Commit graph

1119 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
nielash
e9cd3e5986 bisync: allow lock file expiration/renewal with --max-lock - #7470
Background: Bisync uses lock files as a safety feature to prevent
interference from other bisync runs while it is running. Bisync normally
removes these lock files at the end of a run, but if bisync is abruptly
interrupted, these files will be left behind. By default, they will lock out
all future runs, until the user has a chance to manually check things out and
remove the lock.

Before this change, lock files blocked future runs indefinitely, so a single
interrupted run would lock out all future runs forever (absent user
intervention), and there was no way to change this behavior.

After this change, a new --max-lock flag can be used to make lock files
automatically expire after a certain period of time, so that future runs are
not locked out forever, and auto-recovery is possible. --max-lock can be any
duration 2m or greater (or 0 to disable). If set, lock files older than this
will be considered "expired", and future runs will be allowed to disregard them
and proceed. (Note that the --max-lock duration must be set by the process that
left the lock file -- not the later one interpreting it.)

If set, bisync will also "renew" these lock files every
--max-lock_minus_one_minute throughout a run, for extra safety. (For example,
with --max-lock 5m, bisync would renew the lock file (for another 5 minutes)
every 4 minutes until the run has completed.) In other words, it should not be
possible for a lock file to pass its expiration time while the process that
created it is still running -- and you can therefore be reasonably sure that
any _expired_ lock file you may find was left there by an interrupted run, not
one that is still running and just taking awhile.

If --max-lock is 0 or not set, the default is that lock files will never
expire, and will block future runs (of these same two bisync paths)
indefinitely.

For maximum resilience from disruptions, consider setting a relatively short
duration like --max-lock 2m along with --resilient and --recover, and a
relatively frequent cron schedule. The result will be a very robust
"set-it-and-forget-it" bisync run that can automatically bounce back from
almost any interruption it might encounter, without requiring the user to get
involved and run a --resync.
2024-01-20 16:31:28 -05:00
nielash
4025f42bd9 bisync: Graceful Shutdown, --recover from interruptions without --resync - fixes #7470
Before this change, bisync had no mechanism to gracefully cancel a sync early
and exit in a clean state. Additionally, there was no way to recover on the
next run -- any interruption at all would cause bisync to require a --resync,
which made  bisync more difficult to use as a scheduled background process.

This change introduces a "Graceful Shutdown" mode and --recover flag to
robustly recover from even un-graceful shutdowns.

If --recover is set, in the event of a sudden interruption or other un-graceful
shutdown, bisync will attempt to automatically recover on the next run, instead
of requiring --resync. Bisync is able to recover robustly by keeping one
"backup" listing at all times, representing the state of both paths after the
last known successful sync. Bisync can then compare the current state with this
snapshot to determine which changes it needs to retry. Changes that were synced
after this snapshot (during the run that was later interrupted) will appear to
bisync as if they are "new or changed on both sides", but in most cases this is
not a problem, as bisync will simply do its usual "equality check" and learn
that no action needs to be taken on these files, since they are already
identical on both sides.

In the rare event that a file is synced successfully during a run that later
aborts, and then that same file changes AGAIN before the next run, bisync will
think it is a sync conflict, and handle it accordingly. (From bisync's
perspective, the file has changed on both sides since the last trusted sync,
and the files on either side are not currently identical.) Therefore, --recover
carries with it a slightly increased chance of having conflicts -- though in
practice this is pretty rare, as the conditions required to cause it are quite
specific. This risk can be reduced by using bisync's "Graceful Shutdown" mode
(triggered by sending SIGINT or Ctrl+C), when you have the choice, instead of
forcing a sudden termination.

--recover and --resilient are similar, but distinct -- the main difference is
that --resilient is about _retrying_, while --recover is about _recovering_.
Most users will probably want both. --resilient allows retrying when bisync has
chosen to abort itself due to safety features such as failing --check-access or
detecting a filter change. --resilient does not cover external interruptions
such as a user shutting down their computer in the middle of a sync -- that is
what --recover is for.

