When using `rclone cat` to print the contents of several files, the
user may want to inject some separator between the files, such as a
comma or a newline. This patch adds a `--separator` option to the `cat`
command to make that possible. The default value remains an empty
string, `""`, maintaining the prior behavior of `rclone cat`.
Closes#6968
In this commit we accidentally removed the global --rc flags.
0df7466d2b cmd/rcd: Fix command docs to include command specific prefix (#6675)
This re-instates them.
Before this change if both --progress and --interactive were set then
the screen display could become muddled.
This change makes --progress and --interactive use the same lock so
while rclone is asking for interactive questions, the progress will be
paused.
Fixes#6755
This change addresses two issues with commands that re-used
flags from common packages:
1) cobra.Command definitions did not include the command specific
prefix in doc strings.
2) Command specific flag prefixes were added after generating
command doc strings.
Before this change if logs were not redirected, logging would
corrupt the terminal screen.
This commit stores the logs (max ~100 lines) in an array and
print them when the program exits.
This ensures the virtual terminal processing mode is enabled on the rclone process
for Windows 10 consoles (by using Windows Console API functions GetConsoleMode/SetConsoleMode
and flag ENABLE_VIRTUAL_TERMINAL_PROCESSING), which adds native support for ANSI/VT100
escape sequences. This mode is default in many cases, e.g. when using the Windows
Terminal application, but in other cases it is not, and the default can also be
controlled with registry setting (see below), and therefore configuring it on the process
seem to be the only reliable way of ensuring it is enabled when supported.
[HKEY_CURRENT_USER\Console]
"VirtualTerminalLevel"=dword:00000001
Since rclone version 1.61.0 the tree command uses ANSI color sequences in output by
default, but this lead to issues in Windows terminals that were not handling these (#6668).
This commit ensures the tree command uses the terminal package for output. It relies on
go-colorable to properly handle ANSI color sequences: If stdout is connected to a terminal
the escape sequences are decoded and the text are written with color formatting using
Windows Console API. If stdout is not connected to a terminal, e.g. redirected to file,
the escape sequences are stripped off. The tree command has its own method for writing
directly to a file, specified with flag --output, and then the output is not passed
through the terminal package and must therefore be written without ansi codes.
Since version 3 of fuse libfuse no longer does anything when given the
nonempty option and it's default is to allow mounting over non empty
directories like normal mount does.
Some versions of libfuse give an error when using `--allow-non-empty`
which is annoying for the user.
We now do this check ourselves so we no longer need to pass the option
to libfuse.
Fixes#3562
Before this fix, we told cgofuse/WinFSP that the backend was case
insensitive but didn't implement the Getpath backend function to
return the normalised case of a file.
Resently cgofuse started implementing case insensitive files properly
but since we hadn't implemented Getpath, the file names were taking
the default of all in UPPER CASE.
This patch implements Getpath for cgofuse which fixes the case
problems.
This problem came to light when we upgraded cgofuse and WinFSP (to
1.12) which had the code to implement Getpath.
Fixes#6682
Before this change only serve http was Shutting down its server which
was causing other servers such as serve restic to leave behind their
unix sockets.
This change moves the finalisation to lib/http so all servers have it
and removes it from serve http.
Fixes#6648
Before this change, we started the http listener even if --stdio was
supplied.
This also moves the log message so the user won't see the serving via
HTTP message unless they are really using that.
Fixes#6646