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.)
This makes it possible to run multiple instances on the same box, all
receiving local discovery packets. Tested on Mac, Windows, supposed to
work on at least Linux too. For Windows, there may be issues with XP and
earlier, but meh...
Either Angular or the browser sometimes returns cached repsonse header,
causing a flap between requests that return the new version and requests
that return the old one. Here, instead, we trust the actual data
returned by the uncached /rest/system/version call.
Resetting the timeout doesn't fully cut it, as it may timeout after we
got an event and be delivered later. This should fix it well enough for
the moment. https://github.com/golang/go/issues/11513
1. Change listen addresses to URIs
2. Break out connectionSvc to support listeners and dialers based on schema
3. Add relay announcement and lookups part of discovery service
I figured we're missing out on being cool and awesome by not having an
alphabetically based release code name like the big guys. This commit
fixes that. I've unilaterally decided on a theme of "$metal $bug"
because metals are kind of cool, and bugs, well, ...
This fixes a corner case I discovered in the symlink branch, where we
unexpectedly succeed in "replacing" an entire non-empty directory tree
with a file or symlink. This happens when archiving is in use, as we
then just move the entire tree away into the archive. This is wrong as
we should just archive files and fail on non-empty dirs in all cases.
New handling first checks what the (old) thing is, and if it's a
directory or symlink just does the delete, otherwise does conflict
handling or archiving as appropriate.
This will decrease the risk of running out of file descriptors for the
database and other bad things, which could otherwise potentially happen
if we're serving lots of requests and scanning in parallel, etc.
Windows doesn't have a per process open file limit like Unix so we don't
need to worry about it there.
The number of copiers and pullers is set to default at config loading
time, but the new folder configuration doesn't pass through config
loading so we start up with 0 copiers and 0 pullers and hence get stuck.
I moved the default handling to the puller itself instead. I think this
way is also cleaner as we get to keep the 0 in the config and the puller
gets to decide the defaults on it's own.
* v0.11:
Translations and docs update
Enable browser caching of static resources
Handle multiple case insensitivity prefixes in ignores (fixes#2134)
Make rescan available for unshared folders
Add timeout for peek (fixes#1035)
Fix TestReset when Syncthing shuts down too fast
Clarify password in integration tests
Properly rename config files during integration tests (fixes#1769)