Since we do not recurse within some directories, many files are not seen.
The stale entry will cleanup by themself as the sync engine try to remove
the files that are already removed.
Should we need to actually do this cleanup, it should be dotected in the
discovery.
From issue #7015, the code is wrong because the path is the file system path and
not the path on the DB.
But since this is a conflict, this means the reconcile will still want to download
the file from the server next sync, so we need not to worry about this case
When the ClientSideEncryption object is fed, also serialize the
encryption info of the folders inside the metadata table.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Ottens <kevin.ottens@nextcloud.com>
We used to do it when the propagation starts, let's do it even before
the discovery starts. This way we'll have a chance to exploit the
information during the discovery phase.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Ottens <kevin.ottens@nextcloud.com>
Everything is invalidated later: after discovery, not before. In
addition entries that should only be invalidated when new local
discovery is done have that behavior now.
If the server has the 'uploadConflictFiles' capability conflict
files will be uploaded instead of ignored.
Uploaded conflict files have the following headers set during upload
OC-Conflict: 1
OC-ConflictBaseFileId: 172489174instanceid
OC-ConflictBaseMtime: 1235789213
OC-ConflictBaseEtag: myetag
when the data is available. Downloads accept the same headers in return
when downloading a conflict file.
In the absence of server support clients will identify conflict files
through the file name pattern and attempt to deduce the base fileid.
Base etag and mtime can't be deduced though.
The upload job for a new conflict file will be triggered directly from
the job that created the conflict file now. No second sync run is
necessary anymore.
This commit does not yet introduce a 'username' like identifier that
automatically gets added to conflict file filenames (to name the files
foo_conflict-Fred-1345.txt instead of just foo_conflict-1345.txt).
Make ExcludedFiles something that is instantiated outside of
the CSYNC context and then given to it as a hook.
ExcludedFiles still lives in csync_exclude and the internal
workings haven't been touched.
We mostly trust the file watchers meaning that we don't re-scan the
local tree if we have done that recently and no file watcher events
have arrived. If the file watchers invalidate a subtree, we rescan
only that subtree.
Since we're not entirely sure the file watchers are reliable, we still
do full local discoveries regularly (1h by default). There is a config
file setting as well as an environment variable to control the interval.
Create a specific type that parses the permissions so we can store
it in a short rather than in a QByteArray
Note: in RemotePermissions::toString, we make sure the string is not
empty by adding a space, this was already existing before commit
e8f7adc7ca where it was removed by mistake.
Now that csync is using a more convenient data structure for
its file trees, wait a little bit longer before destroying them and
fetch the remote permissions from the remote tree there instead.
Merge csync_create and csync_init into the constructor and
replace csync_destroy with the destructor.
Also use a QByteArray for csync_s::root_perms and flatten
csync_rename_s as a rename sub-struct of csync_s since it
can now handle C++ types.
Just expose csync_file_stat_t since we don't need an abstraction layer
anymore. Also pass the nodes of both trees directly to the visitor
function.
Issue #1817
Now that csync builds as C++, this will avoid having to implement
functionalities needed by csync mandatorily in csync itself.
This library is built as part of libocsync and symbols exported
through it.
This requires a relicense of Utility as LGPL. All classes moved into
this library from src/libsync will need to be relicensed as well.
We only want to know if they were touched within the last 15 seconds,
so change the data structure to use a QMultiMap, and sort them by
QElapsedTimer. This allows us to iterate over old entries ordered by
time and to stop once we find a recent entry.
This makes the look-up slower but in most cases the folder watcher
will report any change within milliseconds, and we start from the
most recent. What this really makes slower are actual user file
changes while a fast sync is underways which will need to iterate
over the whole map to find out the file isn't there.
This reduces the growth of the memory usage when downloading a large
amount of files.
Since these errors are blacklisted, it can take up to 24h to retry items
that had a 507 error for a while. This way users can intervene and cause
an upload attempt immediately.
It now produces a summary error message indicating the problem.
Adjust blacklist database table to contain 'errorCategory'. This is
useful for two things:
- Reestablishing summary messages based on blacklisted errors. For
example if we don't retry a 507ed file, we still want to show the
message about space on the server
- Selectively wiping the blacklist: When we have ui for something like
"I deleted some files, please retry all files now!", we want to
delete all blacklist entries of a specific category only.
* A bunch of code was determining sync status by ad-hoc comparing some
progress info fields. It can now just check the status, making it
easier to comprehend.
* There's a clear indication for "a new sync is starting", which helps
wiping the issues tab at the right time.
For now we use them for:
* csync errors: This allows them to appear in the sync issues tab
* insufficient local disk space, as a summary of individual file errors
Insufficient remote space will use them too, as might other issues that
are bigger than a single sync item.
These would otherwise be line-wrapped by clang-format,
and then consecutive reformattings remove the aligned
comment indentation
Example:
int a; // too long comment
->
int a; // too long
// comment
->
int a; // too long
// comment
We can do that because the only changes that were in master but not in 2.3 were the
translations change and documentation change, and the support for the 'M' permission
which we want in 2.3.
Added two checkboxes in the Account Wizard in the advanced page to change the first options.
Also added a checkbox in the general settings to ask for confirmation for external storages.
Theme options allow to hide the checkboxes in the wizard.
As described in issue #5340
We now delete subjobs as their propagation is complete. This allows us
to also release the item by making sure that nothing else is holding a
reference to it.
Remove the stored SyncFileItemVector from SyncEngine and SyncResult
and instead gather the needed info progressively as each itemCompleted
signal is emitted.
This frees some holes on the heap as propagation goes, allowing many
memory allocations without the need of requesting more virtual memory
from the OS, preventing the memory usage from increasingly growing.
This was to catch duplicate emissions for PropagateDirectory but we
don't emit this signal anymore from there.
This fixes a warning about PropagatorJob not being a registered metatype.
This reverts commit fe42c1a818.
We are going to change the webdav path depending on the capabilities.
But the SyncEngine and csync might have been created before the capabilities
are retrieved.
The main raison why we gave the path to the sync engine was to pass it to csync.
But the thing is that csync don't need anymore this url as everything is done by the
discovery classes in libsync that use the network jobs that use the account for the urls.
So csync do not need the remote URI.
shortenFilename in folderstatusmodel.cpp was useless because the string is the
_file of a SyncFileItem which is the relative file name, that name never
starts with owncloud://.
All the csync test creates the folder because csync use to check if the folder
exists. But we don't need to do that anymore