This command executes a list query in Google Drive’s native query
language and returns a JSON dump of matches. It’s useful for locating
files quickly in folders with a large number of files, where rclone’s
normal list command is slow due to client-side filtering.
Before this change, Hasher did not check whether a "passed hash" (hashtype
natively supported by the wrapped backend) returned from a backend was blank,
and would sometimes return a blank hash to the caller even when a non-blank hash
was already stored in the db. This caused issues with, for example, Google
Drive, which has SHA1 / SHA256 hashes for some files but not others
(https://rclone.org/drive/#sha1-or-sha256-hashes-may-be-missing) and sometimes also
does not have hashes for very recently modified files.
After this change, Hasher will check if the received "passed hash" is
unexpectedly blank, and if so, it will continue to try other enabled methods,
such as retrieving a value from the database, or possibly regenerating it.
https://forum.rclone.org/t/hasher-with-gdrive-backend-does-not-return-sha1-sha256-for-old-files/44680/9?u=nielash
This change adds support for metadata on OneDrive. Metadata (including
permissions) is supported for both files and directories.
OneDrive supports System Metadata (not User Metadata, as of this writing.) Much
of the metadata is read-only, and there are some differences between OneDrive
Personal and Business (see table in OneDrive backend docs for details).
Permissions are also supported, if --onedrive-metadata-permissions is set. The
accepted values for --onedrive-metadata-permissions are read, write, read,write, and
off (the default). write supports adding new permissions, updating the "role" of
existing permissions, and removing permissions. Updating and removing require
the Permission ID to be known, so it is recommended to use read,write instead of
write if you wish to update/remove permissions.
Permissions are read/written in JSON format using the same schema as the
OneDrive API, which differs slightly between OneDrive Personal and Business.
(See OneDrive backend docs for examples.)
To write permissions, pass in a "permissions" metadata key using this same
format. The --metadata-mapper tool can be very helpful for this.
When adding permissions, an email address can be provided in the User.ID or
DisplayName properties of grantedTo or grantedToIdentities. Alternatively, an
ObjectID can be provided in User.ID. At least one valid recipient must be
provided in order to add a permission for a user. Creating a Public Link is also
supported, if Link.Scope is set to "anonymous".
Note that adding a permission can fail if a conflicting permission already
exists for the file/folder.
To update an existing permission, include both the Permission ID and the new
roles to be assigned. roles is the only property that can be changed.
To remove permissions, pass in a blob containing only the permissions you wish
to keep (which can be empty, to remove all.)
Note that both reading and writing permissions requires extra API calls, so if
you don't need to read or write permissions it is recommended to omit --onedrive-
metadata-permissions.
Metadata and permissions are supported for Folders (directories) as well as
Files. Note that setting the mtime or btime on a Folder requires one extra API
call on OneDrive Business only.
OneDrive does not currently support User Metadata. When writing metadata, only
writeable system properties will be written -- any read-only or unrecognized keys
passed in will be ignored.
TIP: to see the metadata and permissions for any file or folder, run:
rclone lsjson remote:path --stat -M --onedrive-metadata-permissions read
See the OneDrive backend docs for a table of all the supported metadata
properties.
Before this change, operations.CopyDirMetadata would fail with: `internal error:
expecting directory string from combine root '' to have SetMetadata method:
optional feature not implemented` if the dst was the root directory of a combine
upstream. This is because combine was returning a *fs.Dir, which does not
satisfy the fs.SetMetadataer interface.
While it is true that combine cannot set metadata on the root of an upstream
(see also #7652), this should not be considered an error that causes sync to do
high-level retries, abort without doing deletes, etc.
This change addresses the issue by creating a new type of DirWrapper that is
allowed to fail silently, for exceptional cases such as this where certain
special directories have more limited abilities than what the Fs usually
supports.
It is possible that other similar wrapping backends (Union?) may need this same
fix.
In this commit (2014 for v1.02) Purge was implemented for the local
backend:
1527e64ee7 local: Implement Purger interface
This appeared to be implemented just to make a Purge and doesn't
appear to do anything useful.
