In ths security related issue the go1.21.4 stdlib changed the parsing
of volume names on Windows.
https://github.com/golang/go/issues/63713
This had the consequences of breaking the MkdirAll tests which were
looking for specific error messages which changed and using invalid
paths.
In particular under go1.21.3:
filepath.VolumeName(`\\?\C:`) == `\\?\C:`
But under go1.21.4 it is:
filepath.VolumeName(`\\?\C:`) == `\\?`
The path `\\?\C:` isn't actually a valid Windows path. I reported this
as a FYI bug upstream - I'm not expecting it to be fixed.
See: https://github.com/golang/go/issues/64101
Users can now input a comma separated list of namenodes when writing
config for hdfs remotes.
This is required when you have multiple namenodes in your hdfs cluster
and cannot be certain which namenodes will be in 'standby' or 'active'
states.
This was available before but wasn't documented and didn't use the
correct rclone interfaces.
This makes it easier to add resources with any build method, and also when
building librclone.dll.
Goversioninfo is now used as a library, instead of running it as a tool.
After the copy refactor:
179f978f75 operations: refactor Copy into methods on an temporary object
There was some confusion in the code about server side copies - should
they or shouldn't they use partials?
This manifested in unit test failures for remotes which supported
server side Copy and PartialUploads. This combination is rare and only
exists in the sftp backend with the --sftp-copy-is-hardlink flag.
This fix makes the choice that backends which set PartialUploads
always use partials even for server side copies.
The upstream library rclone uses for rclone mount no longer supports
freebsd. Not only is it broken, but it no longer compiles.
This patch disables rclone mount for freebsd.
However all is not lost for freebsd users - compiling rclone with the
`cmount` tag, so `go install -tags cmount` will install a working
`rclone mount` command which uses cgofuse and the libfuse C library
directly.
Note that the binaries from rclone.org will not have mount support as
we don't have a freebsd build machine in CI and it is very hard to
cross compile cmount.
See: https://github.com/bazil/fuse/issues/280Fixes#5843
operations.Copy had become very unwieldy. This refactors it into
methods on a copy object which is created for the duration of the
copy. This makes it much easier to read and reason about.
On a 404 error, b2 returns an empty body which, before this change,
caused the error handler to try to parse an empty string and give the
following DEBUG message:
Couldn't decode error response: EOF
This is confusing as it is expected in normal operations and isn't an
error.
This change reads the body of an error response first then tries to
decode it only if it isn't empty, which avoids the confusing DEBUG
message.
This also upgrades failure to read the body or failure to decode the
JSON to ERROR messages as now we are certain that we should have
something to read and decode.
ncdu stores the position that it was in for each directory. However
doing a rescan can cause those positions to be out of range if the
number of files decreased in a directory. When re-entering the
directory, this causes an index out of range error.
This fixes the problem by detecting the index out of range and
flushing the saved directory position.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/slice-bounds-out-of-range-during-ncdu/42492/
For some files the Windows Volume Shadow Service (VSS) advertises the
file size as X in the directory listing but returns a different number
Y on stat-ing the file. If the file is opened and read there are Y
bytes available for reading.
Existing copy tools copy Y bytes rather than X so for consistency
rclone should do the same.
This fixes the problem by stat-ing the file immediately before opening
it. This will also reduce the unnecessary occurrence of "can't copy -
source file is being updated" errors; if the file has finished
changing by the time we come to copy it then we now can copy it
successfully.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/consistently-getting-corrupted-on-transfer-sizes-differ-syncing-to-an-smb-share/42218/
This was caused by a change to the upstream library
ProtonMail/go-crypto checking the flags on the keys more strictly.
However the signing key for rclone is very old and does not have those
flags. Adding those flags using `gpg --edit-key` and then the
`change-usage` subcommand to remove, save, quite then re-add, save
quit the signing capabilities caused the key to work.
This also adds tests for the verification and adds the selfupdate
tests into the integration test harness as they had been disabled on
CI because they rely on external sources and are sometimes unreliable.
Fixes#7373
makes the following go strings functions available to be used in custom templates; contains, hasPrefix, hasSuffix
added documentation for exported funcs
With automount the target mount drive appears twice in /proc/self/mountinfo.
379 27 0:70 / /mnt/rclone rw,relatime shared:433 - autofs systemd-1 rw,fd=57,...
566 379 0:90 / /mnt/rclone rw,nosuid,nodev,relatime shared:488 - fuse.rclone remote: rw,...
Before this fix we only looked for the mount once in
/proc/self/mountinfo. It finds the automount line and since this
doesn't have fs type rclone it concludes the mount isn't ready yet.
This patch makes rclone look through all the mounts and if any of them
have fs type rclone it concludes the mount is ready.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/systemd-mount-works-but-automount-does-not/42287/
Before this change, if a hardlink command was issued, rclone would
just ignore it and not return an error.
This changes any unknown operations (including hardlink) to return an
unsupported error.
Streaming uploads are used by rclone rcat and rclone mount
--vfs-cache-mode off.
After the multipart chunker refactor the multipart chunked streaming
upload was accidentally mixing the first and the second parts up which
was causing corrupted uploads.
This was caused by a simple off by one error in the refactoring where
we went from 1 based part number counting to 0 based part number
counting.
Fixing this revealed that the metadata wasn't being re-read for the
copied object either.
This fixes both of those issues and adds an integration tests so it
won't happen again.
Fixes#7367