| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Warp is using hyperium/http instead of http-types, so I replaced all
of the http-types usage (mostly status codes) by Warp's
http::StatusCode.
Additionally some of the struct fields were made public to allow
initialization from public code.
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This adds the ability to use mocks that don't actually touch the
network and alternative transports such as using OpenSSL instead of
rustls (but rustls is still superior).
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require_token() uses a token endpoint URI and an HTTP client to query
the token endpoint and return a User object if the user was
authorized, or rejecting with IndieAuthError if not. It is recommended
to use recover() and catch the IndieAuthError at the application level
to show a "not authorized" error message to the user.
This function is more intended for API consumption, but is general
enough to permit using in other scenarios.
TODO: make a variant that returns Option<User> instead of rejecting
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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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Because sometimes seeing the problem is better than searching for it.
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It works. Launch it using the "kittybox-database-converter" command.
First argument should be the old database URI, second should be the
new one. It will migrate the DB for you.
If you're doing this on a test machine, you can then migrate the
database to production using `rsync -rl` to preserve symbolic links
created by Kittybox's database backend.
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Thanks to @Kloenk I was able to get rid of the unsafety and
tell the compiler how to properly check what I needed for
the StorageError to be declared thread-safe.
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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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Now the Redis dependencies are optional and only required if you want
to test the backend or actually use it in production. The app displays
a hint if you try to launch with an unsupported backend.
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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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I need to instrument the mobc library used for the Redis connection
pool, but that can be done later since I am somewhat tired. I don't
remember how much I've worked and I need a break... >.<
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