This code is more strict in what it expects to find in the backend:
depending on the layout, either a directory full of files or a directory
full of such directories.
a gs service account may only have object permissions on an existing
bucket but no bucket create/get permissions.
these service accounts currently are blocked from initialization a
restic repository because restic can not determine if the bucket exists.
this PR updates the logic to assume the bucket exists when the bucket
attribute request results in a permissions denied error.
this way, restic can still initialize a repository if the service
account does have object permissions
fixes: https://github.com/restic/restic/issues/3100
Due to the return if !isFile, the IsDir branch in List was never taken
and subdirectories were traversed recursively.
Also replaced isFile by an IsRegular check, which has been equivalent
since Go 1.12 (golang/go@a2a3dd00c9).
The restic security model includes full trust of the local machine, so
this should not fix any actual security problems, but it's better to be
safe than sorry.
Fixes #2192.
We now use v4 of the module. `backoff.WithMaxRetries` no longer repeats
an operation endlessly when a retry count of 0 is specified. This
required a few fixes for the tests.
The file is already created with the proper permissions, thus the chmod
call is not critical. However, some file systems have don't allow
modifications of the file permissions. Similarly the chmod call in the Remove
operation should not prevent it from working.
As the connection to the rclone child process is now closed after an
unexpected subprocess exit, later requests will cause the http2
transport to try to reestablish a new connection. As previously this never
should have happened, the connection called panic in that case. This
panic is now replaced with a simple error message, as it no longer
indicates an internal problem.
Calling `Close()` on the rclone backend sometimes failed during test
execution with 'signal: Broken pipe'. The stdio connection closed both
the stdin and stdout file descriptors at the same moment, therefore
giving rclone no chance to properly send any final http2 data frames.
Now the stdin connection to rclone is closed first and will only be
forcefully closed after a timeout. In case rclone exits before the
timeout then the stdio connection will be closed normally.
restic did not notice when the rclone subprocess exited unexpectedly.
restic manually created pipes for stdin and stdout and used these for the
connection to the rclone subprocess. The process creating a pipe gets
file descriptors for the sender and receiver side of a pipe and passes
them on to the subprocess. The expected behavior would be that reads or
writes in the parent process fail / return once the child process dies
as a pipe would now just have a reader or writer but not both.
However, this never happened as restic kept the reader and writer
file descriptors of the pipes. `cmd.StdinPipe` and `cmd.StdoutPipe`
close the subprocess side of pipes once the child process was started
and close the parent process side of pipes once wait has finished. We
can't use these functions as we need access to the raw `os.File` so just
replicate that behavior.
In the Google Cloud Storage backend, support specifying access tokens
directly, as an alternative to a credentials file. This is useful when
restic is used non-interactively by some other program that is already
authenticated and eliminates the need to store long lived credentials.
The access token is specified in the GOOGLE_ACCESS_TOKEN environment
variable and takes precedence over GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS.
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
This change allows passing no arguments to rclone, using `-o
rclone.args=""`. It is helpful when running rclone remotely via SSH
using a key with a forced command (via `command=` in `authorized_keys`).
If our ssh process has died, not only the next, but all subsequent
calls to clientError() should indicate the error.
restic output when the ssh process is killed with "kill -9":
Save(<data/afb68adbf9>) returned error, retrying after 253.661803ms: Write: failed to send packet header: write |1: file already closed
Save(<data/afb68adbf9>) returned error, retrying after 580.752212ms: ssh command exited: signal: killed
Save(<data/afb68adbf9>) returned error, retrying after 790.150468ms: ssh command exited: signal: killed
Save(<data/afb68adbf9>) returned error, retrying after 1.769595051s: ssh command exited: signal: killed
[...]
error in cleanup handler: ssh command exited: signal: killed
Before this patch:
Save(<data/de698d934f>) returned error, retrying after 252.84163ms: Write: failed to send packet header: write |1: file already closed
Save(<data/de698d934f>) returned error, retrying after 660.236963ms: OpenFile: failed to send packet header: write |1: file already closed
Save(<data/de698d934f>) returned error, retrying after 568.049909ms: OpenFile: failed to send packet header: write |1: file already closed
Save(<data/de698d934f>) returned error, retrying after 2.428813824s: OpenFile: failed to send packet header: write |1: file already closed
[...]
error in cleanup handler: failed to send packet header: write |1: file already closed
Previously, the function read from ARGV[1] (hardcoded) rather than the
value passed to it, the command-line argument as it exists in globalOptions.
Resolves #1745