| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Now the database objects can be uniformly created from a URI. They can
also optionally do sanity checks and one-time initialization.
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This makes the interface more consistent and resistant to misuse.
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Warning, untested. But hopefully works!
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- Kittybox's source code is moved to a subfolder
- This improves build caching by Nix since it doesn't take changes
to other files into account
- Package and test definitions were spun into separate files
- This makes my flake.nix much easier to navigate
- This also makes it somewhat possible to use without flakes (but
it is still not easy, so use flakes!)
- Some attributes were moved in compliance with Nix 2.8's changes to
flake schema
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Now I will know if something breaks horribly again.
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Iterator::skip_while() returns the last item. Reimplement the
combinator that I need using a loop over Iterator::by_ref()
instead. This will terminate after the end is reached.
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Closes #4.
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- Reads don't lock anymore. At all.
- Writes create a temporary file and use `rename(2)` to atomically
replace it
- since OpenOptions::create_new(true) is used, tempfile creation is
atomic (and since tempfile names are per-post, a post can only be
edited by one request at a time)
- Since written files get atomically replaced, readers can't read a
corrupted file
Potential pitfalls:
1. This approach is not covered by unit tests (yet)
2. Stale tempfiles can prevent editing posts (can be solved by
throwing out tempfiles that are older than, say, a day)
3. Crashed edits can leave stale tempfiles (honestly that sounds
better than corrupting the whole database, doesn't sound like a bug to
me at all!)
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Warp allows requests to be applied as "filters", allowing to flexibly
split up logic and have it work in a functional style, similar to
pipes.
Tokio is just an alternative runtime. I thought that maybe switching
runtimes and refactoring the code might allow me to fish out that
pesky bug with the whole application hanging after a certain amount of
requests...
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This is to prevent spinning in a loop waiting for a lock. This hangs
often, though I suspect this should have been fixed in the previous
commit.
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This may or may not be the cause for the app hanging while waiting for
a lock. Now the operations with locks are never performed over an
async boundary, excluding any shenanigans that can happen when
accidentally leaving a file locked over async boundaries.
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This will allow readers to view private posts intended just for them.
Additionally fixed bugs in patterns due to which webmentions might not
have been sent.
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When an error is found, the site name passed to Storage::get_setting
in the error handler is incorrect. The ASCII serialisation of the
hostname should get used.
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BufReader was really unneccesary here, since I was batch-reading all
of this in one go.
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Now symlink creation works on Windows and creates links relative to
the posts, allowing for seamless migrations of the backing directory
for true portability and no data lock-in.
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There was a bug where `File::write()` would not write the entire
buffer, and this condition was left unchecked by the code. All
`File::write()` calls are now replaced with `File::write_all()` which
ensures the whole buffer is written to the backing file.
Additionally added a smoke check for the file updates. It is in no way
comprehensive nor it is able to catch all the possible failures but
it's a good way of testing the functionality without way too much hassle.
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Currently unavailable for use and only has basic GET and POST operations
implemented. A lot more work is needed to make it truly usable.
Locking is implemented using flock() system call on Linux.
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