Restic used to quit if the repository password was typed incorrectly once.
Restic will now ask the user again for the repository password if typed incorrectly.
The user will now get three tries to input the correct password before restic quits.
Return valid directory info from Lstat() for parent directories of the
specified filename. Previously only "/" and "." were valid directories.
Also set directory mode as this is checked by archiver.
Closes #2063
Windows does not have a concept of a `change time` in the sense as Unix
has it: the field `CreationTime` of the `Win32FileAttributeData` struct
is not updated when attributes or content is changed. So from now on
we're using the `LastWriteTime` as the `change time` on Windows.
Since I could not remember what the value for `Check` means this commit
renames it to `SameFile`: when set to true, the test should make sure
that `FileChanged` should return false (=file is unmodified).
Sometimes restic gets bogus timestamps which cannot be converted to
JSON, because the stdlib JSON encoder returns an error if the year is
not within [0, 9999]. We now make sure that we at least record _some_
timestamp and cap the year either to 0000 or 9999. Before, restic would
refuse to save the file at all, so this improves the status quo.
This fixes #2174 and #1173
This commit is a followup to the addition of the --group-by flag for the
snapshots command. Adding the grouping code there introduced duplicated
code (the forget command also does grouping). This commit refactors
boths sides to only use shared code.
This commit changes the signatures for repository.LoadAndDecrypt and
utils.LoadAll to allow passing in a []byte as the buffer to use. This
buffer is enlarged as needed, and returned back to the caller for
further use.
In later commits, this allows reducing allocations by reusing a buffer
for multiple calls, e.g. in a worker function.
The `s3.storage-class` option can be passed to restic (using `-o`) to
specify the storage class to be used for S3 objects created by restic.
The storage class is passed as-is to S3, so it needs to be understood by
the API. On AWS, it can be one of `STANDARD`, `STANDARD_IA`,
`ONEZONE_IA`, `INTELLIGENT_TIERING` and `REDUCED_REDUNDANCY`. If
unspecified, the default storage class is used (`STANDARD` on AWS).
You can mix storage classes in the same bucket, and the setting isn't
stored in the restic repository, so be sure to specify it with each
command that writes to S3.
Closes #706