sendMessage would only be called if there were options to
be sent to the running application.
Fix the issue by having explicitly named messages and always
send the show settings message.
Issue #2374
There is a race condition that can initialize the RemotePathChecker
instance concurrently on the same address and cause a crash when locking
the mutex. The reason is that local static initialization is not
thread-safe with MSVC2013.
Fix the issue by using call_once to initialize a static unique_ptr
instead.
This could be related to some reports of issue #2836.
The same file is on the two sync trees under different names in case of a rename
We must therefore use the rename target as the key in the _syncItemMap to ensure
that the trees are correctly merged.
Also use the same UTF-8 decoding for the target than for the actual file in order
to catch invalid utf-8 in the rename target
CMake is using "c++" as the compiler and the clang detection fails.
Since we require C++11 at this point, enable it in all cases.
Removed the MSVC todos since we don't plan supporting it yet.
The compilation error was
account.h:140:113: error: expected ')'
const QList< QPair<QString, QString> > &queryItems = QList< QPair<QString, QString> >());
^
followed by more errors.
The problem is because the compiler has hard time disambiguiating the comma
int foo(const QPair<int, int> &p = QPair<int, int>());
^
It is indeed quite hard for the compiler to know if this comma is a separation
between complate arguments or the separation between arguments of the functions.
Use the C++11 construct instead which does not need commas
50ms is sometimes not enough when the client is busy synchronizing.
Wait up to 500ms for the client to answer before we give up and show an
empty menu title.
Ideally we should request the title before the watched directory list, but
the list is currently sent implicitly on connect.
The context menu will now show "Share with ownCloud" instead of "Share" as
it does on other platforms.
This also updates the submodule to point to matching binaries.