For a usual file sync event we check for actual changes in the local file,
after an unlock the local file might be unchanged so we need to sync it anyhow.
Fixes: owncloud/enterprise#3609
When the gui thread blocks for several seconds it's possible for the
ConnectionValidator to timeout and decide that the account is
unreachable. It will then terminate all sync runs.
Increasing the timeout makes this less likely to happen. The tradeoff is
that real disconnects will not be detected as quickly.
This does not address the root cause but makes the symptom less likely
to appear.
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.
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 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.