* Move background job registration of Federation to info.xml
* Move background registration of Files app to info.xml
* Move background job registration of files_sharing to info.xml
* Move background job registration of files_trashbin to info.xml
* Move background job registration of files_versions to info.xml
* Move background job registration from user_ldap to info.xml
* fixes#22819
The old way fired a DELETE statement on each destruction of the
DBLockingProvider. Which could cause a lot of queries. It's enough
to run this every 5 minutes in a background job, which in the end
could result in file locks that exists 5 minutes longer - in the
worst case and for not properly released locks.
This makes the DB based locking a lot more performant and could
result in a similar performance to the Redis based locking provider.
Whenever a file was deleted (also from trash), the tag mapping is
pointing at a fileid that doesn't exist any more.
This cleanup job will delete such orphaned mapping entries.
In case encryption was not enabled, we accidently set encrypted = 1 for
files inside mount points, since 8.1.0. This breaks opening the files in
8.1.1 because we fixed the code that checks if a file is encrypted.
In order to fix the file, we need to reset the flag of the file. However,
the flag might be set because the file is in fact encrypted because it was
uploaded at a time where encryption was enabled.
So we can only do this when:
- Current version of ownCloud before the update is 8.1.0 or 8.2.0.(0-2)
- Encryption is disabled
- files_encryption is not known in the app config
If the first two are not the case, we are save. However, if files_encryption
values exist in the config, we might have a false negative here.
Now if there is no file with unencrypted size greater 0, that means there are
no files that are still encrypted with "files_encryption" encryption. So we
can also safely reset the flag here.
If this is not the case, we go with "better save then sorry" and don't change
the flag but write a message to the ownCloud log file.