The upstream library rclone uses for rclone mount no longer supports
freebsd. Not only is it broken, but it no longer compiles.
This patch disables rclone mount for freebsd.
However all is not lost for freebsd users - compiling rclone with the
`cmount` tag, so `go install -tags cmount` will install a working
`rclone mount` command which uses cgofuse and the libfuse C library
directly.
Note that the binaries from rclone.org will not have mount support as
we don't have a freebsd build machine in CI and it is very hard to
cross compile cmount.
See: https://github.com/bazil/fuse/issues/280Fixes#5843
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.
It was discovered `rclone mount` (but not `rclone cmount`) cached
directories after rename which it shouldn't have done.
This caused IO errors when trying to access files in renamed
directories on bucket based file systems.
This turned out to be the kernel caching the directories as basil/fuse
sets their expiry time to 60s for some reason.
This fix invalidates the relevant kernel cache entries in the for the
directories which fixes the problem.
Fixes: #4977
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/after-a-directory-renmane-using-mv-files-are-not-visible-any-longer/22797
OSX FUSE only supports 32 bit number of blocks which means that block
counts have been wrapping. This causes f_bavail to be 0 which in turn
causes problems with programs like borg backup.
Fixes#2356
Before this change Open("name", os.O_RDONLY|os.O_TRUNC) would have
truncated the file. This is what Linux does, but is counterintuitive.
POSIX states this is undefined, so return an error in this case
instead. This preserves the invariant O_RDONLY => file is not
changed.
The purpose of this is to make it easier to maintain and eventually to
allow the rclone backends to be re-used in other projects without
having to use the rclone configuration system.
The new code layout is documented in CONTRIBUTING.
Normally mount/cmount use `-o ro` to get the kernel to mark the fs as
read only. However this is ignored by WinFsp, so in addition if
`--read-only` is in effect then return EROFS ("Read only File System")
from all methods which attempt to modify something.
This stops the modification times for directories just being the
current time and reads them from the remote instead. This doesn't
take any extra transactions.