This makes sure the service manager doesn't interpret timeout errors, or any other error, as a signal to stop the service instead of restarting it.
I added it directly to our service utility function, as it may help catch other instances of the same problem... We would typically want timeouts etc to be a retryable error, unless it is the top level context that has timed out and we check for that specifically.
Currently, action and type are both displayed only in English. This
commit makes it possible to translate both of them.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
The current code assumes that lastSeenDays is always set which is not
the case when device reports its lastSeen as equal to the Unix epoch.
Thus, make sure that lastSeenDays is set before proceeding with the
disconnected-inactive status check to avoid JS errors in the browser.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
This adds a word to the version string when running containerized. The
purpose is mostly to facilitate troubleshooting via screenshot by
"leaking" this rather important aspect of the setup. Additionally, the
version row gets "no-overflow-ellipsis" treatment so that the whole
thing is actually visible in the GUI and the (now useless) tooltip is
removed. In production releases this won't make a difference as the
whole thing will typically fit, but in odd setups it provides more info
up front.
The authorship script didn't pick up people who were only ever
"co-authors" of a commit, such as when they wrote stuff which was later
included in a PR by someone else, or added code during code review.
This modified the script to look closer in the commit bodies for
"Co-authored-by:"-lines and adds those found to the set of authors.
gui: Remove unmaintained language variant nl-BE.
This has long been removed from Transifex and from the valid-langs.js
list, but somehow the translation file stayed in the repo. There is
already a generic Dutch variant (nl) available as replacement.
On systems with safe umasks (`umask 077`), the entrypoint as copied from
the host may not be executable by other users. Ensure that it is set to
be within the Dockerfile.
* lib/connections: Cache isLAN decision for later external access.
The check whether a remote device's address is on a local network
currently happens when handling the Hello message, to configure the
limiters. Save the result to the ConnectionInfo and pass it out as
part of the model's ConnectionInfo struct in ConnectionStats().
* gui: Use provided connection attribute to distinguish LAN / WAN.
Replace the dumb IP address check which didn't catch common cases and
actually could contradict what the backend decided. That could have
been confusing if the GUI says WAN, but the limiter is not actually
applied because the backend thinks it's a LAN.
Add strings for QUIC and relay connections to also differentiate
between LAN and WAN.
* gui: Redefine reception level icons for all connection types.
Move the mapping to the JS code, as it is much easier to handle
multiple switch cases by fall-through there.
QUIC is regarded no less than TCP anymore. LAN and WAN make the
difference between levels 4 / 3 and 2 / 1:
{TCP,QUIC} LAN --> {TCP,QUIC} WAN --> Relay LAN --> Relay WAN -->
Disconnected.
Without this, we tag the build as made by some random user account on some random host name which is not useful.
(And minor bug in the cache key which has no effect on the build itself.)
We had some unholy mix of our own logger and the stdlib logger, probably
because for historical reasons we wanted the device ID to stdout and the
rest to stderr? But that's not the case any more, and the mix of formats
is weird. Ideally I think the generate command should be silent and just
print the device ID and nothing else, but that's tricky to accomplish
since we have other methods do logging on their own. Hence this just
harmonizes it so that we at least use the same logger with the same
format and target...
gui: Add copy to clipboard, share by email, and share by SMS buttons to device IDs (fixes#2771, ref #3868)
Add buttons to allow for simpler sharing device IDs with others. The
first one copies the ID to clipboard (trying to use three different
methods, depending on the browser). The second one triggers a mailto
link with prefilled subject and body. The third one triggers an sms link
with prefilled body. The short description of Syncthing included in the
latter part of the body is a direct copy from the description at the
official website https://syncthing.net.
Issue #3868 is referred here, because the copy to clipboard button
offers an alternative method for IE11 users to actually be able to copy
device IDs without having to select it manually (which doesn't work).
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
This is sort of a proof of concept, but since our current Windows
builder is down this might solve the problem. It includes a change for
easier code signing (taking the certificate in a secret/env var rather
than existing already on disk), but otherwise mirrors precisely what we
already do in the build server.
The connection type icon comes from Bootstrap. As such, it does not
follow the same dimensions as the other GUI icons, which come from Fork
Awesome. Thus, add left and right margin to make its width roughly the
same as the other GUI icons, which fixes its alignment in relation to
text.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
Currently, a disconnected device is marked as "Disconnected" without any
consideration whether the state is just temporary or rather it has been
like that for a long time, potentially requiring user intervention.
This commit adds a new state called "Disconnected (Inactive)" which is
shown for devices that have been disconnected for longer than a week. It
also changes the "Last seen" information, so that "Never" is used only
when the device hasn't connected at all, and the exact date is displayed
otherwise.
Additionally, when the date is older than 1 week, a note about that is
displayed below the date. Furthermore, when the date becomes older than
1 month, the note text colour changes to orange, and when it exceeds 1
year, the colour changes again to red. This is done to provide the user
with a visual clue that something may potentially be wrong and requires
a manual fix.
Signed-off-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
Co-authored-by: André Colomb <src@andre.colomb.de>