`syncthing cli` subcommand was using urfave/cli as the command parser.
This PR replace it with kong, which the main command uses.
Some help texts and error message format are changed. Other than that,
all the command usage and logic remains unchanged.
There's only one place which still uses urfave/cli, which is `syncthing
cli config`, because it uses some magic to dynamically build commands
from struct reflects. I used kong's `passthrough:""` tag to pass any
argument following `syncthing cli config` to urfave/cli parser.
This PR also fixes#9041
---------
Co-authored-by: Jakob Borg <jakob@kastelo.net>
This pull request allows syncthing to request an IPv6
[pinhole](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firewall_pinhole), addressing
issue #7406. This helps users who prefer to use IPv6 for hosting their
services or are forced to do so because of
[CGNAT](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carrier-grade_NAT). Otherwise,
such users would have to configure their firewall manually to allow
syncthing traffic to pass through while IPv4 users can use UPnP to take
care of network configuration already.
### Testing
I have tested this in a virtual machine setup with miniupnpd running on
the virtualized router. It successfully added an IPv6 pinhole when used
with IPv6 only, an IPv4 port mapping when used with IPv4 only and both
when dual-stack (IPv4 and IPv6) is used.
Automated tests could be added for SOAP responses from the router but
automatically testing this with a real network is likely infeasible.
### Documentation
https://docs.syncthing.net/users/firewall.html could be updated to
mention the fact that UPnP now works with IPv6, although this change is
more "behind the scenes".
---------
Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: bt90 <btom1990@googlemail.com>
Co-authored-by: André Colomb <github.com@andre.colomb.de>
### Purpose
Treat X-Forwarded-For as a comma-separated string to prevent nil IP being returned by the Discovery Server
### Testing
Unit Tests implemented
Testing with a Discovery Client can be done as follows:
```
A simple example to replicate this entails running Discovery with HTTP, use Nginx as a reverse proxy and hardcode (as an example) a list of IPs in the X-Forwarded-For header.
1. Send an Announcement with tcp://0.0.0.0:<some-port>
2. Query the DeviceID
3. Observe the returned IP Address is no longer nil; i.e. `tcp://<nil>:<some-port>`
```
This adds the ability to have multiple concurrent connections to a single device. This is primarily useful when the network has multiple physical links for aggregated bandwidth. A single connection will never see a higher rate than a single link can give, but multiple connections are load-balanced over multiple links.
It is also incidentally useful for older multi-core CPUs, where bandwidth could be limited by the TLS performance of a single CPU core -- using multiple connections achieves concurrency in the required crypto calculations...
Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: tomasz1986 <twilczynski@naver.com>
Co-authored-by: bt90 <btom1990@googlemail.com>
refactor: unused parameter should be replaced by underscore
Unused parameters in functions or methods should be replaced with `_`
(underscore) or removed.
Co-authored-by: deepsource-autofix[bot] <62050782+deepsource-autofix[bot]@users.noreply.github.com>
This allows environment overrides for our directories. This is
advantageous because, apart from the obvious, it means we can set it in
the Docker file and not add command line options there. Having the
command line option as we did meant that it was impossible to use the
Docker image for other commands than `serve` (because that is implied
when we see other options on the command line).