No longer hide the web UI controls for the new untrusted/encrypted
device feature. Testing hasn't been very widespread, but there has been
some and quite a few bugs have been caught and fixed. I believe its time
to not hide it anymore, and cautiously recommend usage. E.g. mention
that the feature hasn't been widely used yet and anyone using it is an
early adopter, but drop the bit about not using it with production data.
We can maybe stress the need for backups in general and especially
using this.
Remove the animation due to its excessive CPU usage, especially when a
large number of files is being downloaded and listed at the same time.
Also, remove the stripes, as they serve no purpose in the now-static
progress bar.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
There was a logic mistake, so the limit in question wasn't used. On my
macOS this doesn't seem to matter, the hard limit returned is 2^63-1 and
setting the soft limit to that works. However I'm assuming that's not
the case for older macOSes since it was so nicely documented, so we
should still have this working. (10240 FDs should be enough for
anybody.)
This is a mostly pointless change to make security scanners and static
analysis tools happy, as they all hate seeing md5. None of our md5 uses
were security relevant, but still. Only visible effect of this change is
that our temp file names for very long file names become slightly longer
than they were previously...
The current text gives an impression that we are currently using a
Receive Encrypted folder, even if we are not. Thus, make the current
text displayed only when the folder is in fact Receive Encrypted, and
add a new string to be displayed when using different folder types.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
This adds a couple of dummy asset files protected by the "noassets"
build tag. The purpose is that it should be possible for, for example,
CI tools and static analysis things to compile and analyze the source
tree without our custom asset generation step. Also makes `go test -tags
noassets ./...` work without building assets first.