This re-implements the stalled enhancement from #8808. Thanks @Craeckie
for the idea and first implementation draft!
If a folder is shared to a device with encryption, add a lock icon in
front of the device name under "Shared With" in the folder details
panel. Be careful not to add whitespace caused by line wraps in HTML
source code, which would defeat the purpose of keeping the icon glued to
the name by a non-breaking space.
Apply the same lock icon for the list of folders shared with a device.
This change was split off from #9355 as an independent clean-up / fix.
See that PR for review discussion, testing, and screenshots.
Improve the wrapping of folder labels / device names by going back to
word-wrapping, but making sure other spans, such as the trailing comma,
do not get separated from the label span.
* Avoid adding whitespace caused by line wraps in HTML source code.
The different cases within the ng-switch block are separated by
newlines for readability, but that gets parsed as whitespace. For
wrapping purposes, this should not happen, because then there is no
way to keep other HTML parts glued to the name / label in each list
entry.
* Simplify redundant conditional comma code.
The separating comma after a device name or folder label (all but the
last) should always stick to it. Use the HTML comment trick to avoid
whitespace and therefore a wrapping opportunity caused by the code
formatting newline. Thus the conditional comma only needs to be
defined once, not in each ng-switch case.
* Wrap at word boundaries and only break up words if necessary.
Use the overflow-wrap: break-word; style instead of word-break:
break-all;. While the latter is suitable for longish paths, breaking
device names or folder labels arbitrarily within words is ugly.
This also makes the the <sup> numbers actually stay glued to their
respective neighboring words.
Include legacy CSS alias "word-wrap" in the class definition.
* Fix indentation (unrelated).
Adds a bool flag to `scanIfItemChanged()` to indicate when the scan was initiated from a delete function, and if so, tell `IsEquivalentOptional()` to ignore Xattrs and Ownership regardless of the global setting.
I tested this with my sledgehammer and it seems to pass.
Go is not cgroup aware and by default will set GOMAXPROCS to the number
of available threads, regardless of whether it is within the allocated
quota. This behaviour causes high amount of CPU throttling and degraded
application performance.
Add support for setting umask value in the Docker `entrypoint.sh`
script. This is useful when
not syncing permissions and working with groups, and needing umask
values like `002` instead of `022`.
The changes to go.mod in latest Go 1.21/1.22 are not fully understood by
older Go that might be pre-installed on builds, so make sure we always
have a modern one in place even for running small release scripts etc.
Somewhere along the way, the non-parallel test became parallel, and at
that point, timeouts occurred. Parallel is better, so increase the
timeout on the offending call a bit...
The new test has a flakiness factor on slow platforms, where the close
on the sending connection races with the last index message, potentially
messing up the count. This adds a wait to ensure that all sent messages
are received, or the test will eventually fail with a timeout.
Currently `IsTraced("xyz")` will return true for
any inclusion of "xyz" in string.
This change splits `STTRACE` using `','`, `' '` and `';'`
as delimiters. That makes facilities separation
more clear.
This makes a couple of small improvements to the folder summary
mechanism:
- The folder summary includes the local and remote sequence numbers in
clear text, rather than some odd sum that I'm not sure what it was
intended to represent.
- The folder summary event is generated when appropriate, regardless of
whether there is an event listener. We did this before because
generating it was expensive, and we wanted to avoid doing it
unnecessarily. Nowadays, however, it's mostly just reading out
pre-calculated metadata, and anyway, it's nice if it shows up reliably
when running with -verbose.
The point of all this is to make it easier to use these events to judge
when devices are, in fact, in sync. As-is, if I'm looking at two
devices, it's very difficult to reliably determine if they are in sync
or not. The reason is that while we can ask device A if it thinks it's
in sync, we can't see if the answer is "yes" because it has processed
all changes from B, or if it just doesn't know about the changes from B
yet. With proper sequence numbers in the event we can compare the two
and determine the truth. This makes testing a lot easier.
This is a refactor of the protocol/model interface to take the actual
message as the parameter, instead of the broken-out fields:
```diff
type Model interface {
// An index was received from the peer device
- Index(conn Connection, folder string, files []FileInfo) error
+ Index(conn Connection, idx *Index) error
// An index update was received from the peer device
- IndexUpdate(conn Connection, folder string, files []FileInfo) error
+ IndexUpdate(conn Connection, idxUp *IndexUpdate) error
// A request was made by the peer device
- Request(conn Connection, folder, name string, blockNo, size int32, offset int64, hash []byte, weakHash uint32, fromTemporary bool) (RequestResponse, error)
+ Request(conn Connection, req *Request) (RequestResponse, error)
// A cluster configuration message was received
- ClusterConfig(conn Connection, config ClusterConfig) error
+ ClusterConfig(conn Connection, config *ClusterConfig) error
// The peer device closed the connection or an error occurred
Closed(conn Connection, err error)
// The peer device sent progress updates for the files it is currently downloading
- DownloadProgress(conn Connection, folder string, updates []FileDownloadProgressUpdate) error
+ DownloadProgress(conn Connection, p *DownloadProgress) error
}
```
(and changing the `ClusterConfig` to `*ClusterConfig` for symmetry;
we'll be forced to use all pointers everywhere at some point anyway...)