It is in fact significatly worse than the rclone fallback purge since
it doesn't operate in parallel or update stats.
This patch removes the Purge routine for a consequent speed up and
showing of stats.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/progress-flag-for-rclone-purge/44416
Before this change, undecryptable file names would be skipped very quietly
(there was a log warning, but only at DEBUG level),
failing to alert users of a potentially serious issue that needs attention.
After this change, the log level is raised to NOTICE by default and a new
--crypt-strict-names flag allows raising an error, for users who may prefer not
to proceed if such an issue is detected.
See https://forum.rclone.org/t/skipping-undecryptable-file-name-should-be-an-error/27115https://github.com/rclone/rclone/issues/5787
Before this change this would give errors like this
failed to set metadata on directory: failed to set birth (creation) time: Access is denied.
This was caused by opening the directory in the wrong mode.
A consequence of this is that fs.Directory returned by the local
backend will now have a correct size in (rather than -1). Some tests
depended on this and have been fixed by this commit too.
Before this change, moving (renaming) a file or folder to a different name
within the same parent directory would fail, due to using the wrong API
operation ("/file/move_copy.json" and "/folder/move_copy.json", instead of the
separate "/file/rename.json" and "/folder/rename.json" that opendrive has for
this purpose.)
After this change, Move and DirMove check whether the move is within the same
parent dir. If so, "rename" is used. If not, "move_copy" is used, like before.
GCS gives NotImplemented errors for multi-part server side copies. The
threshold for these is currently set just below 5G so any files bigger
than 5G that rclone attempts to server side copy will fail.
This patch works around the problem by adding a quirk for GCS raising
--s3-copy-cutoff to the maximum. This means that rclone will never use
multi-part copies for files in GCS. This includes files bigger than
5GB which (according to AWS documentation) must be copied with
multi-part copy. However this seems to work with GCS.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/chunker-uploads-to-gcs-s3-fail-if-the-chunk-size-is-greater-than-the-max-part-size/44349/
See: https://issuetracker.google.com/issues/323465186
A seafile server can be configured to use a relative URL as
FILE_SERVER_ROOT in order to support more than one hostname/ip. (see
https://github.com/haiwen/seahub/issues/3398#issuecomment-506920360 )
The previous backend implementation always expected an absolute
download/upload URL, resulting in an "unsupported protocol scheme"
error.
With this commit it supports both absolute and relative.
It was reported that rclone copy occasionally uploaded corrupted data
to azure blob.
This turned out to be a race condition updating the block count which
caused blocks to be duplicated.
This bug was introduced in this commit in v1.64.0 and will be fixed in v1.65.2
0427177857 azureblob: implement OpenChunkWriter and multi-thread uploads #7056
This race only seems to happen if `--checksum` is used but can happen otherwise.
Unfortunately Azure blob does not check the MD5 that we send them so
despite sending incorrect data this corruption is not detected. The
corruption is detected when rclone tries to download the file, so
attempting to copy the files back to local disk will result in errors
such as:
ERROR : file.pokosuf5.partial: corrupted on transfer: md5 hash differ "XXX" vs "YYY"
This adds a check to test the blocklist we upload is as we expected
which would have caught the problem had it been in place earlier.
Similar to
acf1e2df84,
go1.21.4 appears to have broken sync.MoveDir on Windows because
filepath.VolumeName() returns `\\?` instead of `\\?\C:` in cleanRootPath. It
looks like the Go team is aware of the issue and planning a fix, so this may
only be needed temporarily.
When f.opt.MaxAge == 0, f.db is never set, however several methods later assume
it is set and attempt to access it, causing an invalid memory address error.
This change fixes the issue in a few spots (there may still be others I haven't
yet encountered.)
This fixes the Root() returned by the backend when it has returned
fs.ErrorIsFile.
Before this change it returned a root which included the file path.
Because Root() was wrong this caused the detection of the file being
moved over itself check to fail.
