With this change it is possible to dump a folder to stdout as a tar. The
It can be used just like the normal dump command:
`./restic dump fa97e6e1 "/data/test/" > test.tar`
Where `/data/test/` is a a folder instead of a file.
This commit changes the logic slightly: checking the permissions in the
fuse mount when nobody else besides the current user can access the fuse
mount does not sense. The current user has access to the repo files in
addition to the password, so they can access all data regardless of what
the fuse mount does.
Enabling `--allow-root` allows the root user to access the files in the
fuse mount, for this user no permission checks will be done anyway.
The code now enables `DefaultPermissions` automatically when
`--allow-other` is set, it can be disabled with
`--no-default-permissions` to restore the old behavior.
This option restores the previous behavior of `mount` by disabling the "DefaultPermissions" FUSE option. This allows any user that can access the mountpoint to read any file from the snapshot. Normal FUSE rules apply, so `allow-root` or `allow-other` can be used to allow users besides the mounting user to access these files.
This enforces the Unix permissions of the snapshot files within the mounted filesystem, which will only allow users to access snapshot files if they had access to the file outside of the snapshot.
Make restic forget --keep-within accept time ranges measured in hours and choose
accordingly which snapshots to keep and which to forget. Add relative tests.
The default value of the `--host` flag was set to 'H' (the shorthand
version of the flag), this caused the snapshot lookup to fail.
Also add shorthand `-H` for `backup` command.
Closes #2040
Some time ago we changed the paths in the repo to always use a slash for
separation, it seems we missed that the `dump` command still uses the
`filepath` package, so on Windows backslashes are used.
Closes #2079
reworked restore error callback to use file location
path instead of much heavier Node. this reduced restore
memory usage by as much as 50% in some of my tests.
Signed-off-by: Igor Fedorenko <igor@ifedorenko.com>