The reason for this is that I have another thing cooking which is a
small troubleshooting change to check index consistency during transfer.
This required adding a field or two to the index/indexupdate messages,
and plumbing the extra parameters in umpteen changes is almost as big a
diff as this is. I figured let's do it once and avoid having to do that
in the future again...
The rest of the diff falls out of the change above, much of it being in
test code where we run these methods manually...
gui: Remove non-functional HTML from External Versioning tooltip (ref
#8923)
Since [1], it is no longer possible to use HTML in tooltips. This was
addressed in [2], however the commit missed one instance of HTML that
was used to change the font type of the External versioning command
tooltip. This remaining HTML is removed in this commit.
[1] f5e5af391a
[2] 73c52eafb6
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
### Screenshots
![image](https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/assets/5626656/d5f6c553-35cb-48c2-b654-809d8bbe93b8)
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
This improves the ignore handling so that directories can be fully
ignored (skipped in the watcher) in more cases. Specifically, where the
previous rule was that any complex `!`-pattern would disable skipping
directories, the new rule is that only matches on patterns *after* such
a `!`-pattern disable skipping. That is, the following now does the
intuitive thing:
```
/foo
/bar
!whatever
*
```
- `/foo/**` and `/bar/**` are completely skipped, since there is no
chance anything underneath them could ever be not-ignored
- `!whatever` toggles the "can't skip directories any more" flag
- Anything that matches `*` can't skip directories, because it's
possible we can have `whatever` match something deeper.
To enable this, some refactoring was necessary:
- The "can skip dirs" flag is now a property of the match result, not of
the pattern set as a whole.
- That meant returning a boolean is not good enough, we need to actually
return the entire `Result` (or, like, two booleans but that seemed
uglier and more annoying to use)
- `ShouldIgnore(string) boolean` went away with
`Match(string).IsIgnored()` being the obvious replacement (API
simplification!)
- The watcher then needed to import the `ignore` package (for the
`Result` type), but `fs` imports the watcher and `ignore` imports `fs`.
That's a cycle, so I broke out `Result` into a package of its own so
that it can be safely imported everywhere in things like `type Matcher
interface { Match(string) result.Result }`. There's a fair amount of
stuttering in `result.Result` and maybe we should go with something like
`ignoreresult.R` or so, leaving this open for discussion.
Tests refactored to suit, I think this change is in fact quite well
covered by the existing ones...
Also some noise because a few of the changed files were quite old and
got the `gofumpt` treatment by my editor. Sorry not sorry.
---------
Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
### Purpose
Fix#9241 by expanding tildes in version paths.
When creating the versioner file system, first try to expand any leading
tildes to the user's home directory before handling relative paths. This
makes a version path `"~/p"` expand to `"$HOME/p"` instead of
`"/folder/~/p"`.
### Testing
Added a test to lib/versioner that exercises this code path. Also
manually tested with local syncthing instances.
### Purpose
This PR changes behaviour of syncthing related to `receive-only`
folders, which I believe to be a bug since I wouldn't expect the current
behaviour. With the current syncthing codebase, a file of a
`receive-only` folder that is only modified locally can cause the
creation of a `.sync-conflict` file.
### Testing
Consider this szenario: Setup two paired clients that sync a folder with
a given file (e.g. `Test.txt`). One of the clients configures the folder
to be `receive-only`. Now, change the contents of the file for the
receive-only client **_twice_**.
With the current syncthing codebase, this leads to the creation of a
`.sync-conflict` file that contains the modified contents, while the
regular `Test.txt` file is reset to the cluster's provided contents.
This is due to a `protocol.FileInfo#ShouldConflict` check, that is
succeeding on the locally modified file.
This PR changes this behaviour to not reset the file and not cause the
creation of a `.sync-conflict`. Instead, the second content update is
treated the same as the first content update.
This PR also contains a test that fails on the current codebase and
succeeds with the changes introduced in this PR.
### Screenshots
This is not a GUI change
### Documentation
This is not a user visible change.
## Authorship
Your name and email will be added automatically to the AUTHORS file
based on the commit metadata.
#### Thanks to all the syncthing folks for this awesome piece of
software!
### Purpose
This implements CLI completion using the Kongplete module. As a side
effect a CLI structure for syncthing/cli was created for kongplete to be
able to parse and implement CLI completion.
### Testing
I've tested the autocompletion manually, and it had worked, but I hadn't
added any tests so as to test it automatically. Additionally, I ran `go
run build.go test` with all tests passing.
This adds a "token manager" which handles storing and checking expired
tokens, used for both sessions and CSRF tokens. It removes the old,
corresponding functionality for CSRFs which saved things in a file. The
result is less crap in the state directory, and active login sessions
now survive a Syncthing restart (this really annoyed me).
It also adds a boolean on login to create a longer-lived session cookie,
which is now possible and useful. Thus we can remain logged in over
browser restarts, which was also annoying... :)
<img width="1001" alt="Screenshot 2023-12-12 at 09 56 34"
src="https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/assets/125426/55cb20c8-78fc-453e-825d-655b94c8623b">
Best viewed with whitespace-insensitive diff, as a bunch of the auth
functions became methods instead of closures which changed indentation.