I figured we're missing out on being cool and awesome by not having an
alphabetically based release code name like the big guys. This commit
fixes that. I've unilaterally decided on a theme of "$metal $bug"
because metals are kind of cool, and bugs, well, ...
This will decrease the risk of running out of file descriptors for the
database and other bad things, which could otherwise potentially happen
if we're serving lots of requests and scanning in parallel, etc.
Windows doesn't have a per process open file limit like Unix so we don't
need to worry about it there.
- Move the Go files into script/ instead of random places
- Rewrite check-contrib.sh into check-authors.go and check-copyright.go
- Clean up build.sh a little bit
This sends the Cache-Control header to allow caching of static resources,
and checks the If-Modified-Since header to allow browser to use the
cached resource on refresh. Also fixes some paths that caused redirects
(core//foo -> core/foo)
This captures the common pattern of writing to a temp file and moving it
to it's real name only if everything went well. It reduces the amount of
code in some places where we do this, but maybe not as much as I
expected because the upgrade thing is still a special snowflake...
This captures the common pattern of writing to a temp file and moving it
to it's real name only if everything went well. It reduces the amount of
code in some places where we do this, but maybe not as much as I
expected because the upgrade thing is still a special snowflake...
The reset of all folders failed when there was no data for a given
folder, as it was not returned by db.ListFolders then. But we don't
really care about that, we can "reset" it anyway...
The API never got the first few events ("Starting" etc) as it subscribed
too late. Instead, set up a subscription for it early on. If the API is
configured not to run this is unnecessary but doesn't hurt very much.