"Graceful Shutdown" mode is activated by sending SIGINT or pressing Ctrl+C
during a run. Once triggered, bisync will use best efforts to exit cleanly
before the timer runs out. If bisync is in the middle of transferring files, it
will attempt to cleanly empty its queue by finishing what it has started but
not taking more. If it cannot do so within 30 seconds, it will cancel the
in-progress transfers at that point and then give itself a maximum of 60
seconds to wrap up, save its state for next time, and exit. With the -vP flags
you will see constant status updates and a final confirmation of whether or not
the graceful shutdown was successful.

At any point during the "Graceful Shutdown" sequence, a second SIGINT or Ctrl+C
will trigger an immediate, un-graceful exit, which will leave things in a
messier state. Usually a robust recovery will still be possible if using
--recover mode, otherwise you will need to do a --resync.

If you plan to use Graceful Shutdown mode, it is recommended to use --resilient
and --recover, and it is important to NOT use --inplace, otherwise you risk
leaving partially-written files on one side, which may be confused for real
files on the next run. Note also that in the event of an abrupt interruption, a
lock file will be left behind to block concurrent runs. You will need to delete
it before you can proceed with the next run (or wait for it to expire on its
own, if using --max-lock.)
2024-01-20 16:31:28 -05:00
nielash
b4216648e4 bisync: full support for comparing checksum, size, modtime - fixes #5679 fixes #5683 fixes #5684 fixes #5675
Before this change, bisync could only detect changes based on modtime, and
would refuse to run if either path lacked modtime support. This made bisync
unavailable for many of rclone's backends. Additionally, bisync did not account
for the Fs's precision when comparing modtimes, meaning that they could only be
reliably compared within the same side -- not against the opposite side. Size
and checksum (even when available) were ignored completely for deltas.

After this change, bisync now fully supports comparing based on any combination
of size, modtime, and checksum, lifting the prior restriction on backends
without modtime support. The comparison logic considers the backend's
precision, hash types, and other features as appropriate.

The comparison features optionally use a new --compare flag (which takes any
combination of size,modtime,checksum) and even supports some combinations not
otherwise supported in `sync` (like comparing all three at the same time.) By
default (without the --compare flag), bisync inherits the same comparison
options as `sync` (that is: size and modtime by default, unless modified with
flags such as --checksum or --size-only.) If the --compare flag is set, it will
override these defaults.

If --compare includes checksum and both remotes support checksums but have no
hash types in common with each other, checksums will be considered only for
comparisons within the same side (to determine what has changed since the prior
sync), but not for comparisons against the opposite side. If one side supports
checksums and the other does not, checksums will only be considered on the side
that supports them. When comparing with checksum and/or size without modtime,
bisync cannot determine whether a file is newer or older -- only whether it is
changed or unchanged. (If it is changed on both sides, bisync still does the
standard equality-check to avoid declaring a sync conflict unless it absolutely
has to.)

Also included are some new flags to customize the checksum comparison behavior
on backends where hashes are slow or unavailable. --no-slow-hash and
--slow-hash-sync-only allow selectively ignoring checksums on backends such as
local where they are slow. --download-hash allows computing them by downloading
when (and only when) they're otherwise not available. Of course, this option
probably won't be practical with large files, but may be a good option for
syncing small-but-important files with maximum accuracy (for example, a source
code repo on a crypt remote.) An additional advantage over methods like
cryptcheck is that the original file is not required for comparison (for
example, --download-hash can be used to bisync two different crypt remotes with
different passwords.)

Additionally, all of the above are now considered during the final --check-sync
for much-improved accuracy (before this change, it only compared filenames!)

Many other details are explained in the included docs.
2024-01-20 16:08:06 -05:00
nielash
d8e07bfd8e bisync: document beta status more clearly - fixes #6082 2024-01-20 15:38:26 -05:00
nielash
199d82969b bisync: normalize session name to non-canonical - fixes #7423
Before this change, bisync used the "canonical" Fs name in the filename for its
listing files, including any {hexstring} suffix. An unintended consequence of
this was that if a user added a backend-specific flag from the command line
(thus "overriding" the config), bisync would fail to find the listing files it
created during the prior run without this flag, due to the path now having a
{hexstring} suffix that wasn't there before (or vice versa, if the flag was
present when the session was established, and later removed.) This would
sometimes cause bisync to fail with a critical error (if no listing existed
with the alternate name), or worse -- it would sometimes cause bisync to use an
old, incorrect listing (if old listings with the alternate name DID still
exist, from before the user changed their flags.)

