Previously we'd use the full regex when the bname triggered a full-path
matching to take place. Now we have a simplified full-traversal regex
for this case that can be significantly faster to apply.
Triggered by #5017 but doesn't actually solve it.
Unfortunately matching behaved differently on Windows. This patch
restores the previous matching behavior but still uses the new regular
expression based matching.
Further work will hopefully unify the behavior between platforms without
breaking backwards compatibility.
fopen does not work well with relative path tand forward slashes on windows
This fix the windows textexcludedfiles test.
And also make the code simpler.
Note that the 'trimmed' might be a behavior change, but i think it is ok
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).
Previously, there was csync_ftw_type_e and SyncFileItem::Type. Having
two enums lead to a bug where Type::Unknown == Type::File that went
unnoticed for a good while.
This patch keeps only a single enum.
csync_exclude.cpp:428:17: error: assigning to 'char *' from incompatible type 'const char *'
bname = path;
^~~~
The C library's strrchr always return 'char*'
Only the C++'s std::strrchr has two overloads
Improves full matches by more than an order of magnitude
and also improves speed of traversal matches by roughly 20%,
judging by the check_csync_exclude performance test.
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.
On Mac, this halves the time spent in csync_excluded_traversal
when using check_csync_excluded_performance. A similar performance
increase is seen on linux.
Set OWNCLOUD_UPLOAD_CONFLICT_FILES=1 to trigger this behavior.
Note that this is experimental and unsupported. The real feature is
likely to end up in 2.5.
Uploading conflict files is simply done by removing the pattern from
csync_exclude. The rest here deals with making the conflict notification
ui approximately work.
There are still some concerns about where an uploaded conflict file
appears in the sync protocol and issues list (it should be in both, but
is only in one of them currently!).
See #4557.
Otherwise adding patterns that start with # are impossible to add, since
they get treated as comments. Also add this escaping for patterns added
in the ui.
Also move csync_normalize_etag to common/utility since we
don't need the char* function anymore.
Remove the single space file_stat->remotePerm codepath since
this won't be used in csync anymore since
8de3bda0b1.
Issue #1817
This will allow us to unify data structures between csync and libsync.
Utility functions like csync_time and c_std are still compiled as C
since we won't need to be coupled with Qt in the short term.