Previously the pin states of deleted files stayed in the 'flags'
database and could be inadvertently reused when a new file with the same
name appeared. Now they are deleted.
To make this work right, the meaning of the 'path' column in the 'flags'
table was changed: Previously it never had the .owncloud file suffix.
Now it's the same as in metadata.path.
This takes the safe parts from #7274 for inclusion in 2.6. The more
elaborate database schema changes (why use 'path' the join the two
tables in the first place?) shall go into master.
Previously RequestEtagJob did return the etag verbatim (including extra
quotes) while the db had the parsed form. That caused the etag
comparison during discovery move detection to always fail. The test
didn't catch it because the etags there didn't have quotes.
Now:
- RequestEtagJob will parse the etag, leading to a consistent format
- Tests have etags with quotes, detecting the problem
- Close the UploadDevice to close the QFile after the PUT job is done.
This allows winvfs to get an oplock on the file later.
- Don't rely on QFile::fileName() to be valid after
openAndSeekFileSharedRead() was called. The way it is openend on
Windows makes it have an empty filename.
If one adds a new file to an online-only folder the previous behavior
was to upload the file in one sync and dehydrate it in the next. Now
these new files get set to Unspecified pin state, making them retain
their data.
Instead of all at once, to reduce peak memory use.
Changing UploadDevice in this way requires keeping the file open for the
duration of the upload. It also means changes to open(), seek(), close()
to ensure that uses of the device work right when a request needs to
be resent.
Since Qt does not yet transparently resend HTTP2 requests in some cases
we do it manually.
The test showed a problem where the initial non-200 reply would close
the target temporary file and the follow-up request couldn't store any
data. Removing that close() call is safe because there also is a
_saveBodyToFile flag that guards writes to the target file.
The previous patch ensured that the sqlite temporaries weren't deleted
and recreated for every sync run, but there was still time between
client startup and the first sync run where they would have the
"needs-sync" icon.
Previously "no-availability" meant db-error and querying the
availability of a nonexistant path returned AllHydrated.
Now, the availability has a DbError and a NoSuchItem error case.
Saying "Currently available locally" sounds more like an indicator than
"Availably locally" does. Centralizing translations avoids consistency
issues between shell context menus and sync folder context menu.
The db-close operation is likely a leftover from when the SyncEngine
owned its own db connection and serves no purpose anymore.
Closing the db causes the removal of the temporary wal and shm files.
These files are recreated when the db is opened again, which happens
almost immediately.
This is a problem for winvfs because the delete-recreate step wipes the
exclusion state on these files just after the sync is done. That meant
that the db temporaries permanently had a "needs sync" icon marker shown
in the explorer.
Avoiding reopening the db also reduces the number of log messages per
sync.
Previously these result codes during remote discovery of the sync root
would not cause an error and the discovery would get stuck.
Also extends RemoteDiscovery tests to check for errors on the root item.
Previously if one set the instruction to ERROR while forgetting to set
an error status, it'd propagate as FileIgnored. Now the default is
NormalError for INSTRUCTION_ERROR and FileIgnored for
INSTRUCTION_IGNORE.
The idea is that the user's question is "is this folder's data available
offline?" and not "does this folder have AlwaysLocal pin state?".
The the answers to the two questions can differ: an always-local
folder can have subitems that are not always-local and are dehydrated.
The new availability enum intends to describe the answer to the user's
actual question and can be derived from pin states. If pin states aren't
stored in the database the way of calculating availability will depend
on the vfs plugin.
The pin state is a per-item attribute that has an effect on _type:
AlwaysLocal dehydrated files will be marked for hydration and OnlineOnly
hydrated files will be marked for dehydration.
Where exactly this effect materializes depends on how the pin states are
stored. If they're stored in the db (suffix) the dbEntry._type is
changed during the discovery.
If the pin state is stored in the filesystem, the localEntry._type must
be adjusted by the plugin's stat callback.
This patch makes pin states behave more consistently between plugins.
Previously with suffix-vfs pin states only had an effect on new remote
files. Now the effect of pinning or unpinning files or directories is as
documented and similar to other plugins.
1. The _firstJob is usually deleted by the time the PropagateDirectory
finishes. (deleteLater() is called early)
2. The PropagateDirectory::_item and PropagateRemoteMkdir::_item point
to the same SyncFileItem anyway. This code is a leftover from when
each job had its own instance.
Previously removing the vfs suffix of a file always triggered a
conflict. Now it may just cause a file download.
This was done because users expected symmetry in the rename actions and
renaming foo -> foo.owncloud already triggers the "make the file
virtual" action. Now foo.owncloud -> foo triggers the "download the
contents" action.
Users can rename a file *and* add/remove the vfs suffix at the same time
leading to very complex sync actions. This patch doesn't add support for
them, but adds tests and makes sure these cases do not cause unintened
behavior.
The rename will be propagated, but the users's hydrate/dehydrate request
will be ignored.