The upstream revive repo changed the default settings for this linter.
We use this through golangci-lint.
This change meant lots of errors appearing all at once. We should
probably fix these in due course, but for the time being this disables
those settings.
See: https://github.com/mgechev/revive/pull/799
Before this change if logs were not redirected, logging would
corrupt the terminal screen.
This commit stores the logs (max ~100 lines) in an array and
print them when the program exits.
When using ssh-agent to hold multiple keys, it is common practice to configure
openssh to use a specific key by setting the corresponding public key as
the `IdentityFile`. This change makes a similar behavior possible in rclone
by having it parse the `key_file` config as the public key when
`key_use_agent` is `true`.
rclone already attempted this behavior before this change, but it assumed that
`key_file` is the private key and that the public key is specified in
`${key_file}.pub`. So for parity with the openssh behavior, this change makes
rclone first attempt to read the public key from `${key_file}.pub` as before
(for the sake of backward compatibility), then fall back to reading it from
`key_file`.
Fixes#6791
Before this change, we would upload files as single part uploads even
if the source MD5SUM was not available.
AWS won't let you upload a file to a locket bucket without some sort
of hash protection of the upload which we don't have with no MD5SUM.
So we switch to multipart upload when the source does not have an
MD5SUM.
This means that if --s3-disable-checksum is set or we are copying from
a source with no MD5SUMs we will copy with multipart uploads.
This patch changes all uploads, not just those to locked buckets
because having no MD5SUM protection on uploads is undesirable.
Fixes#6846
This provider:
- supports the `X-OC-Mtime` header to set the mtime
- calculates SHA1 checksum server side and returns it as a `ME:sha1hex` prop
To differentiate the new hasMESHA1 quirk, the existing hasMD5 and hasSHA1
quirks for Owncloud have been renamed to hasOCMD5 and hasOCSHA1.
Fixes#6837
Sometimes vsftpd returns a 426 error when closing the stream even when
all the data has been transferred successfully. This is some TLS
protocol mismatch.
Rclone has code to deal with this already, but the error returned from
Close was wrapped in a multierror so the detection didn't work.
This properly extract `textproto.Error` from the errors returned by
`github.com/jlaffaye/ftp` in all the cases.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/vsftpd-vs-rclone-part-2/36774
Before this change if a file was uploaded to a backend which didn't
support modtimes, the time of the file read after the upload had
completed would change to the time the file was uploaded on the
backend.
When using `--vfs-cache-mode writes` or `full` this time would be
different by the `--vfs-write-back` delay which would cause
applications to think the file had been modified.
This changes uses the last modification time read by the OS as a
virtual modtime for backends which don't support setting modtimes. It
does not change the modtime to that actually uploaded.
This means that as long as the file remains in the directory cache it
will have the expected modtime.
See: https://forum.rclone.org/t/saving-files-causes-wrong-modified-time-to-be-set-for-a-few-seconds-on-webdav-mount-with-bitrix24/36451