Click the transfer rate to toggle between binary-exponent bytes (KiB/s,
MiB/s) and metric based bits (kb/s, Mb/s). The setting is persisted in
browser local storage (best effort).
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4074
The ng-list directive makes angular handle lists by doing comma
separation in the roundtrip. We could simplify our normal config dialog
this way as well...
Also adds devices that were inexplicably not available in the advanced
config.
This reveals some other uglyness, as the "devices" config of a folder
now shows as "[object Object], [object Object]" - previously it was
invisible. I think that's fine for now.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4071
This change sorts the language selection menu in Syncthing's home page so
that the languages are displayed alphabetically. The issue was discussed in
#3813. There were few ways of doing this. Sorting the language names in
transifix file did not work due to access control. So I sorted the languages
directly in languageSelectdirective.js by inverting and sorting the language
info retrieved from localeService.js.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/4052
The discrepancy between global and local sizes is fine and expected in
the presence of ignores. This just moves the "we have ignore patterns"
indication to the actual local size metric, as an explanation of why it
may differ from the global size...
We used to consider deleted files & directories 128 bytes large. After
the delta indexes change a bug slipped in where deleted files would be
weighted according to their old non-deleted size. Both ways are
incorrect (but the latest change made it worse), as if there are more
files deleted than remaining data in the repo the needSize can be
greater than the globalSize, resulting in a negative completion
percentage.
This change makes it so that deleted items are zero bytes large, which
makes more sense. Instead we expose the number of files that we need to
delete as a separate field in the Completion() result, and hack the
percentage down to 95% complete if it was 100% complete but we need to
delete files. This latter part is sort of ugly, but necessary to give
the user some sort of feedback.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3556
The completion of remote devices was based only on the average of the percentages of all folders, which is irrelevant in case of two folders with very different sizes.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3481
LGTM: calmh, AudriusButkevicius