Before this fix a chain compress -> crypt -> s3 was giving errors
BadDigest: The Content-MD5 you specified did not match what we received.
This was because the crypt backend was encrypting the underlying local
object to calculate the hash rather than the contents of the metadata
stream.
It did this because the crypt backend incorrectly identified the
object as a local object.
This fixes the problem by making sure the crypt backend does not
unwrap anything but fs.OverrideRemote objects.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/not-encrypting-or-compressing-before-upload/32261/10
Before this fix if a file was updated, but to the same length and
timestamp then the local backend would return the wrong (cached)
hashes for the object.
This happens regularly on a crypted local disk mount when the VFS
thinks files have been changed but actually their contents are
identical to that written previously. This is because when files are
uploaded their nonce changes so the contents of the file changes but
the timestamp and size remain the same because the file didn't
actually change.
This causes errors like this:
ERROR: file: Failed to copy: corrupted on transfer: md5 crypted
hash differ "X" vs "Y"
This turned out to be because the local backend wasn't clearing its
cache of hashes when the file was updated.
This fix clears the hash cache for Update and Remove.
It also puts a src and destination in the crypt message to make future
debugging easier.
Fixes#4031
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.
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
With the file version format standardized in lib/version, `crypt` can
now treat the version strings separately from the encrypted/decrypted
file names. This allows --b2-versions to work with `crypt`.
Fixes#1627
Co-authored-by: Luc Ritchie <luc.ritchie@gmail.com>
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.
Before this change, when the above backends created a new backend they
didn't put it into the backend cache.
This meant that rc commands acting on those backends did not work.
This was fixed by making sure the backends use the backend cache.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-rc-backend-command-not-working-as-expected/18834
In this commit
a2afa9aadd fs: Add directory to optional Purge interface
We failed to encrypt the directory name so the Purge failed.
This was spotted by the integration tests.
- 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.
This commit changes the output of the rclone backend encode crypt: and
decode commands to output a plain list of decoded or encoded file
names.
This makes the command much more useful for command line scripting.
Before this change crypt would not calculate hashes for files it was
uploading. This is because, in the general case, they have to be
downloaded, encrypted and hashed which is too resource intensive.
However this causes backends which need the hash first before
uploading (eg s3/b2 when uploading chunked files) not to have a hash
of the file. This causes cryptcheck to complain about missing hashes
on large files uploaded via s3/b2.
This change calculates hashes for the upload if the upload is coming
from a local filesystem. It does this by encrypting and hashing the
local file re-using the code used by cryptcheck. For a local disk this
is not a lot more intensive than calculating the hash.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/strange-output-for-cryptcheck/15437Fixes: #2809