --progress flag overrides operations.SyncPrintf in order to do its
magic on stdout without interfering with other output.
Before this change the syncFprintf routine in operations (which is
used to print all output to stdout) was taking the
operations.StdoutMutex and the printProgress function in the
--progress routine was also attempting to take the same mutex causing
a deadlock.
This patch fixes the problem by moving the locking from the
syncFprintf function to SyncPrintf. It is then up to the function
overriding this to lock the StdoutMutex. This ensures the StdoutMutex
can never cause a deadlock.
Before this change partially uploaded files (when --inplace is not in
effect) would be left lying around in the file system if rclone was
killed in the middle of a transfer.
This adds an exit handler to remove the file and removes it when the
file is complete.
Before this change, some parts of operations called the Open method on
objects directly, and some called NewReOpen to make an object which
can re-open itself on errors.
This adds a new function operations.Open which should be called
instead of fs.Object.Open to open a reliable stream of data and
changes all call sites to use that.
This means `rclone check --download` and `rclone cat` will re-open
files on failures.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/does-rclone-support-retries-for-check-when-using-download-flag/38641
Before this change we tested special errors for straight equality.
This works for all normal backends, but the union backend may return
wrapped errors which contain the special error types.
In particular if a pcloud backend was part of a union when attempting
to set modification times the fs.ErrorCantSetModTime return wasn't
understood because it was wrapped in a union.Error.
This fixes the problem by using errors.Is instead in all the
comparisons in operations.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/failed-to-set-modification-time-1-error-pcloud-cant-set-modified-time/38596
When copying to a backend which has the PartialUploads feature flag
set and can Move files the file is copied into a temporary name first.
Once the copy is complete, the file is renamed to the real
destination.
This prevents other processes from seeing partially downloaded copies
of files being downloaded and prevents overwriting the old file until
the new one is complete.
This also adds --inplace flag that can be used to disable the partial
file copy/rename feature.
See #3770
Co-authored-by: Nick Craig-Wood <nick@craig-wood.com>
When using `rclone cat` to print the contents of several files, the
user may want to inject some separator between the files, such as a
comma or a newline. This patch adds a `--separator` option to the `cat`
command to make that possible. The default value remains an empty
string, `""`, maintaining the prior behavior of `rclone cat`.
Closes#6968
If a file has two (or more) extensions and the second (or subsequent)
extension is recognised as a valid mime type, then the suffix will go
before that extension. So `file.tar.gz` would be backed up to
`file-2019-01-01.tar.gz` whereas `file.badextension.gz` would be
backed up to `file.badextension-2019-01-01.gz`
Fixes#6892
Before this change if both --progress and --interactive were set then
the screen display could become muddled.
This change makes --progress and --interactive use the same lock so
while rclone is asking for interactive questions, the progress will be
paused.
Fixes#6755