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 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.
It appears that ci.DryRun = true affects the behavior of r.WriteObject on
chunker only, and no other remotes. This change puts a quick bandaid on it by
setting it later on in the test, but perhaps the underlying issue warrants a
closer look at some point... is chunker checking ci.DryRun itself in a way that
no other remote does? If so, should it? (Does this break encapsulation?)
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.)
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, 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/
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
The recent changes to remove race conditions from --max-delete have
made these tests fail on chunker with s3 because they do copy then
delete and the deletes are being counted in the --max-delete(-size)
counts.
Before this change if we copied files of unknown size, then they lost
their metadata.
This was particularly noticeable using --s3-decompress.
This change adds metadata to Rcat and RcatSized and changes Copy to
pass the metadata in when it calls Rcat for an unknown sized input.
Fixes#6546
strings.Title has been deprecated since Go 1.18 and an alternative has been
available since Go 1.0. The rule Title uses for word boundaries does not handle
Unicode punctuation properly. Use golang.org/x/text/cases instead.
In commit
3ccf222acb sync: overlap check is now filter-sensitive
The tests were attempting to write invalid objects on some backends
due to a leading / on the object name.
This fix also adds a few more test cases and makes sure the tests can
be run individually.
Previously, the overlap check was based on simple prefix checks of the source and destination paths. Now it actually checks whether the destination is excluded via any filter rule or a "--exclude-if-present"-file.
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>
Previously only the fs being checked on gets passed to
GetModifyWindow(). However, in most tests, the test files are
generated in the local fs and transferred to the remote fs. So the
local fs time precision has to be taken into account.
This meant that on Windows the time tests failed because the
local fs has a time precision of 100ns. Checking remote items uploaded
from local fs on Windows also requires a modify window of 100ns.
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 was caused by
7a1cab57b6 cmd/hashsum: dont put ERROR or UNSUPPORTED in output
And was picked up in the integration tests.
This patch no longer calls the HashLister for unsupported hash types.
Currently rclone check supports matching two file trees by sizes and hashes.
This change adds support for SUM files produced by GNU utilities like sha1sum.
Fixes#1005
Note: checksum by default checks, hashsum by default prints sums.
New flag is named "--checkfile" but carries hash name.
Summary of introduced command forms:
```
rclone check sums.sha1 remote:path --checkfile sha1
rclone checksum sha1 sums.sha1 remote:path
rclone hashsum sha1 remote:path --checkfile sums.sha1
rclone sha1sum remote:path --checkfile sums.sha1
rclone md5sum remote:path --checkfile sums.md5
```
- Unify all hash names as lowercase alphanumerics without punctuation.
- Legacy names continue to work but disappear from docs, they can be depreciated or dropped later.
- Make rclone hashsum print supported hash list in case of wrong spelling.
- Update documentation.
Fixes#5071Fixes#4841