After this change, the issue is fixed by always normalizing the SessionName to
the non-canonical version (no {hexstring} suffix), regardless of the flags. To
avoid a breaking change, we first check if a suffixed listing exists. If so, we
rename it (and overwrite the non-suffixed version, if any.) If not, we carry on
with the non-suffixed version. (We should only find a suffixed version if
created prior to this commit.)

The result for the user is that the same pair of paths will always use the same
.lst filenames, with or without backend-specific flags.
2024-01-20 15:38:26 -05:00
nielash
57624629d6 bisync: account for differences in backend features on integration tests - see #5679
Before this change, integration tests often could not be run on backends with
differing features from the local system that goldenized them. In particular,
differences in modtime precision, checksum support, and encoding would cause
false positives. After this change, the tests more accurately account for the
features of the backend being tested, which allows us to see true positives
more clearly, and more meaningfully assess whether a backend is supported.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
422b037087 bisync: fallback to cryptcheck or --download when can't check hash
Bisync checks file equality before renaming sync conflicts by comparing
checksums. Before this change, backends without checksum support (notably
Crypt) would fall back to --size-only for these checks, which is not a very
safe method (differing files can sometimes have the same size, especially if
they're small.) After this change, Crypt remotes fallback to using Cryptcheck
so that checksums can be compared. As a last resort when neither Check nor
Cryptcheck are available, files are compared using --download so that we can be
certain the files are identical regardless of checksum support.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
bbf9b1b3d2 bisync: support two --backup-dir paths on different remotes
Before this change, bisync supported `--backup-dir` only when `Path1` and
`Path2` were different paths on the same remote. With this change, bisync
introduces new `--backup-dir1` and `--backup-dir2` flags to support separate
backup-dirs for `Path1` and `Path2`.

`--backup-dir1` and `--backup-dir2` can use different remotes from each other,
but `--backup-dir1` must use the same remote as `Path1`, and `--backup-dir2`
must use the same remote as `Path2`. Each backup directory must not overlap its
respective bisync Path without being excluded by a filter rule.

The standard `--backup-dir` will also work, if both paths use the same remote
(but note that deleted files from both paths would be mixed together in the
same dir). If either `--backup-dir1` and `--backup-dir2` are set, they will
override `--backup-dir`.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
9cf783677e bisync: support files with unknown length, including Google Docs - fixes #5696
Before this change, bisync intentionally ignored Google Docs (albeit in a
buggy way that caused problems during --resync.) After this change, Google Docs
(including Google Sheets, Slides, etc.) are now supported in bisync, subject to
the same options, defaults, and limitations as in `rclone sync`. When bisyncing
drive with non-drive backends, the drive -> non-drive direction is controlled
by `--drive-export-formats` (default `"docx,xlsx,pptx,svg"`) and the non-drive
-> drive direction is controlled by `--drive-import-formats` (default none.)

For example, with the default export/import formats, a Google Sheet on the
drive side will be synced to an `.xlsx` file on the non-drive side. In the
reverse direction, `.xlsx` files with filenames that match an existing Google
Sheet will be synced to that Google Sheet, while `.xlsx` files that do NOT
match an existing Google Sheet will be copied to drive as normal `.xlsx` files
(without conversion to Sheets, although the Google Drive web browser UI may
still give you the option to open it as one.)

If `--drive-import-formats` is set (it's not, by default), then all of the
specified formats will be converted to Google Docs, if there is no existing
Google Doc with a matching name. Caution: such conversion can be quite lossy,
and in most cases it's probably not what you want!

To bisync Google Docs as URL shortcut links (in a manner similar to "Drive for
Desktop"), use: `--drive-export-formats url` (or alternatives.)

