One local folder can now be configured as sync target for multiple
accounts as long as their url and user differ.
Also this patch accepts that the sync folder is behind a symlink.
Also this patch fixes a bug that before the user input was taken
canonically which was not working for the symlink handling.
The filename must not be wiped in csync_commit as that is
happening after every sync. It is only set once in the
constructor of the SyncEngine in csync_init().
Before it was in Folder, however, the command line client does not
have the Folder class. To not duplicate code, the function to generate
the sync journal name went to SyncEngine class.
Use a QMap to avoid using a full hashtable for only a few entries, and
clear the QMap once we're done with the measuring. This saves a few
hundred bytes per job during propagation that would otherwise only be
freed at the end of the sync.
During propagation, we create a line for each file, taking memory, but
we delete all lines passed 2000 right at the beginning of the next sync.
Since the user has little chances of being able to read past those 2000
lines in the log, we might as well keep it capped at 2000 also during
propagation to prevent it from eating memory.
The SyncRunFileLog owned by the Folder must be destroyed after the
SyncEngine since the SyncEngine will abort during destruction, resulting
in all jobs being aborted.
It's possible that this crash only happens with a debug build.
The FolderWatcher inserts files to be marked as SYNC and we
currently assume that all file statuses will be updated by the
following sync. It's however possible that the FolderWatcher
notify us of a change that csync won't consider necessary to
propagate, in which case a new status wouldn't be pushed and
the file manager would continue showing this file as syncing.
Re-push the file status when emptying the dirty files list
before propagating to avoid this issue, most likely the OK
status.
No need to allocate (and initialize to 0) a 10 MiB buffer for each files, even
when most files are much smaller than that.
So make sure the buffer that we allocate is not bigger than the file size.
And Also 10 MiB is a bit big for a buffer. 500 KiB should be more than enough.
(Too big allocations can cause problem because of memory fragmentation and such)