Before this change, the elapsed time shown with the --progress flag
would not print ".0s" so the elapsed time.
This change will make it so that the line width is kept a bit more
consistent by always printing to a fixed-point.
This does change the displayed value when the elapsed time
is less than 1s, in which it used to be that the value would be shown
in ms or smaller units.
Signed-off-by: Gary Kim <gary@garykim.dev>
Before this changed we unconditionally fetched the MimeType. On Some
backends like s3 and swift this takes an extra transaction which meant
that `lsf` on those backends was needlessly slow.
This adds an internal option so `lsf` can declare whether it wants
MimeTypes or not depending on whether the user asked for them and an
external flag `--no-mimetype` for `lsjson`.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/reliably-setup-incremental-updates/14006/8
This is a timing dependent test and to make it long enough so that it
would work with the remotes would make it too long for local tests.
The code paths are identical for local vs non-local so just run on
local.
This fixes the integration tests.
This gives you more control over how long rclone will run for, making
it easier to script backups, e.g. via cron. Once the `--max-duration`
time limit is reached, no new transfers will be initiated, but those
already in-flight will be allowed to complete.
Fixes#985
Before this change the expect/continue timeout was set to
--conntimeout which was 60s by default which is too long to wait.
This was noticed when using s3 with a proxy which apparently didn't
support expect / continue properly.
Set --expect-continue-timeout 0 to disable expect/continue.
Statistics of ransfers which were interrupted are not cleared before
retry iteration. These transfers completed with over 100 percentage.
This change clears transfer accounting before next retry iteration is
done in order to keep numbers in track.
Fixes#3861
Without the fix we can have a race, example:
```
Write at 0x00c000432039 by goroutine 187:
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.(*StatsInfo).Error()
fs/accounting/stats.go:495 +0x3f1
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.(*StatsInfo).Error-fm()
fs/accounting/stats.go:477 +0x55
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/walk.listRwalk.func1()
fs/walk/walk.go:162 +0xd2
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/walk.walk.func2()
fs/walk/walk.go:402 +0x30f
Previous read at 0x00c000432039 by goroutine 184:
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.(*statsGroups).sum()
fs/accounting/stats_groups.go:351 +0xcae
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.rcTransferredStats()
fs/accounting/stats_groups.go:132 +0x1f4
```
Fixes#3844
Before this change if an operation was retried on operations.Copy and
the operation was large enough to use an async buffer then an async
buffer was leaked on the retry. This leaked memory, a file handle and
a go routine.
After this change if Account.WithBuffer is called and there is already
a buffer, then a new one won't be allocated.
rclone library users might be intrested in changing default value to
other, or even disabling it. With current version it's impossible which
leads to races when number of uploaded objects exceeds default limit.
Fixes#3732
For few commands, RClone counts a error multiple times. This was fixed by
creating a new error type which keeps a flag to remember if the error has
already been counted or not. The CountError function now wraps the original
error eith the above new error type and returns it.
from rsync manual:
--compare-dest=DIR
This option instructs rsync to use DIR on the destination machine as an
additional hierarchy to compare destination files against doing transfers
(if the files are missing in the destination directory). If a file is found
in DIR that is identical to the sender's file, the file will NOT be
transferred to the destination directory. This is useful for creating
a sparse backup of just files that have changed from an earlier backup.
--copy-dest=DIR
This option behaves like --compare-dest, but rsync will also copy unchanged
files found in DIR to the destination directory using a local copy.
This is useful for doing transfers to a new destination while leaving
existing files intact, and then doing a flash-cutover when all files
have been successfully transferred.