This fixes collisions that were causing uploads to break in a very
terrible way.
Kudos to @kesselb for finding the problematic place and to
@hottwister for the proposed solution.
Fixes#10527.
When the uploaded files have a relative path (that is, when a folder is
uploaded) it is first ensured that all the parent folders exist, which
is done by trying to create them. When a folder is created in the
currently opened folder the file list is updated and a row for the new
folder is added. However, this was done too when the folder already
existed, which caused the previous row to be removed and a new one added
to replace it.
For security reasons, some special headers need to be set in requests;
this is done automatically for jQuery by handling the "ajaxSend" event
in the document. In the case of DAV requests, if the headers are not set
the server rejects the request with "CSRF check not passed".
When a file or folder is dropped on a folder row the jQuery upload
events are chained from the initial drop event, which has the row as its
target. In order to upload the file jQuery performs a request, which
triggers the "ajaxSend" event in the row; this event then bubbles up to
the document, which is then handled by adding the special headers to the
request.
However, when a folder was dropped on a folder row that folder row was
removed when ensuring that the folder exists. The jQuery upload events
were still triggered on the row, but as it had been removed it had no
parent nodes, and thus the events did not bubble up. Due to this the
"ajaxSend" event never reached the document when triggered on the
removed row, the headers were not set, and the upload failed.
All this is simply fixed by not removing the folder row when trying to
create it if it existed already.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Fixes#12588
Probably needs more fixing for the other cases. But this is the quick
fix I could come up with for now.
Signed-off-by: Roeland Jago Douma <roeland@famdouma.nl>
Large files are not uploaded in a single operation, but uploaded in
several chunks; once all the chunks are uploaded then the server needs
to assemble them to get the final file.
Before, once the chunks were uploaded the progress bar was hidden.
However, this was confusing for the users, as the file could still need
some time to appear in the file list due to the assembling. Now once all
the chunks are uploaded the text in the progress bar changes to inform
the user that there are still some pending operations, and only when the
file is finally assembled the progress bar is hidden.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
When the browser reports a drag of items other than files (for example,
text) and then triggers a drop event with no files no error message
should be shown to the user, as in that case there would be no highlight
of the drop zone and no indication that the drop would be valid (except
for the mouse cursor); the error message should be shown only when
the drop event with no files follows a file drag.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
The highlighting was removed in Firefox when the cursor was no longer
moving to handle the behaviour of reporting a file drag and then
providing no files in the drop event. That behaviour (which was only
present in Firefox 48 and 49) is already handled with the "dropnofiles"
callback, so that special handling is no longer needed.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
When a file is dragged from the desktop to the file list the file list
is highlighted, and when the file is finally dropped or the drag
operation is cancelled the highlighting is removed. In some cases, due
to a wrong implementation, a browser may end a file drag with a drop
with no files (for example, when a folder or text is dragged), which
would cause the highlight to not be removed. Now those cases are handled
with the "dropnofiles" callback, which restores the UI and also shows a
message to the user.
The error message is just a generic one, as in some cases it is not even
possible to know whether the problem came from a text drag or a folder
drag, and whether the problem appears or not depends on the browser,
version and even operating system.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
"disableDropState" was set as the event handler in 8d4e5747f3, but
the duplicated code was accidentally added back in 786e858d23.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
Before any upload is submitted the upload is registered in a list of
known uploads; this is needed to retrieve the upload object at several
points of the upload process. When a chunked upload is submitted first a
directory to upload all the chunks is created and, once that is done,
the chunks are sent; in order to send a chunk the upload object needs to
be retrieved from the list of known uploads.
When all the active uploads were finished the list of known uploads was
cleared. However, an upload is not active until it actually starts
sending the data, so while waiting for the upload directory to be
created the upload is already in the list of known uploads yet not
active. Due to all this, if the active uploads finished while another
pending upload was waiting for the upload directory to be created that
pending upload would be removed from the list of known uploads too, and
once the directory was created and thus the chunks were sent a field of
a null upload object would be accessed thus causing a failure.
