This includes a new directory listing template which was originally
from the Caddy project (used with permission and copyright attribution).
This is used whenever we serve directory listings so `rclone serve
http`, `rclone serve webdav` and `rclone rcd --rc-serve`
This also modifies the tests so they work with the original template which
is easier to debug.
Bind rclone standard input to password command's standard input. This
allows to provide password from a pipe and collect it using cat.
The typical use case is when rclone is on a remote server with an
encrypted configuration. This solved the environment variable
issue (#3368) and the password storage on remote host.
Now the following chain is allowed:
echo 'secret' | ssh host.example.com \
sudo -u rclone \
rclone --config /path/to/rclone.conf \
--password-command 'cat' ls remote:
Signed-off-by: Sébastien Gross <seb•ɑƬ•chezwam•ɖɵʈ•org>
Co-authored-by: Sébastien Gross <seb•ɑƬ•chezwam•ɖɵʈ•org>
Before this code we were settig the headers on the PUT request. However this isn't where GCS needs them.
After this fix we set the headers in the object upload request itself.
This means that we only support a limited range of headers
- Cache-Control
- Content-Disposition
- Content-Encoding
- Content-Language
- Content-Type
- X-Goog-Meta-
Note for the last of those are for setting custom metadata in the form
"X-Goog-Meta-Key: value".
if running `rclone rcd --rc-user=admin --rc-pass=admin
--rc-allow-origin="*"`, lots of duplicate warnings apperent in log
Warning: Allow origin set to *. This can cause serious security problems.
Warning: Allow origin set to *. This can cause serious security problems.
....
This is not conducive to analyzing debugging info.
Therefore, let's show it only once.
Before this change the local backend was returning file not found
errors for post transfer hashes for files which were moved. This was
caused by the routine which checks for the object being changed.
After this change we ignore file not found errors while checking to
see if the object has changed. If the hash has to be computed then a
file not found error will be thrown when it is opened, otherwise the
cached hash will be returned.
Before this change Windows would read a directory then immedately stat
every item in the directory.
After this change we return the stat information along with the
directory which stops so many callbacks.
Before this change, the current working directory could disappear
according to the Linux kernel.
This was caused by mount returning different nodes with the same
information in.
This change uses vfs.Node.SetSys to cache the information so we always
return the same node.
Before this change rclone would skip all shortcuts with a message
Ignoring unknown document type "application/vnd.google-apps.shortcut"
After this message rclone resolves the shortcuts by default to the
actual files that they point to. See the docs for more info.
The --drive-skip-shortcuts flag can be used to skip shortcuts.
Before this change we stored cached Fs under the config string the
user gave us. As the result of fs.ConfigString() can often be
different after the backend has canonicalised the paths this meant
that we could not look up backends in the cache reliably.
After this change we store cached Fs under their config string as
returned from fs.ConfigString(f) after the Fs has been created. We
also store a map of user to canonical names (where they are different)
so the users can look up Fs under the names they passed to rclone too.
This change along with Pin and Unpin is necessary so we can look up
the Fs in use reliably in the `backend/command` remote control
interface.
Before this change the newObject* functions could return object=nil
with err=nil. The result of these functions are passed outside of the
backend code (eg in Copy, Move) and returning a nil object with a nil
error leads to crashes elsewhere as it breaks expectations.
After this change we return (nil, fs.ErrorObjectNotFound) in these
cases. The one place this is actually needd internally (when turning
items into listings) we detect that error and use it to mean skip the
directory item.
This problem was noticed while testing the shortcuts code. It
shouldn't happen normally but it is conceivable it could.
Apparently some tools (eg duplicati) upload the SHA1 in uppercase to
b2 to be stored in the `large_file_sha1` metadata. This patch forces
it to lower case.
Before this change if you specified --hash MD5 in rclone lsf it would
calculate all the hashes and just return the MD5 hash which was very
slow on the local backend.
Likewise specifying --hash on rclone lsjson was equally slow.
This change introduces the --hash-type flag (and corresponding
internal parameter) so that the hashes required can be selected in
lsjson.
This is used internally in lsf when the --hash parameter is selected
to speed up the hashing by only hashing with the one hash specified.
Fixes#4181