This adds a header with the operating system version, verbatim in
whatever format the operating system reports it, to the upgrade check.
The intention is that the upgrade server can use this information to
filter out (or maybe just mark) potentially unsupported upgrades.
Based on user request from Weblate, user `@aindriu80`.
Looks promising based on the profile:
https://hosted.weblate.org/user/aindriu80/ Not sure whether almost
30.000 translations in about one month is realistic for a human though.
### Purpose
Wrap access to Model for users that use the syncthing Go package. See
discussion:
https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/9619#pullrequestreview-2212484910
### Testing
It works with the iOS app. Other than that, there are no current users
of this API (to my knowledge) as Model was only exposed recently form
the iOS app.
### Purpose
This PR contains the set of changes needed to make Syncthing work on iOS
for [my iOS app for
Syncthing](https://github.com/pixelspark/sushitrain).
Most changes originate from [the Mobius Sync
fork](http://github.com/MobiusSync/syncthing/tree/ios). I have removed
the changes from their fork that are not strictly needed for my app
(i.e. their changes to the GUI and command line utilities, for instance)
and squashed it all in a single commit.
In summary, the changes are:
* Resolve non-absolute paths to the 'Documents' folder (basically the
only one an app can/should write user data to by default on iOS)
* Tweaking of build flags/conditions for iOS (i.e. determine which
basicfs_watch, ignoreresult variant to build for iOS)
* Disable upgrade mechanism on iOS
* Make `RequestGlobal` and `PullerProgress` public symbols
* Expose syncthing.app's Model instance (app.M)
* Add no-op stub for SetLowPriority on iOS
I would very much appreciate these changes to be (eventually) merged to
mainline syncthing, as this would allow my iOS app to track the mainline
source code directly and removes the need (for me at least) for
maintaining a separate fork. Perhaps the Mobius folks can also benefit
from this (although as noted this branch does not contain their changes
to e.g. the GUI).
### Testing
This branch has been tested with the iOS app and appears to work fine.
The full set of MobiusSync changes has been used before with success.
### Screenshots
n/a
### Documentation
There should be no visible changes for users due to this set of changes.
---------
Co-authored-by: Simon Pickup <simon@pickupinfinity.com>
Tiny cleanup I noticed while trying to fix/test another issue
(https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/9600). I shortly tried to
figure out what it was used for in the past, but gave up without
results.
Previously we queried cache with backslashes, and stored entries with
slashes. As in no cache hits ever for non-toplevel files. I also
eventually remembered that cache is disabled by default, so this is a
bit pointless, but still right :P
### Purpose
Avoid the issue where the folder marker is deleted by overzealous
cleanup tools because it's just a useless, empty directory.
We create a small file containing a an admonishment to not delete the
directory, and some metadata that is just for human consumption at the
moment. (But it would parse as a valid yaml file if we wanted to read
this, at some point.)
This will only apply when _creating_ a folder marker, that is, existing
setups will not gain the file automatically. Obviously, when using a
custom folder marker none of this applies.
Also, slightly adjust the permission bits for the folder marker directory and file on Unixes, making sure the group & write bits are unset.
### Testing
I've created and deleted a few folders and it appears to behave as I
expect.
### Screenshots
```
jb@ok:~/somefolder % ls -la
total 0
drwxr-xr-x 3 jb staff 96 May 1 08:52 ./
drwx------ 12 jb staff 384 May 1 08:52 ../
drwxr-xr-x 3 jb staff 96 May 1 08:52 .stfolder/
jb@ok:~/somefolder % ls -l .stfolder
total 8
-rw-r--r-- 1 jb staff 122 May 1 08:52 syncthing-folder-39a4b0.txt
jb@ok:~/somefolder % cat .stfolder/syncthing-folder-39a4b0.txt
# This directory is a Syncthing folder marker.
# Do not delete.
folderID: xtdca-cudyf
created: 2024-05-01T08:52:49+02:00
```
Currently the maximum delay is always derived automatically from the
initial delay. This is fine in most cases, but for some use cases (large
files that take a long time to write) we need to be able to set a longer
max delay than the computed value (e.g., 15s delay with 10min timeout).
This adds a small package `geoip` which knows how to download and manage
the Maxmind GeoLite2 database we use. This removes the need for various
scripts to download and manage the geoip database, something that today
happens on Docker startup for the relay pool server and using various
hand written hacks for the usage reporting server.
The database is downloaded when needed and then refreshed on a
best-effort basis weekly.