This adds an integration test to check it for all backends.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-move-chunker-dir-file-chunker-dir-deletes-all-file-chunks/43333/
Since `tokenRenewer` adds a Shutdown method, we should call it to
clean up resources.
changes backends:
onedrive,box,pcloud,amazonclouddrive,hidrive,jottacloud,sharefile
,premiumizeme
Signed-off-by: rkonfj <rkonfj@gmail.com>
This error was introduced in this commit when refactoring the list
routine.
b8591b230d onedrive: implement ListR method which gives --fast-list support
The error was caused by OneNote files not being skipped properly.
Before this change the IP address of the server was used in the SMB
connect request (see CloudSoda/go-smb2#18).
The updated library now can pass the hostname instead.
The update requires a small change in the dial method call.
Fixes rclone#6672
Before this change ListR was unconditionally enabled on onedrive.
This caused performance problems for some uses, so now the
--onedrive-delta flag has to be supplied.
Fixes#7362
Before this change PartialUploads was not set. This is clearly wrong
since incoming files are visible on the smb server.
Setting PartialUploads fixes the multithread upload modtime problem as
it uses the PartialUploads flag as an indication that it needs to set
the modtime explicitly.
This problem was detected by the new TestMultithreadCopy integration
tests
Fixes#7411
Before this change smb drives sometimes showed a fraction of the
correct size using `rclone about`.
This fixes the problem by switching the upstream library from
github.com/hirochachacha/go-smb2 to github.com/cloudsoda/go-smb2 which
has a fix for the problem.
The new library passes the integration tests.
Fixes#6733
Before this change, streaming files an exact multiple of the chunk
size would cause rclone to attempt to stream a 0 sized chunk which was
rejected by the b2 servers.
This bug was noticed by the new integration tests for chunked streaming.
Before this change the b2 servers would complain as this was only a
single part transfer.
This was noticed by the new integration tests for server side chunked copy.
This commit fixed the problem but made the integration tests fail.
33376bf399 dropbox: fix missing encoding for rclone purge
This fixes the problem properly by making sure we send the encoded or
non encoded root to the right places.
Before this change, the drive backend only used metadata if it was
created with Metadata enabled.
This patch changes it so the Metadata support is enabled dynamically
if it is set in the context.
This fixes the metadata tests in the integration tests which have been
changed to make sure Metadata is enabled.
Google drive doesn't allow the btime (created time) metadata to be
updated when updating an existing object.
This changes skips btime metadata if we are updating an existing
object but allows it otherwise.
- fetch metadata with listings and fetch permissions in parallel
- only write permissions out if they are not inherited.
- make setting labels, owner and permissions work controlled by flags
- `--drive-metadata-labels`, `--drive-metadata-owner`, `--drive-metadata-permissions`
- convert to directoryCache - makes backend much more efficient
- don't force --low-level-retries to 2
- don't wrap paced calls in pacer
- fix shouldRetry
- fix file list searching mechanism
- use rclone's http Transport
- fix handling of 0 length files
- combine into one file and remove uneeded abstraction
- make `chunk_size` and `upload_concurrency` settable
- make auth the same as azureblob
- set the Features correctly
- implement `--azurefiles-max-stream-size`
- remove arbitrary sleep on Mkdir
- implement `--header-upload`
- implement read and write MimeType for objects
- implement optional methods
- About
- Copy
- DirMove
- Move
- OpenWriterAt
- PutStream
- finish documentation
- disable build on plan9 and js
Fixes#365Fixes#7378
- Changes
- Rename `--s3-authkey` to `--auth-key` to get it out of the s3 backend namespace
- Enable `Content-MD5` integrity checks
- Remove locking after code audit
- Documentation
- Factor out documentation into seperate file
- Add Quickstart to docs
- Add Bugs section to docs
- Add experimental tag to docs
- Add rclone provider to s3 backend docs
- Fixes
- Correct quirks in s3 backend
- Change fmt.Printlns into fs.Logs
- Make metadata storage per backend not global
- Log on startup if anonymous access is enabled
- Coding style fixes
- rename fs to vfs to save confusion with the rest of rclone code
- rename db to b for *s3Backend
Fixes#7062
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.
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.