Without explaining exactly how this is generated, it can be confusing
and worrying to not know how the password that encrypts your data is
stored.
This also brings peace of mind to the user that even though
the same password is obscured differently each time, all the data to
get back to the original password remains. Explaining how it works
is much better than the reader of the documentation having to trust
a blackboxy/magical mechanism.
Before this change we queries /me/drives for a list of the users
drives and asked the user to choose. Sometimes this does not return
the users main drive for reasons unknown.
After this change we query /me/drives first then /me/drive and add
that to the list of drives if it wasn't already there.
This commit corrects the logic for --track-renames-strategy which
broke the integration tests.
It also improves the parsing of the argument and adds a test for that.
This commit adds the `--track-renames-strategy` flag which allows the
user to choose the strategy for tracking renames when using the
`--track-renames` flag.
This can be "hash" or "modtime" or both currently.
This, when used with `--track-renames-strategy modtime` enables
support for tracking renames in encrypted remotes.
Fixes#3696Fixes#2721
Before this change backends which introduce overhead (eg crypt) were
failing to upload the first file.
This change increases the threshold to 2k to allow the first file to
go through even with some overhead but the next file to definitely
fail.
In 5470d34740 "backend/s3: use low-level-retries as the number
of SDK retries" we switched over to using the AWS SDK low level
retries instead of rclone's low level retry logic.
This had the unfortunate attempt that retrying listings to correct XML
Syntax errors failed on non S3 backends such as CEPH. The AWS SDK was
also retrying the XML Syntax error request which doesn't make sense.
This change turns off the AWS SDK retries in favour of just using
rclone's retry logic.
Before this change we checked the transfer was out of range only
before the Read call. This means that we returned all the data to the
reader before declaring an error. This means that some backends wrote
the file even though an error was returned.
This fix checks the transfer after the Read as well, and chops the
excess characters off the read data if we are over the limit so that
we don't ever deliver all the data.
This fixes the tests introduced as part of 6f1766dd9e and #2672
on backends other than local.
If chunk size is more than 250M (262,144,000 bytes) then API throws the following error:
Microsoft.SharePoint.Client.InvalidClientQueryException: The request message is too big. The server does not allow messages larger than 262144000 bytes.
Before this change the exit code for transfer limit exceeded was
incorrect. This was because the `resolveExitCode` function unwraps the
error thus reading the underlying error which is not the same as the
error it was comparing to (`ErrorMaxTransferLimitReached`).
This change fixes it by splitting the error definition in two so that
when the Fatal error is unwrapped we match against
`ErrorMaxTransferLimitReached` however when we return the error we
return `ErrorMaxTransferLimitReachedFatal`.
Before this change rclone didn't use sparse files on Windows. This
means that when you downloaded a file with multithread download it
wrote the entire file with zeros first on the first write not at the
start of the file.
This change makes the file be sparse on Windows. Linux/macOS files
were already sparse.
Before this change shared with me items with multiple parents (ie most
of them that aren't in the root) would appear twice in the directory
listings.
This fixes the problem by doing an early exit for shared with me
items.
This bug was introduced here by removing some necessary code detecting
shared with me items at the root with no parents.
4453fa4ba6 "drive: fix --fast-list when using appDataFolder"
This fix reverts that part of the patch.
Fixes#4018
In 8a0775ce3c which was released in v1.49.0 we inadvertently
stopped SAS URLs working from the root without a container name.
Previously to this change you could use `rclone mount azsas:` and it
would actually be equivalent to `rclone mount azsas:container`. After
this change, only `rclone mount azsas:container` will work, `rclone
mount azsas:` will have a directory in the root called "container".
After some discussion it was decided not to revert this change as the
current behaviour is more logical and in line with the similar
behaviour for the b2 backend.
Instead the documentation was updated to show exactly how container
level SAS URLs behave.
Fixes#4028