Linux 4.20 and above allow setting the number of pages per FUSE message
upto 256 (4K * 256 = 1MiB). This can greatly increase read and write
speeds depending on the workload.
`defaults` is a value used by all filesystems and isn't passed through to
mergerfs when mounting via the fstab or the mount command. This led
to inconsistent application of options. atomic_o_trunc, big_writes, and
default_permissions should be enabled all the time anyway and splice_*
can lead to issues so they are not always enabled.
This allows users to tag a branch as readonly or not for writing regardless
of how the filesystem is mounted. Should simplify deployments and offer
more flexibility.
When enabled if a regular file is opened which has a link count > 1 it will
copy the file to a temporary file and rename over the original. Effectively
breaking the link. This behavior is similar to cow-shell and other LD_PRELOAD
based "CoW" solutions.
Parsing of and acting upon "-o threads" option is done in the bundled `libfuse/`,
so move the corresponding help text there too.
This make help text consistent with behavior
when building against system libfuse,
which doesn't support this option.
This feature mimics the standard mhddfs behavior but is more thorough.
If a write fails and the errno is set to ENOSPC then mergerfs will (if
the feature is enabled) attempt to move the file to the drive with
the most free space but only if it has enough room for the file plus
the amount to be written. If that transfer is successful it will then
unlink the original file and attempt the previously failed write again.
The copy includes copying the path and file including the acls, owners,
attributes, extended attributes, and timestamps.