This means that we can return ErrorNotAFile when there is an object
with the same name as a directory rather than potentially creating a
duplicate name.
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".
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 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 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.
According to Microsoft support this error can be caused by
> A timing/concurrency issue where the PUT operations are happening
> about the same time for a single blob. The Put Block List operation
> writes a blob by specifying the list of block IDs that make up the
> blob. In order to be written as part of a blob, a block must have
> been successfully written to the server in a prior Put Block
> operation.
>
> Documentation reference:
>
> https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/rest/api/storageservices/put-block
>
> This error can happen when doing concurrent upload commits after you
> have started the upload but before you commit. In that case, the
> upload fails. The application can retry this error or attempt some
> other recovery action based on the required scenario.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/error-while-syncing-with-azure-blob-storage-x-ms-error-code-invalidbloborblock/15561
For a certain class of broken or missing image Google Photos puts an
image in the error message.
Before this fix we blindly chucked it into the error message.
After this fix we replace it with some sensible text.
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