Before this change if --user-server-modtime was in use the ModTime
could change for an object as we receive it accurate to the nearest ms
in listings, but only accurate to the nearest second in HEAD and GET
requests.
Normally AWS returns the milliseconds as .000 in listings, but if
versions are in use it may not. Storj S3 also seems to return
milliseconds.
This patch tries to keep the maximum precision in the last modified
time, so it doesn't update a last modified time with a truncated
version if the times were the same to the nearest second.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/cache-fingerprint-miss-behavior-leading-to-false-positive-stalen-cache/33404/
Before this fix, the chunksize calculator was using the previous size
of the object, not the new size of the object to calculate the chunk
sizes.
This meant that uploading a replacement object which needed a new
chunk size would fail, using too many parts.
This fix fixes the calculator to take the size explicitly.
Before this change, if an object compressed with "Content-Encoding:
gzip" was downloaded, a length and hash mismatch would occur since the
go runtime automatically decompressed the object on download.
If --s3-decompress is set, this change erases the length and hash on
compressed objects so they can be downloaded successfully, at the cost
of not being able to check the length or the hash of the downloaded
object.
If --s3-decompress is not set the compressed files will be downloaded
as-is providing compressed objects with intact size and hash
information.
See #2658
In
22abd785eb s3: implement reading and writing of metadata #111
The reading information of objects was refactored to use the
s3.HeadObjectOutput structure.
Unfortunately the code branch with `--s3-no-head` was not tested
otherwise this panic would have been discovered.
This shows that this is path is not integration tested, so this adds a
new integration test.
Fixes#6322
The SDK doesn't wrap errors in a Go standard way so they can't be
unwrapped and tested for - eg fatal error.
The code looks for a Serialization or RequestError and returns the
unwrapped underlying error if possible.
This fixes the fs/operations integration tests checking for fatal
errors being returned.
In this commit
e5974ac4b0 s3: use PutObject from the aws SDK to upload single part objects
rclone was made to upload objects to s3 using PUT requests rather than
using signed uploads.
However this change missed the fact that there is a supported way to
do this in the SDK using the SetStreamingBody method on the Request.
This therefore reverts a lot of the previous commit to do with making
an unsigned connection and other complication and uses the SDK
facility.
strings.ReplaceAll(s, old, new) is a wrapper function for
strings.Replace(s, old, new, -1). But strings.ReplaceAll is more
readable and removes the hardcoded -1.
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
Before this change rclone used presigned requests to upload single
part objects. This was because of a limitation in the SDK which didn't
allow non seekable io.Readers to be passed in.
This is incompatible with some S3 backends, and rclone wasn't adding
the `X-Amz-Content-Sha256: UNSIGNED-PAYLOAD` header which was
incompatible with other S3 backends.
The SDK now allows for this so rclone can use PutObject directly.
This sets the `X-Amz-Content-Sha256: UNSIGNED-PAYLOAD` flag on the PUT
request. However rclone will add a `Content-Md5` header if at all
possible so the body data is still protected.
Note that the old behaviour can still be configured if required with
the `use_presigned_request` config parameter.
Fixes#5422
Before this change the new multipart upload ETag checking code was
failing in the integration tests with Alibaba OSS.
Apparently Alibaba calculate the ETag in a different way to AWS.
This introduces a new provider quirk with a flag to disable the
checking of the ETag for multipart uploads.
Mulpart Etag checking has been enabled for all providers that we can
test for and work, and left disabled for the others.
Before this rclone ignored the ETag on multipart uploads which missed
an opportunity for a whole file integrity check.
This adds that check which means that we now check even harder that
multipart uploads have arrived properly.
See #5993
Before this change a multipart upload with the --no-head flag returned
the MD5SUM as a base64 string rather than a Hex string as the rest of
rclone was expecting.
* Wasabi starts to provide AP Northeast 2 (Osaka) endpoint, so add it to the list
* Rename ap-northeast-1 as "AP Northeast 1 (Tokyo)" from "AP Northeast"
Signed-off-by: lindwurm <lindwurm.q@gmail.com>
This is possible now that we no longer support go1.12 and brings
rclone into line with standard practices in the Go world.
This also removes errors.New and errors.Errorf from lib/errors and
prefers the stdlib errors package over lib/errors.
This removes the checks against the provider throughout the code and
puts them into a single setQuirks function for easy maintenance when
adding a new provider.
It also updates the quirks with the results of testing against
backends we have access to.
This also adds a list_url_encode parameter so that quirk can be
manually set.
This implements a quirks system for providers and notes which
providers we have tested to support ListObjectsV2.
For those providers which don't support ListObjectsV2 we use the
original ListObjects call.