An error on opening .stignore will satisfy os.IsNotExist() and not be
reported. Other errors will be reported and stop the folder, including
is-not-exist errors from #include as these are passed through fmt.Errorf.
Also fixes minor issue where we would not print cause of folder stopping
to the log.
Also fixes minor issue with capitalization of errors.
The connections service no longer depends directly on the
syncthing model object, but on an interface instead. This
makes it drastically easier to write clients that handle
the model differently, but still want to benefit from
existing and future connections changes in the core.
This was motivated by burkemw3's interest in creating a
FUSE client that can present a view of the global model,
but not have all of the file data locally.
The actual decoupling was done by adding a connections.Model
interface. This interface is effectively an extension of the
protocol.Model interface that also handles connections
alongside the modified service.
The XDR encoder doesn't understart slices of strings very well. It can
encode and decode them, but there's no way to set limits on the length
of the strings themselves (only on the length of the slice), and the
generated diagrams are incorrect. This trivially works around this,
while also documenting what the string actually is (a URL).
This makes it so we can initialize the relay management and then give
that to the connection management, instead of the other way around.
This is important to me in the discovery revamp I'm doing, as otherwise
I get a circular dependency when constructing stuff, with relaying
depending on connection, connection depending on discovery, and
discovery depending on relaying.
With this fixed, discovery will depend on relaying, and connection will
depend on both discovery and relaying.
Instead, make sure we do the check as part of CheckFolderHealth before
pulling, and individually per file to try to not run out of space at
that stage.
(The latter is far from fool proof as we may pull lots of stuff in
parallell, but it's worth a try.)