Without the fix we can have a race, example:
```
Write at 0x00c000432039 by goroutine 187:
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.(*StatsInfo).Error()
fs/accounting/stats.go:495 +0x3f1
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.(*StatsInfo).Error-fm()
fs/accounting/stats.go:477 +0x55
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/walk.listRwalk.func1()
fs/walk/walk.go:162 +0xd2
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/walk.walk.func2()
fs/walk/walk.go:402 +0x30f
Previous read at 0x00c000432039 by goroutine 184:
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.(*statsGroups).sum()
fs/accounting/stats_groups.go:351 +0xcae
github.com/rclone/rclone/fs/accounting.rcTransferredStats()
fs/accounting/stats_groups.go:132 +0x1f4
```
Fixes#3844
The S3 ListObject API returns paginated bucket listings, with
"MaxKeys" items for each GET call.
The default value is 1000 entries, but for buckets with millions of
objects it might make sense to request more elements per request, if
the backend supports it. This commit adds a "list_chunk" option for
the user to specify a lower or higher value.
This commit does not add safe guards around this value - if a user
decides to request a too large list, it might result in connection
timeouts (on the server or client).
In AWS S3, there is a fixed limit of 1000, some other services might
have one too. In Ceph, this can be configured in RadosGW.
Before this patch we were failing to URL decode the NextMarker when
url encoding was used for the listing.
The result of this was duplicated listings entries for directories
with >1000 entries where the NextMarker was a file containing a space.
Before this change, renaming an open file when using the VFS cache was
delayed until the file was closed. This meant that the file was not
readable after a rename even though it is was in the cache.
After this change we rename the local cache file and the in memory
cache, delaying only the rename of the file in object storage.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/xen-orchestra-ebadf-bad-file-descriptor-write/13104
Before this change we used the same (relatively low limits) for server
side copy as we did for multipart uploads. It doesn't make sense to
use the same limits since no data is being downloaded or uploaded for
a server side copy.
This change introduces a new parameter --s3-copy-cutoff to control
when the switch from single to multipart server size copy happens and
defaults it to the maximum 5GB.
This makes server side copies much more efficient.
It also fixes the erroneous error when trying to set the modification
time of a file bigger than 5GB.
See #3778
Before this change multipart copies were giving the error
Range specified is not valid for source object of size
This was due to an off by one error in the range source introduced in
7b1274e29a "s3: support for multipart copy"
Before this change rclone used "Authorization: BEARER token". However
according the the RFC this should be "Bearer"
https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6750#section-2.1
This changes it to "Authorization: Bearer token"
Fixes#3751 and interop with Salesforce Webdav server
When using nextcloud, before this change we only uploaded one of SHA1
or MD5 checksum in the OC-Checksum header with preference to SHA1 if
both were set.
This makes the MD5 checksums read as empty string which makes syncing
with checksums less useful than they should be as all the MD5
checksums are blank.
This change makes it so that we only upload the SHA1 to nextcloud.
The behaviour of owncloud is unchanged as owncloud uses the checksum
as an upload integrity check only and calculates its own checksums.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/how-to-specify-hash-method-to-checksum/13055
This also corrects the symlink detection logic to only check symlink
files. Previous to this it was checking all directories too which was
making it do more stat calls than was necessary.