Currently, the dismiss button is displayed as the first of the three
buttons. However, the most common action that the user wants to do when
sharing a new folder is to add it on a different device. Because of
this, the add button should be displayed first as the most prominent of
the three. The ignore button is the opposite of the add button, and also
results in a parmenent action, hence it makes sense to lump the two
together. Thus, the dismiss button should be moved to the last place as
an alternative to the two main actions, when the user is yet unsure what
they want to do with the notification.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
1. Change each modal title text to match the action that is being
executed (i.e. "Revert" to "Revert Local Additions", "Override" to
"Override Changes", "Delete" to "Delete Unexpected Items").
2. Change the icons to match the icons used by each action (i.e. arrow-
circle-down for Revert, arrow-circle-up for Override). Replace the
broken lock icon for Delete with minus-circle.
3. Rearrange the order in the modal HTML code to simplify it a little.
Disable the Versions button when the folder is paused, because it does
not work, i.e. the versioned files are not loaded. The folder needs to
be unpaused to actually be able to view the versioned file list.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
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.
Move the "Last seen" field to the very top in the device information.
This way, if a device has disconnected unexpectly, we can quickly check
the time when it was last available. Right now, due to the very long
address field, it is usually necessary to scroll down in order to view
the "Last seen" field.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
If there are no folders present, show only the "Add Folder" button, and
hide the "Rescan All" button. Only show the latter when at least one
folder exists.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
The button does nothing when the External Versioning is being used, so
it should not be displayed at all to avoid confusing the users.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
When using a Web browser with JavaScript either disabled or unavailable,
show a warning to let the user know that the Web GUI requires JS in
order to operate.
To achieve this, add a <div> that wraps both the navbar and the main
content, and then move the CSS class ng-cloak from the <html> element to
that <div>. This way, only the JavaScript-dependent part is hidden when
JS is unavailable, and not the whole website, as it is the case right
now. Then, add a <noscript> element right at the start of the <body>
element, so that the warning is also shown right away in text-based Web
browsers. The <noscript> element includes a stripped down version of the
navbar showing only the Syncthing logo, and then a container with the
warning itself. Lastly, leave the footer untouched and always visible,
because it does not rely on JavaScript at all.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
Co-authored-by: Jakob Borg <jakob@kastelo.net>
Adds a new folder state "Waiting to Sync" in the same vein as the
existing "Waiting to Scan". This vastly improves performances in the
rare cases when there are lots and lots of folders operating.
* lib/api, lib/connections, gui: Show connection error for disconnected devices (fixes#3345)
This adds functionality in the connetions service to track the last
error per address. That is in turn exposed in the /rest/system/status
API method, as that is also where we already show the listener status
from the connection service.
The GUI uses this info where it lists addresses, showing errors (if any)
in red underneath each address.
I also slightly refactored the existing status method on the connection
service to have a better name and return typed information.
* ok
* review
* formatting
* review
* lib/tlsutil: Enable TLS 1.3 when available, on test builds (fixes#5065)
This enables TLS 1.3 negotiation on Go 1.12 by setting the GODEBUG
variable. For now, this just gets enabled on test versions (those with a
dash in the version number).
Users wishing to enable this on production builds can set GODEBUG
manually.
The string representation of connections now includes the TLS version
and cipher suite. This becomes part of the log output on connections.
That is, when talking to an old client:
Established secure connection .../TLS1.2-TLS_ECDHE_ECDSA_WITH_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
and now potentially:
Established secure connection .../TLS1.3-TLS_AES_128_GCM_SHA256
(The cipher suite was there previously in the log output, but not the
TLS version.)
I also added this info as a new Crypto() method on the connection, and
propagate this out to the API and GUI, where it can be seen in the
connection address hover (although with bad word wrapping sometimes).
* wip
* wip
This adds booleans to the /system/version response to advice the GUI
whether the running version is a candidate release or not. (We could
parse it from the version string, but why duplicate the logic.)
Additionally the settings dialog locks down the upgrade and usage
reporting options on candidate releases. This matches the current
behavior, it just makes it obvious what actually *can* be chosen.
Adds a receive only folder type that does not send changes, and where the user can optionally revert local changes. Also changes some of the icons to make the three folder types distinguishable.
Copied over from settings. Moves ignore patterns from its own modal into a tab
of the folder edit modal. Advanced settings are in a tab instead of a expandable
section and versioning gets it's own tab.
Also added modal hidden event handler to remove the anchor in the url.
Since #4340 pulls aren't happening every 10s anymore and may be delayed up to 1h.
This means that no folder error event reaches the web UI for a long time, thus no
failed items will show up for a long time. Now errors are populated when the
web UI is opened.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4650
LGTM: AudriusButkevicius
Just because there are a ton of people struggling to set env vars.
Perhaps this should live in advanced settings, and perhaps we should have a button to view the log.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4604
LGTM: calmh, imsodin
This adds a new config AllowedNetworks per device, which when set should
contain a list of network prefixes (192.168.0.0/126 etc) that are
allowed for the given device. The connection service will not attempt
connections to addresses outside of the given networks and incoming
connections will be rejected as well.
I've added the config to the normal device editor and shown it (when
set) in the device summary on the main screen.
There's a unit test for the IsAllowedNetwork method, I've done some
manual sanity testing on top of that.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4073
Click the transfer rate to toggle between binary-exponent bytes (KiB/s,
MiB/s) and metric based bits (kb/s, Mb/s). The setting is persisted in
browser local storage (best effort).
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4074