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>
There were two routes apps/files/ajax/download.php but apparently also
apps/files/download.php I could not find any use of it.
Signed-off-by: Roeland Jago Douma <roeland@famdouma.nl>
The div that contains the elements related to the creation of new files,
and thus the upload button, is always present in the DOM; it is hidden
or shown based on the folder permissions by adding or removing the
"hidden" CSS class. However, as the other CSS classes for the div are
"actions" and "creatable" and a "display: flex" rule was defined for
".actions.creatable" below the "display: none" rule for
".actions.hidden" the last one took precedence and the div ended being
always visible, even if the "hidden" CSS class was set. Now the rules
for the ".actions.hidden" selector are defined below the rules for the
".actions.creatable" selector and thus the "display: none" rule is
applied as expected.
Signed-off-by: Daniel Calviño Sánchez <danxuliu@gmail.com>