We need Qt 5.9 for HTTP2 because, even if Qt 5.8 already has support
for it, there is some critical bug in the HTTP2 implementation which
make it unusable [ https://codereview.qt-project.org/186050 and
https://codereview.qt-project.org/186066 ]
When using HTTP2, we can use many more parallel network request, this
is especially good for small file handling
Lower the priority of the GET and PUT propagation jobs, so the quota
or selective sync ui PROPFIND will not be blocked by them
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
This gives more insight about the logs and allow setting fine-tuned
logging rules. The categories are set to only output Info by default
so this allows us to provide more concise logging while keeping the
ability to extract more information for a specific category when
developping or debugging customer issues.
Issue #5647
When we first detect a 503 (probably from a PROPFIND) and enter the
ServiceUnavailable state, we new trigger a status.php query that will
switch the state to MaintenanceMode if necessary.
Newer servers will have the option of hiding version, versionstring, edition
and productname. They will always send the full information in the capabilities.
By default QNetworkReply::errorString() often produces messages like
"Error downloading <url> - server replied: <reason>"
but the "downloading" part invariably confuses people since the
error might very well have been produced by a PUT request.
This commit produces clearer error messages for HTTP errors.
Additionally:
* Remove some unnecessary null checks from slots connected to
network job signals and document that these signals never send
null replies.
* There was a bug where AbstractNetworkJob::_timedout wasn't
set when derived classes overrode slotTimeout. We now ensure
it's always set by disallowing overrides of slotTimeout.
Instead it now calls onTimedOut, which allows custom handling.
* Several subclasses declared errorString, isTimedOut. Move
these to AbstractNetworkJob.
* Unify handling of OC-ErrorString (via the new, general
Job::errorString)
* Add documentation in various places.
The avatar pixmap is fetched from the server by the Connectionvalidator,
once it has validated the user name, it queries the avatar pixmap.
If the server does not have the avatar route, an empty pixmap is stored.
The re-enables the UI, uses Qt API for importing and
stores the certificate/key in the system keychain.
People who had set up client certs need to re-setup the account. This is ok
since it was an undocumented feature anyway.
We wwer enot connecting to the right signal from the check server
job, and therefore we were not catching the condition in which the
json was invalid. We would then never terminate the ConnectionValidator job.
Note that instanceNotFound is also emited if there is a network error.
The log looked like this:
10:25:51.247 OCC::CheckServerJob::finished: status.php from server is not valid JSON!
10:25:51.248 OCC::CheckServerJob::finished: status.php returns: QMap() QNetworkReply::NetworkError(NoError) Reply: QNetworkReplyHttpImpl(0x2b6a790)
10:25:51.248 OCC::CheckServerJob::finished: No proper answer on QUrl("http://localhost/~owncloud/status.php")
10:26:23.235 OCC::AccountState::checkConnectivity: ConnectionValidator already running, ignoring "owncloud@localhost"
10:26:55.235 OCC::AccountState::checkConnectivity: ConnectionValidator already running, ignoring "owncloud@localhost"
[...]
If the PROPFIND return an invalid code (like 200) then we would
not recieve the error signal and we would never sync again.
Found while investigating https://github.com/owncloud/enterprise/issues/1068
The signal jsonReceived() now not only delivers the raw json string, but
also the status code that came as OCS reply.
Also, fixed a typo in the signals name (recieved => received).
This moves the responsibility of asking the user or not for
credentials from the Credentials classes back to the AccountState.
fetch() now only extract credentials from the keychain, reports
the result to the AccountState which then decides if askFromUser()
should be called or not. The result is once more reported to the
AccounState.
This also replaces the HttpCredentials::queryPassword virtual
which now lets HttpCredentialsGui and HttpCredentialsText do it
the way that they prefer.
The AccountState is now the only class responsible for triggering credentials
fetching from the keychain or from the user.
With the ShibbolethRefresher out of the question it's possible
to remove the invalidateAndFetch virtual and manually call invalidateToken.
This also allows us to move that code from Account to AccountState.
In the end this also allows us to move the fetch() call from the
ConnectionValidator and use the same code path as for invalid credentials.
The original problem is that showing a popup not originated
from the main settings window while it's focused won't be
shown in front to the user.
This try not to highjack the user's attention of the user
by showing a notification when checking the connection for
valid credentials, and require the user to sign in through
the UI. There are still issues with showing that popup from
the tray icon, but the user will most likely be looking for
the popup in that case. The new sign in button directly in
the settings account works properly.
Theme will eventually be moved to the GUI
Theme::appNameGUI and QApplicaiton::applicationName are the same, it is currently
set in the constructor of ConfigFile
In particular the 'unsupported client version' error message
is now visible to the user when trying to connect to a
server that no longer supports the current client version.
If the password or user was wrong during setup, the client showed a
ConnectionClosed error instead of a proper Username or password wrong
message. This was because in HTTPCredentials::slotAuthentication, the
reply is closed, and a property is set to indicate the auth problem.
This patch now checks at all occurences of networkErrors if it might
have been an authentication problem, and displays something useful.
There is a good chance that this is a sufficient fix for
owncloud/enterprise#556
QNetworkReply::OperationCanceledError may be both because of anthentication
error (because the HTTPCredentials abort the reply) or because of a timeout
(the timer abort the reply). We should only ask for the password if the
reply was canceled because the password was wrong.