This test was failing locally for me. Indeed, through QStandardPaths it
was finding the user settings of my production client and not having the
initial state it expected. Using QStandardPaths test mode then it starts
from a clean slate every time.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Ottens <kevin.ottens@nextcloud.com>
We simply use a static QObject using Q_GLOBAL_STATIC()
instead of allocating a leaking QObject on the heap.
Signed-off-by: Stephan Beyer <s-beyer@gmx.net>
In case of denormalized paths in the dav href (presence of . or .. in
the path) simple string startsWith comparison wasn't enough to know if
said href ended up in the right namespace. That's why we're now using
QUrl (pretending local file since we don't have a full URL in the href)
to normalize the path before comparison.
This could happen with broken proxies for instance where we would
wrongly validate the dav information resulting in potentially surprising
syncing and name collisions.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Ottens <kevin.ottens@nextcloud.com>
- When the the users logs because of 401 or 403 errors, it checks if the
server requested the remote wipe. If yes, locally deletes account and folders
connected to the account and notify the server. If no, proceeds to ask the
user to login again.
- The app password is restored in the keychain.
- WIP: The change also includes a test class for RemoteWipe.
Signed-off-by: Camila San <hello@camila.codes>
Add a test to test the data fingerprint feature make me realize it was broken.
The code was relying in the distinction between empty and null QByteArray,
but this was a bad idea as this difference is lost when going through QString.
Note that we also needed to adjust the server url to contains the user name
in the folder wizard. (As checkPathValidityForNewFolder expect the user name)
Issue #6654
Fix a strange warning seen on the log from the CI on Windows in
https://github.com/owncloud/client/pull/6621
The test shows, at the beginning
QObject::connect: No such signal DesktopServiceHook::destroyed(QObject*)
And crashes at the and.
My guess is that when QDesktopServices::setUrlHandler is called, the
QMetaObject is not yet initialized
But this is probably not the reason of the crash
It could happen that readyRead was emitted for incoming data while the
download was not yet finished. Then the network job could finish with
no more data arriving - so readyRead wasn't emitted again.
To fix this, the finished signal also gets connected to the readyRead
slot.