Cloudflare R2 doesn't support range options like `Range: bytes=21-`.
This patch makes FixRangeOption turn a SeekOption into an absolute
RangeOption like this `Range: bytes=21-25` to interoperate with R2.
See: #5642
Before this change FixRangeOption was leaving `Range: bytes=21-`
alone, thus not fulfilling its contract of making Range requests
absolute.
As it happens this form isn't supported by Cloudflare R2.
After this change the request is normalised to `Range: bytes=21-25`.
See: #5642
Before this change rclone used presigned requests to upload single
part objects. This was because of a limitation in the SDK which didn't
allow non seekable io.Readers to be passed in.
This is incompatible with some S3 backends, and rclone wasn't adding
the `X-Amz-Content-Sha256: UNSIGNED-PAYLOAD` header which was
incompatible with other S3 backends.
The SDK now allows for this so rclone can use PutObject directly.
This sets the `X-Amz-Content-Sha256: UNSIGNED-PAYLOAD` flag on the PUT
request. However rclone will add a `Content-Md5` header if at all
possible so the body data is still protected.
Note that the old behaviour can still be configured if required with
the `use_presigned_request` config parameter.
Fixes#5422
Changes made for macOS specific for that style of system.
Paths are established/defined singularly and modes are set automatically
when created. (Platform specific.)
Before this running `go mod tidy` caused the build to break because it
removed the dependency on golang.org/x/mobile and a command line tool
from this package is needed for the build.
This adds an explicit dependency which will mean the tool is always present.
This builds all windows binaries without CGO but with cmount.
cgofuse has a compile mode which works without CGO on Windows for
amd64/x86/arm64 architectures so switch to using that.
Uses b2_list_file_versions to retrieve all file versions, and returns
the one that was active at the specified time
This is especially useful in combination with other backup tools, such
as restic, which may use rclone as a backend.
Similar to fs.Duration but parses into a timestamp instead
Supports parsing from:
* Any of the date formats in parseTimeDates
* A time.Duration offset from now
* parseDurationSuffixes offset from now
Jottacloud have several different apis and endpoints using a mix of different
timestamp formats. In existing code the list operation (after the recent liststream
implementation) uses format from golang's time.RFC3339 constant. Uploads (using the
allocate api) uses format from a hard coded constant with value identical to golang's
time.RFC3339. And then we have the classic JFS time format, which is similar to RFC3339
but not identical, using a different constant. Also the naming is a bit confusing,
since the term api is used both as a generic term and also as a reference to the
newer format used in the api subdomain where the allocate endpoint is located.
This commit refactors these things a bit.
Now using the utility function for deduplication that was newly implemented to
fix an issue with server-side copy. This function uses the original, and generic,
"jfs" api (and its "cphash" feature), instead of the newer "allocate" api dedicated
for uploads. Both apis support similar deduplication functionaly that we rely on for
the SetModTime operation. One advantage of using the jfs variant is that the allocate
api is specialized for uploads, an initial request performs modtime-only changes and
deduplication if possible but if not possible it creates an incomplete file revision
and returns a special url to be used with a following request to upload missing content.
In the SetModTime function we only sent the first request, using metadata from existing
remote file but different timestamps, which lead to a modtime-only change. If, for some
reason, this should fail it would leave the incomplete revision behind. Probably not
a problem, but the jfs implementation used with this commit is simpler and
a more "standalone" request which either succeeds or fails without expecting additional
requests.
A strange feature (probably bug) in the api used by the server-side copy implementation
in Jottacloud backend is that if the destination file is in trash, the copy request
succeeds but the destination will still be in trash! When this situation occurs in
rclone, the copy command will fail with "Failed to copy: object not found" because
rclone verifies that the file info in the response from the copy request is valid,
and since it is marked as deleted it is treated as invalid.
This commit works around this problem by looking for this situation in the response
from the copy operation, and send an additional request to a built-in deduplication
endpoint that will restore the file from trash.
Fixes#6112
Some backends may not provide size for all objects, and instead
return -1. Existing version included these in directory sums,
with strange results. With this commit rclone ncdu will consider
negative sizes as zero, but add a new prefix flag '~' with a
description that indicates the shown size is inaccurate.
Fixes#6084