It filters the error out of the list of blocking errors. It now shows up
in the Activities and Notificattions list as a warning.
Signed-off-by: Camila San <hello@camila.codes>
We otherwise normalize all path in the C form, so we must have
the Folder's path normalized the same. Or all comparizon will fail
(such as knowing if a file from the SocketAPI or the FilesystemWatcher
are part of the folder)
Issue #4424
If the SyncResult incorrectly believes that there are no conflicts, the
tray icon won't be correct and there will be no warning about unresolved
conflicts on the account.
Nevertheless, it's pretty awkward that the IssuesWidget is better
informed about pending conflicts than the Folder itself. This kind of
backwards data flow is very confusing.
Unfortunately the only alternative I see is to either keep track of
this information in two places (also in Folder), or create a common
data-holding class that can serve as a model instance for the issues
view as well as provide data directly to the Folder - which would
have been a much larger change.
- Changes the configuration name in ConfigFile and GeneralSettings
accordingly with the new text.
- Makes sure the user sees error and conflict messages even if the
setting is disabled.
Signed-off-by: Camila San <hello@camila.codes>
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.
... even if the file is not changed.
We get an UPDATE_METADATA in that case, so make sure we let the
SyncFileStatusTracker know about it.
That means we need to filter out UPDATE_METADATA in the other listeners
of this signal.
Issue #6098
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.
This makes it unnecessary for FolderMan to manage the list and removes
the need for some forwarders.
This is done in preparation for follow-up commits that want to add
diagnostics to FolderWatcher that shall be available from within Folder.
This gets rid of the csync_statedb sqlite layer and use
the same code and same connection as the rest of the SyncEngine.
Missing functions are added to SyncJournalDb and change a few minor
things (like changing SyncJournalFileRecord::_modtime to be an int64
instead of a QDateTime, like it was in csync).
The current implementation would return the same value whether the query failed
or if no row would be found. This is something that is currently checked by csync
and needs to be provided if we want to use SyncJournalDB there.
Adjusted all call sites to also check the return value even though they
could still just rely on rec.isValid(), but makes it more explicit as to what
happens for database errors in those cases, if we ever want to gracefully handle
them.
This is motivated by the fact that QMetaObject::noralizeSignature takes 7.35%
CPU of the LargeSyncBench. (Mostly from ABstractNetworkJob::setupConnections and
PropagateUploadFileV1::startNextChunk). It could be fixed by using normalized
signature in the connection statement, but i tought it was a good oportunity
to modernize the code.
This commit only contains calls that were automatically converted with clazy.
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.
* 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.
When synchronizing a folder on a samba share, creating files that begin
with ._ is often forbidden. This prevented the client from creating
its ._sync_abcdef.db file.
Now, it'll check whether the preferred filename is creatable, and if
it isn't it'll use .sync_abcdef.db instead.
The disadvantage is that this alternative path won't be ignored by
older clients - that was the reason for the ._ prefix.
Use qCInfo for anything that has general value for support and
development. Use qCWarning for any recoverable error and qCCritical
for anything that could result in data loss or would identify a serious
issue with the code.
Issue #5647