Instead of removing all the known uploads at once when the active
uploads finish now each upload is explicitly removed when it finishes.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
The jQuery File Upload plugin triggers the "stop" event once there are
no more files being uploaded (even if some of them were added when
another upload was already in progress). Therefore, the progress bar
should be hidden in the "fileuploadstop" callback.
In some cases the "stop" event is not triggered and thus the progress
bar is not hidden once no more files are being uploaded. This is caused
by a race condition and it will be fixed in another commit; except in
buggy cases like that one (that need to be fixed anyway) it is safe to
hide the progress bar in the "fileuploadstop" callback.
In any case, note that the callbacks in "fileuploaddone" may be called
after the "stop" event was triggered and handled when using chunked
uploads. In that case once all the chunks are uploaded the assembled
file is moved to its final destination, so its promise could be resolved
after the "stop" event was triggered. Therefore a different approach
would be needed to keep the progress bar visible until the chunked
upload is truly finished, but for the time being the current one is good
enough.
Before this commit the progress bar was being hidden when the first
upload finished, either successfully or with an error, no matter if
there were other files being uploaded too.
The progress bar was being explicitly hidden also when the upload was
cancelled. When an upload is cancelled all the single uploads are
aborted, which triggers a "fail" event for each of them. However, the
"stop" event is always triggered when no more files are being uploaded,
so it is triggered too once all the single uploads were aborted. As all
the single uploads are immediately aborted in a loop when the general
upload is cancelled it makes no difference to hide the progress bar when
the first single upload is aborted or when all the single uploads were
aborted, so the progress bar is no longer explicitly hidden in the
former case.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
In case of error, instead of a generic error message, an upload will
display whichever message is returned in the Sabre Exception, if
applicable.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
This commit adds chunked uploads in the Web UI (for authenticated users,
but not for public uploads). To do that the server endpoint used by the
uploader is changed from WebDAV v1 to WebDAV v2. The chunking itself is
done automatically by the jQuery-File-Upload plugin when the
"maxChunkSize" parameter is set; in "fileuploadchunksend" the request is
adjusted to adapt the behaviour of the plugin to the one expected by
"uploads/" in WebDAV v2.
The chunk size to be used by the Web UI can be set in the
"max_chunk_size" parameter of the Files app configuration. By default it
is set to 10MiB.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>
If the estimated upload time is bigger than 4 hours it shows the text
"Uploading..." because the time then doesn't give any good hint to the
user anyways.
Signed-off-by: Morris Jobke <hey@morrisjobke.de>
The unit of `data.bitrate` is bit, but the argument unit of
`humanFileSize` function is byte, so it should be divided by 8.
Signed-off-by: Yaojin Qian <i@ume.ink>
The upload remaining time is always 'a few second' whatever a big or a
small file uploading.
This commit fixes it. The `new Date().getMilliseconds()` only return a
three digits number. When time arrived the next second, the millisecond
start from ZERO again. So `new Date().getTime()` is the righe choice.
And remaining time variables shoule be initialized when the file starts
uploading, otherwise the remaining time of a new upload will always be
'Infinity years' until you refresh the page.
Signed-off-by: Yaojin Qian <i@ume.ink>
added quit option in notif in app.js
added quit option in notif in file-upload.js
added quit option in notif in fileinfomodel.js
added quit option in notif in filelist.js
added quit option in notif in filelist.js
added quit option in notif in tagsplugin.js
added quit option in notif in statusmanager.js
added quit option in notif in external.js
added quit option in notif in versionstabview.js
added quit option in notif in notification.js
changes according to the latest review.
timeout removed since there is a button to close it
translation capability added
typo fixed
test files updated
small errors fixed
Signed-off-by: Morris Jobke <hey@morrisjobke.de>
Removes the need for POST to collection which would hit against upload
limits.
The client tries to auto rename the file by adding a suffix "(2)".
It tries to use the file list on the client side to guess a
suitable name. In case a file still cannot be uploaded and creates a
conflict, which can happen when the file was concurrently uploaded, the
logic will continue increasing the suffix.
The web UI now uses for PUT uploads which aren't restricted by PHP's
upload_max_filesize and post_max_size
Signed-off-by: Lukas Reschke <lukas@statuscode.ch>