Before this fix it was impossible to stop rclone generating an
X-Amx-Acl: header which is incompatible with GCS with uniform access
control and is generally deprecated at AWS.
The API endpoint GetBucketLocation requires
top level permission.
If we do an authenticated head request to a bucket, the bucket location will be returned in the HTTP headers.
Fixes#5066
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/
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.
In this commit
8d1fff9a82 local: obey file filters in listing to fix errors on excluded files
We started using filters in the local backend so the user could short
circuit troublesome files/directories at a low level.
However this caused a number of integration tests to fail. This turned
out to be in backends wrapping the local backend. For example the
combine backend test failed because it changes the paths passed to the
local backend so they no longer match the paths in the current filter.
To fix this, a new feature flag `FilterAware` was added and the
UseFilter context flag is only passed to backends which support it. As
the wrapping backends don't support the flag, this fixes the problems
in the integration tests.
In future the wrapping backends could modify the active filters to
match the path modifications and then they could set the FilterAware
flag.
See #6376
Before this fix, the chunksize calculator was using the previous size
of the object, not the new size of the object to calculate the chunk
sizes.
This meant that uploading a replacement object which needed a new
chunk size would fail, using too many parts.
This fix fixes the calculator to take the size explicitly.
Before this change, if rclone was run with `-M` on a filesystem
without xattr support, it would error out.
This patch makes rclone detect the not supported errors and disable
xattrs from then on. It prints one ERROR level message about this.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/metadata-update-local-s3/32277/7
Before this change, if an object compressed with "Content-Encoding:
gzip" was downloaded, a length and hash mismatch would occur since the
go runtime automatically decompressed the object on download.
If --s3-decompress is set, this change erases the length and hash on
compressed objects so they can be downloaded successfully, at the cost
of not being able to check the length or the hash of the downloaded
object.
If --s3-decompress is not set the compressed files will be downloaded
as-is providing compressed objects with intact size and hash
information.
See #2658
Before this fix, the dropbox backend wasn't decoding the file names
received in changenotify events into rclone standard format.
This meant that changenotify events for filenames which had encoded
characters were failing to be decrypted properly if wrapped in crypt.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-vfs-cache-says-file-name-too-long/31535
Before this patch backends could be shutdown when they fell out of the
cache when they were in use with combine. This was particularly
noticeable with the dropbox backend which gave this error when
uploading files after the backend was Shutdown.
Failed to copy: upload failed: batcher is shutting down
This patch gets the combine remote to pin them until it is finished.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-combine-upload-failed-batcher-is-shutting-down/32168
Previously, with standard auth, the username would be stored in config - but only after
entering the non-standard device/mountpoint sequence during config (a feature introduced
with #5926). Regardless of that, rclone always requests the username from the api at
startup (NewFS).
In #6270 (commit 9dbed02329) this was changed to always
store username in config (consistency), and then also use it to avoid the repeated
customer info request in NewFs (performance). But, as reported in #6309, it did not work
with legacy auth, where user enters username manually, if user entered an email address
instead of the internal username required for api requests. This change was therefore
recently reverted.
The current commit takes another step back to not store the username in config during
the non-standard device/mountpoint config sequence (consistentcy). The username will
now only be stored in config when using legacy auth, where it is an input parameter.
Extend the shouldRetry function by also checking for the quotaExceeded
reason, and since this function appeared to be untested, add a test case
for the existing errors and this new one.
Fixes#615
In
22abd785eb s3: implement reading and writing of metadata #111
The reading information of objects was refactored to use the
s3.HeadObjectOutput structure.
Unfortunately the code branch with `--s3-no-head` was not tested
otherwise this panic would have been discovered.
This shows that this is path is not integration tested, so this adds a
new integration test.
Fixes#6322
`FS.cacheExpiry` is accessed through sync/atomic.
According to the documentation, "On ARM, 386, and 32-bit MIPS, it is
the caller's responsibility to arrange for 64-bit alignment of 64-bit
words accessed atomically. The first word in a variable or in an
allocated struct, array, or slice can be relied upon to be 64-bit
aligned."
Before commit 1d2fe0d856 this field was
aligned, but then a new field was added to the structure, causing the
test suite to panic on linux/386.
No other field is used with sync/atomic, so `cacheExpiry` can just be
placed at the beginning of the stuct to ensure it is always aligned.
By default these will be downloaded compressed.
This changes the default of the previous commit
2781f8e2f1 gcs: Fix download of "Content-Encoding: gzip" compressed objects
But will fit in better with the metadata framework when copying
gzip-encoded objects from backend to backend.
Existing version did save username in config, but only when entering the custom
device/mountpoint sequence in config. Regardless of that, it did always look up the
username at startup with an api request.
This commit improves it so that the username will always be stored in config,
and when using standard authentication it picks it from the login token instead of
requesting it from the remote api, and also in fs constructor it picks it from config
instead of requesting it from remote api (again).
The SDK doesn't wrap errors in a Go standard way so they can't be
unwrapped and tested for - eg fatal error.
The code looks for a Serialization or RequestError and returns the
unwrapped underlying error if possible.
This fixes the fs/operations integration tests checking for fatal
errors being returned.
In this commit
e5974ac4b0 s3: use PutObject from the aws SDK to upload single part objects
rclone was made to upload objects to s3 using PUT requests rather than
using signed uploads.
However this change missed the fact that there is a supported way to
do this in the SDK using the SetStreamingBody method on the Request.
This therefore reverts a lot of the previous commit to do with making
an unsigned connection and other complication and uses the SDK
facility.