Soldiering on with a broken or incomplete response could lead to
incorrect sync behavior.
Since discovery uses LsCol jobs which already handle errors
correctly, this should not have a significant impact.
In SQLite bindings are not cleared by sqlite3_reset() calls, so
skipping a sqlite3_bind call to create a NULL value doesn't work,
instead the previous value will be written.
To fix this, I clear all bindings in SqlQuery::reset and make sure
to explicitly bind NULL when desired in SqlQuery::bind.
To make sure there's no confusion about SqlQuery::reset and
sqlite3_reset, I rename our method to reset_and_clear_bindings().
Helps with small file sync #331
When I benchmarked this, it went up to 6 parallelism and
was about 1/3 faster than the previous fixed 3 parallelism.
Doing more than 6 is dangerous because QNAM limits to 6 TCP
connections and also the server might become a bottleneck.
Should also help for #4081
This will be useful if we ever want to store account-level gui state.
I built this originally because I thought a paused account would be
this kind of state.
The creation doesn't need to be separated from the SyncEngine anymore.
This allows the SyncEngine to be created in fewer steps if we want to
use it in tests.
This moves most of the direct csync code from Folder into the SyncEngine.
The exclude file logic for the context has been wrapped using the
existing ExcludedFiles class as well.
As discussed with Klaas, this seems to be a better compromise.
10MB * 3 prarralel jobs = 30MB in memory, and to retry in case of
disconnection. Which is still reasonable. And might make the upload
almost twice as fast on fast network where the amount of chunk is the
bottleneck (because of more server processing)
Relates to issue #4354
If the PROPFIND return an invalid code (like 200) then we would
not recieve the error signal and we would never sync again.
Found while investigating https://github.com/owncloud/enterprise/issues/1068
The ".sys.admin#recall#" is the recall file and should not be ignored
even if hidden.
The remote discovery do not need to detect hidden files because it
is already detected by csync in all cases. So this avoid code duplication
Users have complained that they don't see the notification when it is
shown and are not aware that their files aren't syncing.
Remove the non-interactive credentials fetch logic and add make sure
that the shibboleth popup will flash in the taskbar instead.
This will still not allow the popup to show in front in all cases,
but this is a compromise that we have to chose.
This reverts commit dcb687929f.
Issue https://github.com/owncloud/enterprise/issues/990
This is the fix for issue #4370
Step to reproduce the bug:
1) have lots of files in directory "dir1"
2) do mkdir dir2 && mv dir1/* dir2
3) DURING the sync (which takes time because of the many moves) do mkdir dir3 && mv dir2/* dir3/
4) observe that files are PUT in the next sync
The problem is that SyncJournalFileRecord::SyncJournalFileRecord will fail to
get the inode after the forst move because the files are already moved on the
filesystem. Normaly it should use the inode from the discovery phase in that
case but that is not working because it comes from the remote node in case of
moves, so the code in SyncEngine::treewalkFile would not set the inode.
Test in https://github.com/owncloud/smashbox/pull/143