Previously the source was deleted (or attempted to be deleted), even if
the new location was not acceptable for upload. This could make data
unavilable on the server.
For #7410
By introducing a PropagateRootDirectory job that explicitly
separates the directory deletion jobs from all the other jobs.
Note that this means that if there are errors in subJobs the
dirDeletionJobs won't get executed.
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
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.
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.
This is to avoid issues on OSX, where the ._ prefix has special meaning.
Originally (before 2.3.2) ._ was necessary to guarantee exclusion. But
since then the .sync_ prefix is excluded as well.
This does not affect existing database files.
We want to keep the body so we can get the message from it
(Issue #6459)
TestDownload::testErrorMessage did not fail because the FakeErrorReply
did not emit readyRead and did not implement bytesAvailable.
Signed-off-by: Kevin Ottens <kevin.ottens@nextcloud.com>
Add a test to test the data fingerprint feature make me realize it was broken.
The code was relying in the distinction between empty and null QByteArray,
but this was a bad idea as this difference is lost when going through QString.
It could happen that readyRead was emitted for incoming data while the
download was not yet finished. Then the network job could finish with
no more data arriving - so readyRead wasn't emitted again.
To fix this, the finished signal also gets connected to the readyRead
slot.