- only the media part of the mime type can be search, but not the full
mime type. It can be added, should it become necessary.
- thus fixes previously hardcoded selector for image/ types
- also fixes a return type hint
- adds a return type hint
Signed-off-by: Arthur Schiwon <blizzz@arthur-schiwon.de>
Target case is photos app: when visiting the tags category, all systemtags
of the whole cloud are retrieved. In subequent steps the next tag is
requested until the browser view is filled with tag tiles (i.e. previews
are requested just as well).
With this approach, we incorpoate the dav search and look for user related
tags that are used by them, and already returns the statistics (number of
files tagged with the respective tag) as well as a file id for the purpose
to load the preview. This defaults to the file with the highest id.
Call:
curl -s -u 'user:password' \
'https://my.nc.srv/remote.php/dav/systemtags-current' \
-X PROPFIND -H 'Accept: text/plain' \
-H 'Accept-Language: en-US,en;q=0.5' -H 'Depth: 1' \
-H 'Content-Type: text/plain;charset=UTF-8' \
--data @/home/doe/request-systemtag-props.xml
With request-systemtag-props.xml:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<d:propfind xmlns:d="DAV:">
<d:prop xmlns:oc="http://owncloud.org/ns" xmlns:nc="http://nextcloud.org/ns">
<oc:id/>
<oc:display-name/>
<oc:user-visible/>
<oc:user-assignable/>
<oc:can-assign/>
<nc:files-assigned/>
<nc:reference-fileid/>
</d:prop>
</d:propfind>
Example output:
…
<d:response>
<d:href>/master/remote.php/dav/systemtags/84</d:href>
<d:propstat>
<d:prop>
<oc:id>84</oc:id>
<oc:display-name>Computer</oc:display-name>
<oc:user-visible>true</oc:user-visible>
<oc:user-assignable>true</oc:user-assignable>
<oc:can-assign>true</oc:can-assign>
<nc:files-assigned>42</nc:files-assigned>
<nc:reference-fileid>924022</nc:reference-fileid>
</d:prop>
<d:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</d:status>
</d:propstat>
</d:response>
<d:response>
<d:href>/remote.php/dav/systemtags/97</d:href>
<d:propstat>
<d:prop>
<oc:id>97</oc:id>
<oc:display-name>Bear</oc:display-name>
<oc:user-visible>true</oc:user-visible>
<oc:user-assignable>true</oc:user-assignable>
<oc:can-assign>true</oc:can-assign>
<nc:files-assigned>1</nc:files-assigned>
<nc:reference-fileid>923422</nc:reference-fileid>
</d:prop>
<d:status>HTTP/1.1 200 OK</d:status>
</d:propstat>
</d:response>
…
Signed-off-by: Arthur Schiwon <blizzz@arthur-schiwon.de>
for most operations we don't actually care about any mounts inside a folder, only for metadata that needs to propagate across storage boundaries (size, etag, mtime) do we need all the submount info.
By only loading this data when needed we can save a bunch of storage setup in a number of cases
Signed-off-by: Robin Appelman <robin@icewind.nl>
As the user folder might be initialized by the root from two levels
down the hierarchy, passing this as a parent only works if the path matches
Signed-off-by: Julius Härtl <jus@bitgrid.net>
Fixes#16876
Before we'd just fetch everything from all storages we'd have access to.
Then we'd sort. And filter in php. Now this of course is tricky if a
user shared just a file with you and then has a ton of activity.
Now we try to contruct the prefix path. So that the filtering can happen
right away in the databae.
Now this will make the DB more busy. But it should help overall as in
most cases less queries are needed then etc.
Signed-off-by: Roeland Jago Douma <roeland@famdouma.nl>
To continue this formatting madness, here's a tiny patch that adds
unified formatting for control structures like if and loops as well as
classes, their methods and anonymous functions. This basically forces
the constructs to start on the same line. This is not exactly what PSR2
wants, but I think we can have a few exceptions with "our" style. The
starting of braces on the same line is pracrically standard for our
code.
This also removes and empty lines from method/function bodies at the
beginning and end.
Signed-off-by: Christoph Wurst <christoph@winzerhof-wurst.at>
instead of first creating an empty file and then writing the content.
This solves the overhead of creating an empty file with the common pattern:
```php
$file = $simpleFilder->newFile('foo.txt');
$file->putContent('bar.txt');
```
roughly halving the number of storage and database operations that need to be done when creating a `SimpleFile`.
This is not automatically done with `File` because that has a more complex api which I'm more hesitant to touch.
Instead the `Folder::newFile` api has been extended to accept the content for the new file.
In my local testing, the overhead of first creating an empty file took about 20% of the time for preview generation
Signed-off-by: Robin Appelman <robin@icewind.nl>