Before this change rclone would allow the user to stream (eg with
rclone mount, rclone rcat or uploading google photos or docs) 5TB
files. This meant that rclone allocated 4 * 525 MB buffers per
transfer which is way too much memory by default.
This change makes rclone use the configured chunk size for streamed
uploads. This is 5MB by default which means that rclone can stream
upload files up to 48GB by default staying below the 10,000 chunks
limit.
This can be increased with --s3-chunk-size if necessary.
If rclone detects that a file is being streamed to s3 it will make a
single NOTICE level log stating the limitation.
This fixes the enormous memory usage.
Fixes#3568
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/how-much-memory-does-rclone-need/12743
This works around a bug in Ceph which doesn't encode CommonPrefixes
when using URL encoded directory listings.
See: https://tracker.ceph.com/issues/41870
When used with v2_auth = true, PresignRequest doesn't return
signed headers, so remote dest authentication would be fail.
This commit copying back HTTPRequest.Header to headers.
Tested with RiakCS v2.1.0.
Signed-off-by: Anthony Rusdi <33247310+antrusd@users.noreply.github.com>
- Read the storage class for each object
- Implement SetTier/GetTier
- Check the storage class on the **object** before using SetModTime
This updates the fix in 1a2fb52 so that SetModTime works when you are
using objects which have been migrated to GLACIER but you aren't using
GLACIER as a storage class.
Fixes#3522
- change the interface of listBuckets() removing dir parameter and adding context
- add makeBucket() and use in place of Mkdir("")
- this fixes some corner cases in Copy/Update
- mark all the listed buckets OK in ListR
Thanks to @yparitcher for the review.
- Change rclone/fs interfaces to accept context.Context
- Update interface implementations to use context.Context
- Change top level usage to propagate context to lover level functions
Context propagation is needed for stopping transfers and passing other
request-scoped values.
Before this change rclone would fail with
Failed to set modification time: InvalidObjectState: Operation is not valid for the source object's storage class
when attempting to set the modification time of an object in GLACIER.
After this change rclone will re-upload the object as part of a sync if it needs to change the modification time.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/suspected-bug-in-s3-or-compatible-sync-logic-to-glacier/10187
Make the pacer package more flexible by extracting the pace calculation
functions into a separate interface. This also allows to move features
that require the fs package like logging and custom errors into the fs
package.
Also add a RetryAfterError sentinel error that can be used to signal a
desired retry time to the Calculator.
Before this change buckets were created with the same ACL as objects.
After this change, the user can set just --s3-acl to set the ACL of
buckets and objects, or use --s3-bucket-acl as well to have a
different ACL used for bucket creation.
This also logs at INFO level the creation and deletion of buckets.
The existing s3 backend passed all integration tests with OSS provided
`force_path_style = false`.
This makes sure that is so and adds documentation and configuration
for OSS.
Thanks to @luolibin for their work on the OSS backend which we ended
up not needing.
Fixes#1641Fixes#1237
Increasing the --s3-upload-concurrency to 4 (from 2) gives an
additional 45% throughput at the cost of 10MB extra memory per transfer.
After testing the upload perfoc
Before this change rclone would use multipart uploads for any size of
file. However multipart uploads are less efficient for smaller files
and don't have MD5 checksums so it is advantageous to use single part
uploads if possible.
This implements single part uploads for all files smaller than the
upload_cutoff size. Streamed files must be uploaded as multipart
files though.
Wasabi has two location, US East and US West, with different endpoint URLs.
When configuring S3 to use Wasabi, provide the endpoint information for both
locations.
When the env_auth option is enabled, the AWS SDK's session constructor
now loads configuration from ~/.aws/config and environment variables,
and credentials per the selected (or default) AWS_PROFILE's settings.
This is accomplished by **NOT** including any Credential provider in the
aws.Config passed to the session constructor: If the Config.Credentials
is non-nil, that will always be used and the user's configuration re
role_arn, credential_source, source_profile, etc... from the shared
config will be completely ignored.
(The conditional creation and configuration of the stscreds Credential
provider is complicated enough that it is not worth re-creating that
logic.)
Before this change the ACL for objects which were server side copied
was left at the default "private" settings. S3 doesn't copy the ACL
from the source when you copy an object, you have to set it afresh
which is what this does.
This unifies the 3 methods of reading config
* command line
* environment variable
* config file
And allows them all to be configured in all places. This is done by
making the []fs.Option in the backend registration be the master
source of what the backend options are.
The backend changes are:
* Use the new configmap.Mapper parameter
* Use configstruct to parse it into an Options struct
* Add all config to []fs.Option including defaults and help
* Remove all uses of pflag
* Remove all uses of config.FileGet