Note that these link files cannot be edited on the non-drive side -- you will
get errors if you try to sync an edited link file back to drive. They CAN be
deleted (it will result in deleting the corresponding Google Doc.) If you
create a `.url` file on the non-drive side that does not match an existing
Google Doc, bisyncing it will just result in copying the literal `.url` file
over to drive (no Google Doc will be created.) So, as a general rule of thumb,
think of them as read-only placeholders on the non-drive side, and make all
your changes on the drive side.

Likewise, even with other export-formats, it is best to only move/rename Google
Docs on the drive side. This is because otherwise, bisync will interpret this
as a file deleted and another created, and accordingly, it will delete the
Google Doc and create a new file at the new path. (Whether or not that new file
is a Google Doc depends on `--drive-import-formats`.)

Lastly, take note that all Google Docs on the drive side have a size of `-1`
and no checksum. Therefore, they cannot be reliably synced with the
`--checksum` or `--size-only` flags. (To be exact: they will still get
created/deleted, and bisync's delta engine will notice changes and queue them
for syncing, but the underlying sync function will consider them identical and
skip them.) To work around this, use the default (modtime and size) instead of
`--checksum` or `--size-only`.

To ignore Google Docs entirely, use `--drive-skip-gdocs`.

Nearly all of the Google Docs logic is outsourced to the Drive backend, so
future changes should also be supported by bisync.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
4d5d6ee61b bisync: provide more info in critical error msgs 2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
44637dcd7f bisync: high-level retries if --resilient
Before this change, bisync had no ability to retry in the event of sync errors.
After this change, bisync will retry if --resilient is passed, but only in one
direction at a time. We can safely retry in one direction because the source is
still intact, even if the dest was left in a messy state. If the first
direction still fails after our final retry, we abort and do NOT continue in
the other direction, to prevent the messy dest from polluting the source. If
the first direction succeeds, we do then allow retries in the other direction.

The number of retries is controllable by --retries (default 3)

bisync: high-level retries if --resilient

Before this change, bisync had no ability to retry in the event of sync errors.
After this change, bisync will retry if --resilient is passed, but only in one
direction at a time. We can safely retry in one direction because the source is
still intact, even if the dest was left in a messy state. If the first
direction still fails after our final retry, we abort and do NOT continue in
the other direction, to prevent the messy dest from polluting the source. If
the first direction succeeds, we do then allow retries in the other direction.

The number of retries is controllable by --retries (default 3)
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
98f539de8f bisync: refactor normalization code, fix deltas - fixes #7270
Refactored the case / unicode normalization logic to be much more efficient,
 and fix the last outstanding issue from #7270. Before this change, we were
 doing lots of for loops and re-normalizing strings we had already normalized
 earlier. Now, we leave the normalizing entirely to March and avoid
 re-transforming later, which seems to make a large difference in terms of
 performance.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
9c96c13a35 bisync: optimize --resync performance -- partially addresses #5681
Before this change, --resync was handled in three steps, and needed to do a lot
of unnecessary work to implement its own --ignore-existing logic, which also
caused problems with unicode normalization, in addition to being pretty slow.
After this change, it is refactored to produce the same result much more
efficiently, by reducing the three steps to two and letting ci.IgnoreExisting
do the work instead of reinventing the wheel.

The behavior and sync order remain unchanged for now -- just faster (but see
the ongoing lively discussions about potential future changes in #5681!)
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
f7f4651828 bisync: handle unicode and case normalization consistently - mostly-fixes #7270
Before this change, Bisync sometimes normalized NFD to NFC and sometimes
did not, causing errors in some scenarios (particularly for users of macOS).
It was similarly inconsistent in its handling of case-insensitivity.

There were three main places where Bisync should have normalized, but didn't:

1. When building the list of files that need to be transferred during --resync
2. When building the list of deltas during a non-resync
3. When comparing Path1 to Path2 during --check-sync

After this change, 1 and 3 are resolved, and bisync supports
--no-unicode-normalization and --ignore-case-sync in the same way as sync.
2 will be addressed in a future update.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
fd95511091 bisync: generate listings concurrently with march -- fixes #7332
Before this change, bisync needed to build a full listing for Path1, then a
full listing for Path2, then compare them -- and each of those tasks needed to
finish before the next one could start. In addition to being slow and
inefficient, it also caused real problems if a file changed between the time
bisync checked it on Path1 and the time it checked the corresponding file on
Path2.

