This introduces a new fs.Option flag, Sensitive and uses this along
with IsPassword to redact the info in the config file for support
purposes.
It adds this flag into backends where appropriate. It was necessary to
add oauthutil.SharedOptions to some backends as they were missing
them.
Fixes#5209
Before this change, when Object.Update was called in the drive
backend, it overwrote the remote with that of the object info.
This is incorrect - the remote doesn't change on Update and this patch
fixes that and introduces a new test to make sure it is correct for
all backends.
This was noticed when doing Update of objects in a nested combine
backend.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/rclone-runtime-goroutine-stack-exceeds-1000000000-byte-limit/37912
Before this change, drive would mistakenly identify a folder with a
training slash as a file when passed to NewObject.
This was picked up by the integration tests
This change provides the ability to pass `env_auth` as a parameter to
the drive provider. This enables the provider to pull IAM
credentials from the environment or instance metadata. Previously if no
auth method was given it would default to requesting oauth.
Before this change, change notify would pick up files which were
shared with us as well as file within the drive.
When using an encrypted mount this caused errors like:
ChangeNotify was unable to decrypt "Plain file name": illegal base32 data at input byte 5
The fix tells drive to restrict changes to the drive in use.
Fixes#6771
Before this change, if a "--drive-stop-on-upload-limit" was set,
rclone would not stop the upload if a "storageQuotaExceeded" error occurred.
This fix now checks for the "storageQuotaExceeded" error
and "--drive-stop-on-upload-limit", and fails fast.
Previously it was limited to plain ASCII (0-9, A-Z, a-z).
Implemented by adding \p{L}\p{N} alongside the \w in the regex,
even though these overlap it means we can be sure it is 100%
backwards compatible.
Fixes#6618
In this commit
8d1fff9a82 local: obey file filters in listing to fix errors on excluded files
We started using filters in the local backend so the user could short
circuit troublesome files/directories at a low level.
However this caused a number of integration tests to fail. This turned
out to be in backends wrapping the local backend. For example the
combine backend test failed because it changes the paths passed to the
local backend so they no longer match the paths in the current filter.
To fix this, a new feature flag `FilterAware` was added and the
UseFilter context flag is only passed to backends which support it. As
the wrapping backends don't support the flag, this fixes the problems
in the integration tests.
In future the wrapping backends could modify the active filters to
match the path modifications and then they could set the FilterAware
flag.
See #6376
Extend the shouldRetry function by also checking for the quotaExceeded
reason, and since this function appeared to be untested, add a test case
for the existing errors and this new one.
Fixes#615
This adjusts
rclone backend drives -o config drive:
So that it also emits a config section called `AllDrives` which uses
the combine backend to make a backend which combines all the shared
drives into one.
It also makes sure that all the shared drive names are valid rclone
config names, deduplicating if necessary.
Fixes#4506
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 supported authorizing for remote systems by
going to a URL and cutting and pasting a token from Google. This is
known as the OAuth out-of-band (oob) flow.
This, while very convenient for users, has been shown to be insecure
and has been deprecated by Google.
https://developers.googleblog.com/2022/02/making-oauth-flows-safer.html#disallowed-oob
> OAuth out-of-band (OOB) is a legacy flow developed to support native
> clients which do not have a redirect URI like web apps to accept the
> credentials after a user approves an OAuth consent request. The OOB
> flow poses a remote phishing risk and clients must migrate to an
> alternative method to protect against this vulnerability. New
> clients will be unable to use this flow starting on Feb 28, 2022.
This change disables that flow, and forces the user to use the
redirect URL flow. (This is the flow used already for local configs.)
In practice this will mean that instead of cutting and pasting a token
for remote config, it will be necessary to run "rclone authorize"
instead. This is how all the other OAuth backends work so it is a well
tested code path.
Fixes#6000
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 changes the interface to NewObject so that if NewObject is called
on a directory then it should return fs.ErrorIsDir if possible without
doing any extra work, otherwise fs.ErrorObjectNotFound.
Tested on integration test server with:
go run integration-test.go -tests backend -run TestIntegration/FsMkdir/FsPutFiles/FsNewObjectDir -branch fix-stat -maxtries 1
I discovered that `rclone` always upload in chunks of 16MiB whenever
uploading a file smaller than `--drive-upload-cutoff`. This is
undesirable since the purpose of the flag `--drive-upload-cutoff` is
to *prevent* chunking below a certain file size.
I realized that it wasn't `rclone` forcing the 16MiB chunks. The
`google-api-go-client` forces a chunk size default of
[`googleapi.DefaultUploadChunkSize`](32bf29c2e1/googleapi/googleapi.go (L55-L57))
bytes for resumable type uploads. This means that all requests that
use `*drive.Service` directly for upload without specifying a
`googleapi.ChunkSize` will be forced to use a *`resumable`*
`uploadType` (rather than `multipart`) for files less than
`googleapi.DefaultUploadChunkSize`. This is also noted directly in the
Drive API client documentation [here](https://pkg.go.dev/google.golang.org/api/drive/v3@v0.44.0#FilesUpdateCall.Media).
This fixes the problem by passing `googleapi.ChunkSize(0)` to
`Media()` method calls, which is the only way to disable chunking
completely. This is mentioned in the API docs
[here](https://pkg.go.dev/google.golang.org/api/googleapi@v0.44.0#ChunkSize).
The other alternative would be to pass
`googleapi.ChunkSize(f.opt.ChunkSize)` -- however, I'm *strongly* in
favor of *not* doing this for performance reasons. By not explicitly
passing a `googleapi.ChunkSize(0)`, we effectively allow
[`PrepareUpload()`](https://pkg.go.dev/google.golang.org/api/internal/gensupport@v0.44.0#PrepareUpload)
to create a
[`NewMediaBuffer`](https://pkg.go.dev/google.golang.org/api/internal/gensupport@v0.44.0#NewMediaBuffer)
that copies the original `io.Reader` passed to `Media()` in order to
check that its size is less than `ChunkSize`, which will unnecessarily
consume time and memory.
`minChunkSize` is also changed to be `googleapi.MinUploadChunkSize`,
as it is something specified we have no control over.
Google Drive API allows for clauses like "modifiedTime > '2012-06-04T12:00:00'"
in the query param, so the filter flags --max-age and --min-age can be applied
directly at the directory listing phase rather than in a filter.
This is extremely helpful when we want to do an incremental backup of a remote
drive with many files but the number of recently changed file is small.
Co-authored-by: fotile96 <fotile96@users.noreply.github.com>
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.
This is a very large change which turns the post Config function in
backends into a state based call and response system so that
alternative user interfaces can be added.
The existing config logic has been converted, but it is quite
complicated and folloup commits will likely be needed to fix it!
Follow up commits will add a command line and API based way of using
this configuration system.
Includes adding support for additional size input suffix Mi and MiB, treated equivalent to M.
Extends binary suffix output with letter i, e.g. Ki and Mi.
Centralizes creation of bit/byte unit strings.