This fixes both a race condition where we could assign s.stop from one
goroutine and then read it from another without locking, and handles the
fact that listener may be nil at shutdown if we've had a bad
CommitConfiguration call in the meantime.
This updates the modified time of the config file before archiving it
during an update so that the clean up routine doesn't delete it if it's
too old, preventing the user from being able to rollback after an
upgrade.
This gets rid of redundant checks and centralizes the logic of loading
the config files so that we don't have to keep doing the same thing in
multiple places.
I'm not really sure under what circumstances MkdirAll returns a nil
error but a subsequent stat fails, but apparently it can happen and we
need to handle it. The "mode >= 0" was a no-op, and we never call
ensureDir anyway without the intention of ensuring the mode, so removed
that.
This avoids the double negative of having noConsole = false to represent
not hiding the console. It is also consistent with the action performed
by osutils.
This takes advantage of the newly created parseCommandLineOptions()
function and makes it work so that it now returns a nice struct of
options rather than relying on global variables.
There are a few global variables left, but they will take a bit more
refactoring in order to be removed, so it'll happen in later commits.
ensureDir() did not handle one last error case and there was some logic
in the main() function that belonged to ensureDir() as well. It was also
creating a directory with a hardcoded 0700 mode, regardless of what mode
was passed to it.
This refactors it a little to fix the broken behavior, avoid redundant
checks by taking advantage of the behavior of MkdirAll, and move the
extra logic from main() into ensureDir().
The main() function is growing too big (142 lines as of the date of this
commit), so this attempts to extract some functionality out of there and
into their own functions to make it easier to reason about them and keep
functions short and concise.
--browser-only assumes syncthing is already running and will open the
user's browser in the URL:port currently used in the configuration if
the GUI is enabled.
Every time a JSON object is returned in an HTTP response, the
appropriate header needs to be set and the object itself needs to be
encoded. Doing this in every function is repetitive and error prone
(getDBFile and postDBScan, for instance, never set any headers).
This adds a helper function to centralize the appropriate JSON response
handling.
With this change, the behavior is as follows:
- SIGTERM / SIGINT: Exit cleanly (exit code 0)
- SIGHUP: Restart
This is the case both when hitting the monitor process or the inner
process, or if running with NORESTART (but then we won't restart,
obviously, just exit with code exitRestarting).
It enables "pkill -HUP syncthing" to do the right thing to restart all
Syncthings on package upgrade, for example.
Also fixes what I think migh thave been a bug where we did not use the
proxy for usage reports. And removes the BuildEnv field that we don't
need any more.
This replaces the current 3072 bit RSA certificates with 384 bit ECDSA
certificates. The advantage is these certificates are smaller and
essentially instantaneous to generate. According to RFC4492 (ECC Cipher
Suites for TLS), Table 1: Comparable Key Sizes, ECC has comparable
strength to 3072 bit RSA at 283 bits - so we exceed that.
There is no compatibility issue with existing Syncthing code - this is
verified by the integration test ("h2" instance has the new
certificate).
There are browsers out there that don't understand ECC certificates yet,
although I think they're dying out. In the meantime, I've retained the
RSA code for the HTTPS certificate, but pulled it down to 2048 bits. I
don't think a higher security level there is motivated, is this matches
current industry standard for HTTPS certificates.
We're going to need the db.Instance to keep some state, and for that to
work we need the same one passed around everywhere. Hence this moves the
leveldb-specific file opening stuff into the db package and exports the
dbInstance type.
'AlwaysLocalNets' was getting printed, but was getting used
when setting up connections. Now, the nets that should be
considered local are printed and used.
Overwriting configuration files is likely to happen if a
user syncs their home directories across computers. In this
case, the biggest risk is that all nodes will end up with
the same certificate and thus Device ID.
When the model prepares a folder for syncing, it checks to
see if the configuration files this instance is using are
getting synced. If the are getting synced, and they aren't
getting ignored, a warning is emitted. The model is used
so that when a new folder is added dynamically, a warning
is also emitted.
This will not prevent a user from shooting themselves in
the foot, and will not cover all cases (e.g. symlinks).
It should provide _something_ for many users in this
situation to go on, though.
This implements a new debug/trace infrastructure based on a slightly
hacked up logger. Instead of the traditional "if debug { ... }" I've
rewritten the logger to have no-op Debugln and Debugf, unless debugging
has been enabled for a given "facility". The "facility" is just a
string, typically a package name.
This will be slightly slower than before; but not that much as it's
mostly a function call that returns immediately. For the cases where it
matters (the Debugln takes a hex.Dump() of something for example, and
it's not in a very occasional "if err != nil" branch) there is an
l.ShouldDebug(facility) that is fast enough to be used like the old "if
debug".
The point of all this is that we can now toggle debugging for the
various packages on and off at runtime. There's a new method
/rest/system/debug that can be POSTed a set of facilities to enable and
disable debug for, or GET from to get a list of facilities with
descriptions and their current debug status.
Similarly a /rest/system/log?since=... can grab the latest log entries,
up to 250 of them (hardcoded constant in main.go) plus the initial few.
Not implemented in this commit (but planned) is a simple debug GUI
available on /debug that shows the current log in an easily pasteable
format and has checkboxes to enable the various debug facilities.
The debug instructions to a user then becomes "visit this URL, check
these boxes, reproduce your problem, copy and paste the log". The actual
log viewer on the hypothetical /debug URL can poll regularly for new log
entries and this bypass the 250 line limit.
The existing STTRACE=foo variable is still obeyed and just sets the
start state of the system.
Not necessarily the easiest way to fix just this bug, but the root cause
was using the (at that point uninitialized) cfg variable, so it seemed
sensible to just get rid of it to avoid that kind of crap.
The connections service no longer depends directly on the
syncthing model object, but on an interface instead. This
makes it drastically easier to write clients that handle
the model differently, but still want to benefit from
existing and future connections changes in the core.
This was motivated by burkemw3's interest in creating a
FUSE client that can present a view of the global model,
but not have all of the file data locally.
The actual decoupling was done by adding a connections.Model
interface. This interface is effectively an extension of the
protocol.Model interface that also handles connections
alongside the modified service.
This makes it so we can initialize the relay management and then give
that to the connection management, instead of the other way around.
This is important to me in the discovery revamp I'm doing, as otherwise
I get a circular dependency when constructing stuff, with relaying
depending on connection, connection depending on discovery, and
discovery depending on relaying.
With this fixed, discovery will depend on relaying, and connection will
depend on both discovery and relaying.