* currently there are two ways to access default values:
OCP\Defaults or OC_Defaults (which is extended by
OCA\Theming\ThemingDefaults)
* our code used a mixture of both of them, which made
it hard to work on theme values
* this extended the public interface with the missing
methods and uses them everywhere to only rely on the
public interface
Signed-off-by: Morris Jobke <hey@morrisjobke.de>
Single user mode basically disables WebDAV, OCS and cron execution. Since
we heavily rely on WebDAV and OCS also in the web UI it's basically useless.
An admin only sees a broken interface and can't even change any settings nor
sees any files. Also sharing is not possible.
As this is at least the case since Nextcloud 9 and we haven't received any
reports for this it seems that this feature is not used at all so I removed it.
The encryption commands now rely on the well tested maintenance mode.
Signed-off-by: Morris Jobke <hey@morrisjobke.de>
The current logic for mod_rewrite relies on the fact that people have properly configured ownCloud, basically it reads from the `overwrite.cli.ur
l` entry and then derives the `RewriteBase` from it.
This usually works. However, since the ownCloud packages seem to install themselves at `/owncloud` (because subfolders are cool or so…) _a lot_ of people have just created a new Virtual Host for it or have simply symlinked the path etc.
This means that `overwrite.cli.url` is wrong, which fails hard if it is used as RewriteBase since Apache does not know where it should serve files from. In the end the ownCloud instance will not be accessible anymore and users will be frustrated. Also some shared hosters like 1&1 (because using shared hosters is so awesome… ;-)) have somewhat dubious Apache configurations or use versions of mod_rewrite from the mediveal age. (because updating is money or so…)
Anyhow. This makes this explicitly an opt-in configuration flag. If `htaccess.RewriteBase` is set then it will configure index.php-less URLs, if
admins set that after installation and don't want to wait until the next ownCloud version they can run `occ maintenance:update:htaccess`.
For ownCloud 9.0 we also have to add a repair step to make sure that instances that already have a RewriteBase configured continue to use it by copying it into the config file. That way all existing URLs stay valid. That one is not in this PR since this is unneccessary in master.
Effectively this reduces another risk of breakage when updating from ownCloud 8 to ownCloud 9.
Fixes https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/24525, https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/24426 and probably some more.