The API doesn't seem to accept a value of "0" any more for the root
directory ID, giving the error "Could not decode folder id".
However omitting it seems to work fine.
In this commit, released in 1.56.0 we started reading the size of the
object from the Content-Length header as returned by the GET request
to read the object.
4401d180aa s3: add --s3-no-head-object
However some object storage systems, notably Ceph, don't return a
Content-Length header.
The new code correctly calls the setMetaData function with a nil
pointer to the ContentLength.
However due to this commit from 2014, released in v1.18, the
setMetaData function was not ignoring the size as it should have done.
0da6f24221 s3: use official github.com/aws/aws-sdk-go including multipart upload #101
This commit correctly ignores the content length if not set.
Fixes#5732
Before this change the `shared_credentials_file` config option was
being ignored.
The correct value is passed into the SDK but it only sets the
credentials in the default provider. Unfortunately we wipe the default
provider in order to install our own chain if env_auth is true.
This patch restores the shared credentials file in the session
options, exactly the same as how we restore the profile.
Original fix:
1605f9e14d s3: Fix shared_credentials_file auth
This patch reverts this commit
1605f9e14d s3: Fix shared_credentials_file auth
It unfortunately had the side effect of making the s3 SDK ignore the
config in our custom chain and use the default provider. This means
that advanced auth was being ignored such as --s3-profile with
role_arn.
Fixes#5468Fixes#5762
The API has changed in the directory move call JSON response from
returning a TaskID as a string to returning it as an integer. In other
places it is still returned as a string though.
This patch allows the TaskID to be an integer or a string in the JSON
response and keeps it internally as a string like before.
Before this change the backoff for the error_background error was 6
seconds. This means that if it wasn't resolved in 60 seconds (with the
default 10 low level retries) then an error was reported.
This error was being reported frequently in the integration tests, so
is likely affecting real users too.
This patch changes the backoff into an exponential backoff
1,2,4,8...1024 seconds to make sure we wait long enough for the
background operation to complete.
See #5734
- setup correct path encoding (fixes backend test FsEncoding)
- ignore range option if file is empty (fixes VFS test TestFileReadAtZeroLength)
- cleanup stray files left after failed upload (fixes test FsPutError)
- rebase code on master, adapt backend for rclone context passing
- translate Siad errors to rclone native FS errors in sia errorHandler
- TestSia: return proper backend options from the script
- TestSia: use uptodate AntFarm image, nebulouslabs/siaantfarm is stale
In
05f128868f azureblob: add --azureblob-no-head-object
we incorrectly parsed the size of the object as the Content-Length of
the returned header. This is incorrect in the presense of Range
requests.
This fixes the problem by parsing the Content-Range header if
avaialble to read the correct length from if a Range request was
issued.
See: #5734
This reverts commit
dc06973796 Revert "s3: use rclone's low level retries instead of AWS SDK to fix listing retries"
Which in turn reverted
5470d34740 "backend/s3: use low-level-retries as the number of SDK retries"
So we are back where we started.
It then modifies it to set the AWS SDK to `--low-level-retries`
retries, but set the rclone retries to 2 so that directory listings
can be retried.
Before this change the cleanup routine exited on the first deletion
error.
This change counts any errors on deletion and exits when the iteration
is complete with an error showing the number of deletion failures.
Deletion failures will be logged.
Before this change we uses limit/offset paging for directories in the
main directory listing routine and in the trash cleanup listing.
This switches to the new scheme of limit/marker which is more reliable
on a directory which is continuously changing. It has the disadvantage
that it doesn't tell us the total number of items available, however
that wasn't information rclone uses.
This changes the interface to NewObject so that if NewObject is called
on a directory then it should return fs.ErrorIsDir if possible without
doing any extra work, otherwise fs.ErrorObjectNotFound.
Tested on integration test server with:
go run integration-test.go -tests backend -run TestIntegration/FsMkdir/FsPutFiles/FsNewObjectDir -branch fix-stat -maxtries 1
The egress charges while using a CloudFront CDN url is cheaper when
compared to accessing the file directly from S3. So added a download
URL advanced option, which when set downloads the file using it.
Before this patch the md5all option would skip creating metadata with
hashsum if base filesystem provided md5, in hope to pass it through.
However, if base hash is slow (for example on local fs), chunker passed
slow md5 but never reported this fact in features.
This patch makes chunker snapshot base hashsum in metadata when md5all is
set and base hashsum is slow since chunker was intended to provide only
instant hashsums from the start.
Fixes#5508
Before this change, when uploading to a crypt, the ObjectInfo
accidentally used the encrypted size, not the unencrypted size when
--crypt-no-data-encryption was set.
Fixes#5498
In presence of no_data_encryption the Crypt's Put method used to over-optimize
and returned base object. This patch makes it return Crypt-wrapped object now.
Fixes#5498
I discovered that `rclone` always upload in chunks of 16MiB whenever
uploading a file smaller than `--drive-upload-cutoff`. This is
undesirable since the purpose of the flag `--drive-upload-cutoff` is
to *prevent* chunking below a certain file size.
I realized that it wasn't `rclone` forcing the 16MiB chunks. The
`google-api-go-client` forces a chunk size default of
[`googleapi.DefaultUploadChunkSize`](32bf29c2e1/googleapi/googleapi.go (L55-L57))
bytes for resumable type uploads. This means that all requests that
use `*drive.Service` directly for upload without specifying a
`googleapi.ChunkSize` will be forced to use a *`resumable`*
`uploadType` (rather than `multipart`) for files less than
`googleapi.DefaultUploadChunkSize`. This is also noted directly in the
Drive API client documentation [here](https://pkg.go.dev/google.golang.org/api/drive/v3@v0.44.0#FilesUpdateCall.Media).
This fixes the problem by passing `googleapi.ChunkSize(0)` to
`Media()` method calls, which is the only way to disable chunking
completely. This is mentioned in the API docs
[here](https://pkg.go.dev/google.golang.org/api/googleapi@v0.44.0#ChunkSize).
The other alternative would be to pass
`googleapi.ChunkSize(f.opt.ChunkSize)` -- however, I'm *strongly* in
favor of *not* doing this for performance reasons. By not explicitly
passing a `googleapi.ChunkSize(0)`, we effectively allow
[`PrepareUpload()`](https://pkg.go.dev/google.golang.org/api/internal/gensupport@v0.44.0#PrepareUpload)
to create a
[`NewMediaBuffer`](https://pkg.go.dev/google.golang.org/api/internal/gensupport@v0.44.0#NewMediaBuffer)
that copies the original `io.Reader` passed to `Media()` in order to
check that its size is less than `ChunkSize`, which will unnecessarily
consume time and memory.
`minChunkSize` is also changed to be `googleapi.MinUploadChunkSize`,
as it is something specified we have no control over.
Google Drive API allows for clauses like "modifiedTime > '2012-06-04T12:00:00'"
in the query param, so the filter flags --max-age and --min-age can be applied
directly at the directory listing phase rather than in a filter.
This is extremely helpful when we want to do an incremental backup of a remote
drive with many files but the number of recently changed file is small.
Co-authored-by: fotile96 <fotile96@users.noreply.github.com>
This replaces built-in os.MkdirAll with a patched version that stops the recursion
when reaching the volume part of the path. The original version would continue recursion,
and for extended length paths end up with \\? as the top-level directory, and the error
message would then be something like:
mkdir \\?: The filename, directory name, or volume label syntax is incorrect.