This change solves these problems by listing both paths concurrently, using
the same March infrastructure that check and sync use to traverse two
directories in lock-step, optimized by Go's robust concurrency support.
Listings should now be much faster, and any given path is now checked
nearly-instantaneously on both sides, minimizing room for error.

Further discussion:
https://forum.rclone.org/t/bisync-bugs-and-feature-requests/37636#:~:text=4.%20Listings%20should%20alternate%20between%20paths%20to%20minimize%20errors
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
0cac5d67ab bisync: introduce terminal colors
This introduces a few basic color codings to make the terminal output more
readable (and more fun). Rclone's standard --color flag is supported.
(AUTO|NEVER|ALWAYS)

Only a few lines have colors right now -- more will probably be added in
future versions.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
6d6dc00abb bisync: rollback listing on error
Before this change, bisync had no mechanism for "retrying" a file again next
time, in the event of an unexpected and possibly temporary error. After this
change, bisync is now essentially able to mark a file as needing to be
rechecked next time. Bisync does this by keeping one prior listing on hand at
all times. In a low-confidence situation, bisync can revert a given file row
back to its state at the end of the last known successful sync, ensuring that
any subsequent changes will be re-noticed on the next run.
This can potentially be helpful for a dynamically changing file system, where
files may be changing quickly while bisync is working with them.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
079763f09a bisync: isDir check for deltas
Before this change, if --create-empty-src-dirs was specified, bisync would
include directories in the list of deltas to evaluate by their modtime,
relative to the prior sync. This was unnecessary, as rclone does not yet
support setting modtime for directories.

After this change, we skip directories when comparing modtimes. (In other
words, we care only if a directory is created or deleted, not whether it is
newer or older.)
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
978cbf9360 bisync: generate final listing from sync results, not relisting -- fixes #5676
Before this change, if there were changes to sync, bisync listed each path
twice: once before the sync and once after. The second listing caused quite
a lot of problems, in addition to making each run much slower and more
expensive. A serious side-effect was that file changes could slip through
undetected, if they happened to occur while a sync was running (between the
first and second listing snapshots.)

After this change, the second listing is eliminated by getting the underlying
sync operation to report back a list of what it changed. Not only is this more
efficient, but also much more robust to concurrent modifications. It should no
longer be necessary to avoid make changes while it's running -- bisync will
simply learn about those changes next time and handle them on the next run.
Additionally, this also makes --check-sync usable again.

For further discussion, see:
https://forum.rclone.org/t/bisync-bugs-and-feature-requests/37636#:~:text=5.%20Final%20listings%20should%20be%20created%20from%20initial%20snapshot%20%2B%20deltas%2C%20not%20full%20re%2Dscans%2C%20to%20avoid%20errors%20if%20files%20changed%20during%20sync
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
3a50f35df9 sync: report list of synced paths to file -- see #7282
Allows rclone sync to accept the same output file flags as rclone check,
for the purpose of writing results to a file.
A new --dest-after option is also supported, which writes a list file using
the same ListFormat flags as lsf (including customizable options for hash,
modtime, etc.) Conceptually it is similar to rsync's --itemize-changes, but
not identical -- it should output an accurate list of what will be on the
destination after the sync.

Note that it has a few limitations, and certain scenarios
are not currently supported:

--max-duration / CutoffModeHard
--compare-dest / --copy-dest (because equal() is called multiple times for the
    same file)
server-side moves of an entire dir at once (because we never get the individual
file objects in the dir)
High-level retries, because there would be dupes
Possibly some error scenarios that didn't come up on the tests

Note also that each file is logged during the sync, as opposed to after, so it
is most useful as a predictor of what SHOULD happen to each file
(which may or may not match what actually DID.)

