A recent change that prevents reshare permission changes to delete group
share children had the side-effect of also preventing group share
children deletion when it needed to be done.
This fix adds an extra flag to isolate the "reshare permission change"
deletion case and keep the other ones as they were before, not only to
fix the regression but also fix other potential regressions in code that
uses this method.
Also updated the comment because now Helper::delete() is no longer
limited to reshares but also applies to group share children.
\Sabre\DAV\Auth\Backend\AbstractBasic::authenticate was only calling \OC_Connector_Sabre_Auth::validateUserPass when the response of \Sabre\HTTP\BasicAuth::getUserPass was not null.
However, there is a case where the value can be null and the user could be authenticated anyways: The authentication via ownCloud web-interface and then accessing WebDAV resources. This was not possible anymore with this patch because it never reached the code path in this scenario.
This patchs allows authenticating with a session without isDavAuthenticated value stored (this is for ugly WebDAV clients that send the cookie in any case) and thus the functionality should work again.
To test this go to the admin settings and test if the WebDAV check works fine. Furthermore all the usual stuff (WebDAV / Shibboleth / etc...) needs testing as well.
This function is called a lot of times and was really slow before due to not reusing the same array.
Previously when it was called 500'000 times it took about 2seconds, now we're down to 0.2 seconds on my local machine.
Ref https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/13434
There are a lot of clients that support multiple WebDAV accounts in the same application. However, they resent all the cookies they received from one of the accounts also to the other one. In the case of ownCloud this means that we will always show the user from the session and not the user that is specified in the basic authentication header.
This patch adds a workaround the following way:
1. If the user authenticates via the Sabre Auth Connector add a hint to the session that this was authorized via Basic Auth (this is to prevent logout CSRF)
2. If the request contains this hint and the username specified in the basic auth header differs from the one in the session relogin the user using basic auth
Fixes https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/11400 and https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/13245 and probably some other issues as well.
This requires proper testing also considering LDAP / Shibboleth and whatever instances.
It's better to encode the string to prevent possible (yet unknown) bugs in combination with PHP's type juggling.
Previously the boolean statements evaluated to either an empty string (false) or a not empty one (true, then it was 1). Not it always evaluates to false or true.
This also removes a stray - that was not intended there but shouldn't have produced any bugs. Just to increase readability.
Thanks @nickvergessen for spotting.
Addresses https://github.com/owncloud/core/pull/13235/files#r22852319
The internal path was matched without the last "/" which caused
"files_trashbin" to also match when the internal path was "files".
This adds the missing slash for the comparison.
Apparently `normalizer_normalize` is not verifying itself whether the string needs to be converted or not. Or does it at least not very performantly.
This simple change leads to a 4% performance gain on the processing of normalizeUnicode. Since this method is called quite often (i.e. for every file path) this has actually a measurable impact. For examples searches are now 200ms faster on my machine. Still not perfect but way to go.
Part of https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/13221
Isset is a native language construct and thus A LOT faster than using strlen()
On my local machine this leads to a 1s performance gain for about 1 million paths. Considering that this function will be called a lot for every file operation this makes a noticable difference.
`normalizePath` is a rather expensive operation and called multiple times for a single path for every file related operation.
In my development installation with about 9GB of data and 60k files this leads to a performance boost of 24% - in seconds that are 1.86s (!) - for simple searches. With more files the impact will be even more noticeable. Obviously this affects every operation that has in any regard something to do with using OC\Files\Filesystem.
Part of https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/13221
The check for invalid paths is actually over-complicated and performed twice resulting in a performance penalty. Additionally, I decided to add unit-tests to that function.
Part of https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/13221
Otherwise every time the AppStore was opened a lot of connections to the AppStore server were made which resulted in a terrible performance.
This changeset will cache the response for a sensible time so that only the first request will be somewhat slow.
Performance changes:
- Loading a category took previously more than 3 seconds on my machine. Now for every follow-up request it takes less than 200ms, resulting in a performance gain of 1950%
- Loading the category list took previously about 750ms - now it takes 154ms, a total performance gain of 395%
`$this->info` can very well contain an empty array or possibly other values. This means that when this code path is called a PHP Fatal error might get thrown which is not what we want.
Currently if a user does not replace the .htaccess file with the new update this can lead to serious problems in case Apache is used as webserver.
This commit adds the version to the .htaccess file and the update routine fails in case not the newest version is specified in there. This obviously means that every release has to update the version specified in .htaccess as well. But I see no better solution for it.
Conflicts:
lib/private/updater.php
When uploading files to an OC ext storage backend or when using server
to server sharing storage, part files aren't needed because the backend
already has its own part files and takes care of the final atomic rename
operation.
This also fixes issues when using two encrypted ownCloud instances where
one mounts the other either as external storage (ownCloud backend) or
through server to server sharing.
add logSettingsController
add download logfile button
move getEntries to LogSettingsController
move set log level to logsettingscontroller.php
add warning if logfile is bigger than 100MB
add unit test for set log level
fix typecasting, add new line at EoF
show log and logfile download only if log_type is set to owncloud
add unit test for getFilenameForDownload
I was getting a lot of these in my logs for no apparent reason, and file
uploads were failing:
{"app":"webdav","message":"Sabre\\DAV\\Exception\\ServiceUnavailable: ","level":4,"time":"2015-01-06T15:33:39+00:00"}
In order to debug it, I had to add unique messages to all the places where
this exception was thrown, to identify which one it was, and that made the
logs much more useful:
{"app":"webdav","message":"Sabre\\DAV\\Exception\\ServiceUnavailable: Encryption is disabled","level":4,"time":"2015-01-06T15:36:47+00:00"}
This allows the directory where CSS/JS asset collections are
written to be changed, in case SERVERROOT is not writeable. Note
it does *not* allow the expected URL to be changed: whatever
directory is used, the server must be configured to serve it
at WEBROOT/assets. It may be possible to add another config
parameter to allow the admin to specify a custom asset URL,
but I thought I'd keep the first implementation simple.
At some point SeparatorFilter should be included upstream
(kriswallsmith/assetic), then lib/private/assetic/separatorfilter.php can be
removed and the `use` in lib/private/templatelayout.php rewritten.
SeparatorFilter inserts a separator between assets, preventing issues when
files are incorrectly terminated. For JS this is a semicolon.