Before this change, if there was an existing file being uploaded when
a file was renamed on top of it, then both would be uploaded. This
causes a duplicate in Google Drive as both files get uploaded at the
same time. This was triggered reliably by LibreOffice saving doc
files.
This fix removes any duplicates in the upload queue on rename.
Before this fix, saving a :backend config gave the error
Can't save config "token" = "XXX" for on the fly backend ":backend"
Even when using the in-memory config `--config ""`
This fixes the problem by
- always using the in memory config if it is configured
- moving the check for a :backend config save to the file config backend
It also removes the contents of the config items being saved from the
log which saves confidential tokens being logged.
Fixes#5451
At some point some google docs files started having sizes returned in
their listing information.
This then caused rclone to treat the docs as files which caused
downloads to fail.
The API docs now state that google docs may have sizes (whereas I'm
pretty sure it didn't earlier).
This fix removes the check for size, so google docs are identified
solely by not having an MD5 checksum.
When rclone received a SIGINT (Ctrl+C) or SIGTERM signal while an atexit
function is registered it always terminated with status code 0. Unix
convention is to exit with a non-zero status code. Often it's
`128 + int(signum), but at least not zero.
With this change fatal signals handled by the `atexit` package cause
a non-zero exit code. On Unix systems it's `128 + int(signum)` while
on other systems, such as Windows, it's always 2 ("error not otherwise
categorised").
Resolves#5437.
Signed-off-by: Michael Hanselmann <public@hansmi.ch>
Signal handling by the `atexit` package needs acceess to
`exitCodeUncategorizedError`. With this change all exit status values
are moved to a dedicated package so that they can be reused.
Signed-off-by: Michael Hanselmann <public@hansmi.ch>
Currently rclone check supports matching two file trees by sizes and hashes.
This change adds support for SUM files produced by GNU utilities like sha1sum.
Fixes#1005
Note: checksum by default checks, hashsum by default prints sums.
New flag is named "--checkfile" but carries hash name.
Summary of introduced command forms:
```
rclone check sums.sha1 remote:path --checkfile sha1
rclone checksum sha1 sums.sha1 remote:path
rclone hashsum sha1 remote:path --checkfile sums.sha1
rclone sha1sum remote:path --checkfile sums.sha1
rclone md5sum remote:path --checkfile sums.md5
```
This change fixes the bug described below:
if a file is removed while the local backend List() runs,
the call will flag an accounting error.
The bug manifests itself if local backend is the Sync target
due to intrinsic concurrency.
The odds to hit this bug depend on --checkers and --transfers.
Chunker over local backend is affected even more because
updating a composite object with a smaller size content
translates into removing chunks on the underlying file system
and involves a number of List() calls.
There was no easy way to automatically test the end-to-end functionality
of commands, flags, environment variables etc.
The need for end-to-end testing was highlighted by the issues fixed
in #5341. There was no automated test to continually verify current
behaviour, nor a framework to quickly test the correctness of the fixes.
This change adds an end-to-end testing framework in the cmdtest folder.
It has some simple examples in func TestCmdTest in cmdtest_test.go. The
tests should be readable by anybody familiar with rclone and look like
this:
// Test the rclone version command with debug logging (-vv)
out, err = rclone("version", "-vv")
if assert.NoError(t, err) {
assert.Contains(t, out, "rclone v")
assert.Contains(t, out, "os/version:")
assert.Contains(t, out, " DEBUG : ")
}
The end-to-end tests are executed just like the Go unit tests, that is:
go test ./cmdtest -v
The change also contains a thorough test of environment variables in
environment_test.go.
Thanks to @ncw for encouragement and introduction to the TestMain trick.