This is done by making fs.Config private and attaching it to the
context instead.
The Config should be obtained with fs.GetConfig and fs.AddConfig
should be used to get a new mutable config that can be changed.
This adds a context.Context parameter to NewFs and related calls.
This is necessary as part of reading config from the context -
backends need to be able to read the global config.
- add a directory to the optional Purge interface
- fix up all the backends
- add an additional integration test to test for the feature
- use the new feature in operations.Purge
Many of the backends had been prepared in advance for this so the
change was trivial for them.
This adds expire and unlink fields to the PublicLink interface.
This fixes up the affected backends and removes unlink parameters
where they are present.
These commands are for implementing backend specific
functionality. They have documentation which is placed automatically
into the backend doc.
There is a simple test for the feature in the backend tests.
Note: chunker implements many irrelevant methods (UserInfo, Disconnect etc),
but they are required by TestIntegration/FsCheckWrap and cannot be removed.
Dropped API methods: MergeDirs DirCacheFlush PublicLink UserInfo Disconnect OpenWriterAt
Meta formats:
- renamed old simplejson format to wdmrcompat.
- new simplejson format supports hash sums and verification of chunk size/count.
Change list:
- split-chunking overlay for mailru
- add to all
- fix linter errors
- fix integration tests
- support chunks without meta object
- fix package paths
- propagate context
- fix formatting
- implement new required wrapper interfaces
- also test large file uploads
- simplify options
- user friendly name pattern
- set default chunk size 2G
- fix building with golang 1.9
- fix ci/cd on a separate branch
- fix updated object name (SyncUTFNorm failed)
- fix panic in Box overlay
- workaround: Box rename failed if name taken
- enhance comments in unit test
- fix formatting
- embed wrapped remote rather than inherit
- require wrapped remote to support move (or copy)
- implement 3 (keep fstest)
- drop irrelevant file system interfaces
- factor out Object.mainChunk
- refactor TestLargeUpload as InternalTest
- add unit test for chunk name formats
- new improved simplejson meta format
- tricky case in test FsIsFile (fix+ignore)
- remove debugging print
- hide temporary objects from listings
- fix bugs in chunking reader:
- return EOF immediately when all data is sent
- handle case when wrapped remote puts by hash (bug detected by TestRcat)
- chunked file hashing (feature)
- server-side copy across configs (feature)
- robust cleanup of temporary chunks in Put
- linear download strategy (no read-ahead, feature)
- fix unexpected EOF in the box multipart uploader
- throw error if destination ignores data
Before this change it was possible to make a remote with an invalid
name in the config file, either manually or with `rclone config
create` (but not with `rclone config`).
When this remote was used, because it was invalid, rclone would
presume this remote name was a local directory for a very suprising
user experience!
This change checks remote names more carefully and returns errors
- when the user tries to use an invalid remote name on the command line
- when an invalid remote name is used in `rclone config create/update/password`
- when the user tries to enter an invalid remote name in `rclone config`
This does not prevent the user entering a remote name with invalid
characters in the config manually, but such a remote will fail
immediately when it is used on the command line.
This was factored from fstest as we were including the testing
enviroment into the main binary because of it.
This was causing opening the browser to fail because of 8243ff8bc8.
- Change rclone/fs interfaces to accept context.Context
- Update interface implementations to use context.Context
- Change top level usage to propagate context to lover level functions
Context propagation is needed for stopping transfers and passing other
request-scoped values.
It otherwise has the nearly the same interface as walk.Walk which it
will fall back to if it can't use ListR.
Using walk.ListR will speed up file system operations by default and
use much less memory and start immediately compared to if --fast-list
had been supplied.