Before this change if --user-server-modtime was in use the ModTime
could change for an object as we receive it accurate to the nearest ms
in listings, but only accurate to the nearest second in HEAD and GET
requests.
Normally AWS returns the milliseconds as .000 in listings, but if
versions are in use it may not. Storj S3 also seems to return
milliseconds.
This patch tries to keep the maximum precision in the last modified
time, so it doesn't update a last modified time with a truncated
version if the times were the same to the nearest second.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/cache-fingerprint-miss-behavior-leading-to-false-positive-stalen-cache/33404/
Before this change rclone used statx() to read the metadata for files
from the local filesystem when `-M` was in use.
Unfortunately statx() was only introduced in kernel 4.11 which was
released in April 2017 so there are current systems (eg Centos 7)
still on kernel versions which don't support statx().
This patch checks to see if statx() is available and if it isn't, it
falls back to using fstatat() which was introduced in Linux 2.6.16
which is guaranteed for all Go versions.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/metadata-from-linux-local-s3-failed-to-copy-failed-to-read-metadata-from-source-object-function-not-implemented/33233/
The current default AnnounceInterval is too short, causing the
multicast domain to be flooded with NOTIFY announcements,
which may prevent other dlna devices from sleeping.
This change allows users to set the announcement interval,
and it's default value also increased to 12 minutes.
Even within the interval, rclone can still passively respond to
M-SEARCH requests from other devices.
Verify the http service listening address and the SSDP server
announcement address to prevent accidental listening of IPv6 addresses
that do not support dlna yet and may be globally accessible.
Unlistened addresses on the interface will also be filtered out of the
SSDP announcement to avoid misleading other services in the multicast domain.
Before this change, if the a mount was created via the rc but unmounted
externally with `fusermount -u` say, rclone would still believe the mount
was active when it wasn't.
According to [systemd.automount](https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd.automount.html) manual
> Note that automount units are separate from the mount itself, so you should
> not set After= or Requires= for mount dependencies here.
> For example, you should not set After=network-online.target or
> similar on network filesystems. Doing so may result in an ordering cycle.
In https://github.com/jlaffaye/ftp/commit/212daf295f the upstream FTP
library changed the way adding your own dialer works which meant that
connections when using explicit FTP were failing.
This patch reworks our connection code to bring it into the
expectations of the library.
Before this fix, if an error ocurred reading the metadata, it could be
set as nil and then used, causing a crash.
This fix changes the readMetadata function so it returns an error, and
the error is always set if the metadata returned is nil.
If mkdir fails then before this change it would have thrown an
error.
After this change, if the error indicated that the directory
already exists then the error is not returned to the user.
This fixes a race condition when two rclone threads are trying to
create the same directory.
Fixes issue with spacing between icon and text in backend docs headers.
This reverts the changes from PR #5889 and #5701, which aligned menu/dropdown items when
icons have different sizes, and implements an alternative fix which gives slightly better
results, and also is more of a native Font Awesome solution:
Font Awesome icons are designed on grid and share a consistent height. But they vary in
width depending on how wide or narrow each symbol is. If you prefer to work with icons
that have a consistent width, adding fa-fw will render each icon using the same width.
A very common mistake for new users of rclone is to use a remote name
without a colon. This can be on the command line or in the config when
setting up a crypt backend.
This change checks to see if the user uses a path which matches a
remote name and gives an NOTICE like this if they do
NOTICE: "remote" refers to a local folder, use "remote:" to refer to your remote or "./remote" to hide this warning
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/sync-to-onedrive-personal-lands-file-in-localfilesystem-but-not-in-onedrive/32956