It seems that sometimes the tray implementation isn't ready on system
startup. Retrying later seems to not help. Delaying the start of the
client is the workaround that people have reported as effective.
When owncloud is started during desktop startup the tray may not yet
be running when the client starts. This will make the client attempt
to create a tray icon again after 10 seconds if there's no tray
during initial startup.
This could fix a problem where the client incorrectly decides to delete
local data.
Previously any sqlite3_step() return value that wasn't SQLITE_ROW would
be interpreted as "there's no more data here". Thus an sqlite error at a
bad time could cause the remote discovery to fail to read an unchanged
subtree from the database. These files would then be deleted locally.
With this change sqlite errors from sqlite3_step are detected and
logged. For the particular case of SyncJournalDb::getFilesBelowPath()
the error will now be propagated and the sync run will fail instead of
performing spurious deletes.
Note that many other database functions still don't distinguish
not-found from error cases. Most of them won't have as severe effects on
affected sync runs though.
It still reads and writes the old format too, but all newly stored
client certs will be in the new form.
For #6776 because Windows limits credential data to 512 bytes in older
versions.
By default, plugins are only searched next to the binary or next to the
other Qt plugins. This optional build variable allows another path to be
configured.
The idea is that on linux the oC packaging probably wants the binary in
something like /opt/owncloud/bin and the plugins in
/opt/owncloud/lib/plugins.
Similarly, distribution packagers probably don't want the plugins next
to the binary or next to the other Qt plugins. This flag allows them to
configure another path that the executable will look in.
doExpand() is called when the selective sync editing mode is enabled in
the folder settings view. Previously it'd set the expansion to be
exactly the root items. Now, it just expands any root items that are
currently collapsed, leaving all other item expansion unchanged.
With the recent bugfix to avoid sending messages on dead connections
0bfe7ac250c54f5415c0a794c7b271428e83c3cf
the client now crashed if readyRead() was received after disconnected()
for the socket as the listener for that connection was already removed.
This code fixes it by still invoking the handler from readyRead() but
passing a SocketListener that won't attempt to send messages.
As far as I'm aware local discovery can be skipped on folders that are
selective-sync blacklisted, so a local discovery is required when an
entry is removed from the blacklist.
Also rename
avoidReadFromDbOnNextSync() -> schedulePathForRemoteDiscovery()
since the old name might also imply it's not read from db in the local
discovery - which is not the case. Use Folder::
schedulePathForLocalDiscovery() for that.
Creating a new virtual file and replacing a file with a virtual one now
have their own text in the protocol, not just "Downloaded".
To do this, the SyncFileItem type is kept as
ItemTypeVirtualFileDehydration for these actions. Added new code to
ensure the type isn't written to the database.
While looking at this, I've also added documentation on SyncFileItem's
_file, _renameTarget, _originalFile and destination() because some of
the semantics weren't clear.
That change will be useful for the notifications. Previously the
dehydrated files were reported as "newly downloaded", now they're
reported as "updated".
That just complicated things. It's ok if Vfs is not a fully abstract
interface class.
The pinstate-in-db methods are instead provided directly on Vfs and
VfsSuffix and VfsOff use them to implement pin states.
The start() method is simply non-virtual and calls into startImpl() for
the plugin-specific startup code.
The block of code that propagated attributes etc from the previously
existing file was placed *after* the block that renamed the previously
existing file to a conflict name. That meant the propagation didn't work
in the conflict case.
- SyncJournalDB functions now behind internalPinStates() to avoid
accidental usage, when nearly everyone should go through Vfs.
- Rename Vfs::getPinState() to Vfs::pinState()
Any folder with a (potentially deeply) contained error will have
StatusWarning. StatusExcluded marks exclusions. The difference is useful
to know for VFS.
This will be used in conjunction with vfs plugins that detect whether a
file has a pending hydration/dehydration through independent means and
communicate that to the discovery through local file type.
Since 'placeholder' just means that it's an item of the special type
that the vfs plugin can deal with - no matter whether hydrated or
dehydrated - all done items should become placeholders. Even
directories.
Now every file that passes through updateMetadata() will be converted to
a placeholder if necessary.
On Linux and Windows the file watcher can't distinguish between changes
that were caused by the process itself, like during a sync operation,
and external changes. To work around that the client keeps a list of
files it has touched and blocks notifications on these files for a bit.
The duration of this block was originally and arbitrarily set at 15
seconds. During manual tests I regularly thought there was a bug when
syncs didn't trigger, when the only problem was that my changes happened
too close to a previous sync operation.
This change reduces the duration to three seconds. I imagine that this
is still enough.
Also use std::chrono while at it.
Also, calling deleteLater() on jobs is unnecessary (they autodelete
after finished()) and deleting the attached QSettings is also
unnecessary because the settings object is parented to the job.