This adds a field `guiAddressUsed` to the system status response, that
holds the current listening address actually in use. This may be
different from the one stored in the config because it may have been
overridden by environment or command line flag.
The GUI now checks this field to see if we are listening on localhost.
If we are not, the authentication required warning is displayed,
regardless of the *configured* listening address.
Allow extending LDFLAGS by setting EXTRA_LDFLAGS to be able to pass
-extldflags=-zrelro -ldflags=-extldflags=-znow for Arch Linux packaging
to get full relro.
This is an experiment in testing, based on the advise to always call
t.Parallel() at the start of every test. Doing so makes tests run in
parallel, which is usually faster, but also exposes package level state
and potential race conditions better.
To support this I had to redesign the CSRF manager to not be package
global, which was indeed an improvement. And tests run five times faster
now.
This splits large writes into smaller ones when using a rate limit,
making them into a legitimate trickle rather than large bursts with a
long time in between.
This is the result of:
- Changing build.go to take the protobuf version from the modules
instead of hardcoded
- `go get github.com/gogo/protobuf@v1.3.0` to upgrade
- `go run build.go proto` to regenerate our code
Assume a folder error was set due to bad ignores on the latest scan.
Previously, doing a manual rescan would result in:
1. Clearing the folder error, which schedules (immediately) an fs
watcher restart
2. Attempting to load the ignores, which fails, so we set a folder
error and bail.
3. Now the fs watcher restarts, as scheduled, so we trigger a scan.
Goto 1.
This change fixes this by not clearing the error until the error is
actually cleared, that is, if both the health check and ignore loading
succeeds.
This introduces a better set of defaults for large databases. I've
experimentally determined that it results in much better throughput in a
couple of scenarios with large databases, but I can't give any
guarantees the values are always optimal. They're probably no worse than
the defaults though.
This is a tiny tool to grab the GitHub releases info and generate a
more concise version of it. The conciseness comes from two aspects:
- We select only the latest stable and pre. There is no need to offer
upgrades to versions that are older than the latest. (There might be, in
the future, when we hit 2.0. We can revisit this at that time.)
- We use our structs to deserialize and reserialize the data. This means
we remove all attributes that we don't understand and hence don't
require.
All in all the new response is about 10% the size of the previous one and
avoids the issue where we only serve a bunch of release candidates and
no stable.
NATSymmetricUDPFirewall actually is not NAT at all, but means the machine has a global IP address and an UDP firewall in front (RFC calls it Symmetric UDP Firewall). This is punchable fine, both theoretically and also practically in testing.