Only rclone sync is currently supported -- support for copy and move may be
added in the future.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
0e5f12126f bisync: merge copies and deletes, support --track-renames and --backup-dir -- fixes #5690 fixes #5685
Before this change, bisync handled copies and deletes in separate operations.
After this change, they are combined in one sync operation, which is faster
and also allows bisync to support --track-renames and --backup-dir.

Bisync uses a --files-from filter containing only the paths bisync has
determined need to be synced. Just like in sync (but in both directions),
if a path is present on the dst but not the src, it's interpreted as a delete
rather than a copy.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
5c7ba0bfd3 bisync: fix tests on macOS
normalizes unicode and ignores .DS_Store files to make testing possible
on macOS
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
nielash
66929416d4 lsf: add --time-format flag
Before this change, lsf's time format was hard-coded to "2006-01-02 15:04:05",
regardless of the Fs's precision. After this change, a new optional
--time-format flag is added to allow customizing the format (the default is
unchanged).

Examples:
	rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format 'Jan 2, 2006 at 3:04pm (MST)'
	rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format '2006-01-02 15:04:05.000000000'
	rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format '2006-01-02T15:04:05.999999999Z07:00'
	rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format RFC3339
	rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format DateOnly
	rclone lsf remote:path --format pt --time-format max

--time-format max will automatically truncate '2006-01-02 15:04:05.000000000'
to the maximum precision supported by the remote.
2024-01-20 14:50:08 -05:00
Nick Craig-Wood
223d8c5fe3 serve dlna: now only supported on go1.21 or later
This is due to use of go1.21 only constructs in github.com/anacrolix/log
2024-01-15 16:22:07 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
938b43c26c build: remove random.Seed since random generator is seeded automatically in go1.20
Now that the minimum version is go1.20 we can stop seeding the random
number generator.
2024-01-15 16:22:07 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
1b1e43074f build: update direct dependencies and fix serve nfs
This updates the direct dependencies.

The latest github.com/willscott/go-nfs has changed the interface
slightly so this implements a dummy InvalidateHandle method in order
to satisfy it.
2024-01-15 16:18:42 +00:00
Vincent Murphy
41b8935a6c docs: Fix broken test_proxy.py link again
The previous fix fixed the auto generated output - this fixes the source.
2024-01-08 11:54:02 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
486a10bec5 serve s3: fix listing oddities
Before this change, listing a subdirectory gave errors like this:

    Entry doesn't belong in directory "" (contains subdir) - ignoring

It also did full recursive listings when it didn't need to.

This was caused by the code using the underlying Fs to do recursive
listings on bucket based backends.

Using both the VFS and the underlying Fs is a mistake so this patch
removes the code which uses the underlying Fs and just uses the VFS.

Fixes #7500
2024-01-05 15:51:13 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
0e746f25a3 amazonclouddrive: remove Amazon Drive backend code and docs #7539
The Amazon Drive backend is closed from 2023-12-31.

See: https://www.amazon.com/b?ie=UTF8&node=23943055011
2024-01-04 17:05:54 +00:00
Paul Stern
bb679a9def backend: add description field for all backends
Fixes #4391
2024-01-03 10:57:59 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
f98e672f37 selfupdate: fix crash in tests if beta not found 2023-12-10 22:29:57 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
1ebbc74f1d nfsmount: compile for all unix oses, add --sudo and fix error/option handling
- make compile on all unix OSes - this will make the docs appear on linux and rclone.org!
- add --sudo flag for using with mount
- improve error reporting
- fix option handling
2023-12-05 10:44:53 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
aee787d33e serve nfs: Mark as experimental 2023-12-05 10:44:53 +00:00
Anagh Kumar Baranwal
298c13e719 systemd: Fix detection and switch to the coreos package everywhere
rather than having 2 separate libraries

Signed-off-by: Anagh Kumar Baranwal <6824881+darthShadow@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-12-02 14:17:15 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
caf5dd9d5e mount: notice daemon dying much quicker
Before this change we waited until until the timeout to check the
daemon was alive.

Now we check it every 100ms like we do the mount status.

This also fixes compiling on all platforms which was broken by the
previous change

9bfbf2a4a mount: fix macOS not noticing errors with --daemon

See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-mount-daemon-exits-successfully-even-when-mount-fails/43146
2023-12-01 09:36:05 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
9bfbf2a4ae mount: fix macOS not noticing errors with --daemon
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-mount-daemon-exits-successfully-even-when-mount-fails/43146
2023-11-28 19:42:00 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
0244caf13a serve s3: fix overwrite of files with 0 length file
Before this change overwriting an existing file with a 0 length file
didn't update the file size.

This change corrects the issue and makes sure the file is truncated
properly.

This was discovered by the full integration tests.
2023-11-24 20:47:06 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
aaa897337d serve s3: fix error handling for listing non-existent prefix - fixes #7455
Before this change serve s3 would return NoSuchKey errors when a non
existent prefix was listed.

This change fixes it to return an empty list like AWS does.

This was discovered by the full integration tests.
2023-11-24 20:47:06 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
d8855b21eb serve s3: document multipart copy doesn't work #7454
This puts in a workaround for the tests also
2023-11-24 15:49:33 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
5d5473c8a5 random: speed up String function for generating larger blocks 2023-11-24 11:19:58 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
93f35c915a serve s3: pre-merge tweaks
- Changes
    - Rename `--s3-authkey` to `--auth-key` to get it out of the s3 backend namespace
    - Enable `Content-MD5` integrity checks
    - Remove locking after code audit
- Documentation
    - Factor out documentation into seperate file
    - Add Quickstart to docs
    - Add Bugs section to docs
    - Add experimental tag to docs
    - Add rclone provider to s3 backend docs
- Fixes
    - Correct quirks in s3 backend
    - Change fmt.Printlns into fs.Logs
    - Make metadata storage per backend not global
    - Log on startup if anonymous access is enabled
- Coding style fixes
    - rename fs to vfs to save confusion with the rest of rclone code
    - rename db to b for *s3Backend

Fixes #7062
2023-11-16 16:59:56 +00:00
Saw-jan
d3dcc61154 serve s3: fixes before merge
- add context to log and fallthrough to error log level
- test: use rclone random lib to generate random strings
- calculate hash from vfs cache if file is uploading
- add server started log with server url
- remove md5 hasher
2023-11-16 16:59:56 +00:00
Artur Neumann
aa29742be2 serve s3: fix file name encoding using s3 serve with mc client
using the mc (minio) client file encoding were wrong
see Mikubill/gofakes3#2 for details
2023-11-16 16:59:56 +00:00
Mikubill
23abac2a59 serve s3: let rclone act as an S3 compatible server 2023-11-16 16:59:55 +00:00
albertony
e1b0417c28 size: dont show duplicate object count when less than 1k 2023-11-14 16:44:12 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
831d1df67f docs: factor large docs into separate .md files to make them easier to maintain.
We then use the go embed command to embed them back into the binary.
2023-11-13 16:27:09 +00:00
Adithya Kumar
ad83ff769b
webdav: added an rclone vendor to work with rclone serve webdav
Fixes #7160
2023-11-05 12:37:25 +00:00
albertony
ca14b00b34 docs: show hashsum arguments as optional in usage string 2023-11-03 23:31:00 +01:00
wuxingzhong
4ab57eb90b
serve dnla: fix crash on graceful exit
Before this change, closing a uninitialised chan would cause a crash.
2023-10-31 16:44:25 +00:00
Nick Craig-Wood
af8ba18580 mount: disable mount for freebsd
The upstream library rclone uses for rclone mount no longer supports
freebsd. Not only is it broken, but it no longer compiles.

This patch disables rclone mount for freebsd.

However all is not lost for freebsd users - compiling rclone with the
`cmount` tag, so `go install -tags cmount` will install a working
`rclone mount` command which uses cgofuse and the libfuse C library
directly.

Note that the binaries from rclone.org will not have mount support as
we don't have a freebsd build machine in CI and it is very hard to
cross compile cmount.

See: https://github.com/bazil/fuse/issues/280
Fixes #5843
2023-10-29 15:46:41 +00:00