Diesel requires the following changes:
- Separate connection and pool types per connection, the generate_connections! macro generates an enum with a variant per db type
- Separate migrations and schemas, these were always imported as one type depending on db feature, now they are all imported under different module names
- Separate model objects per connection, the db_object! macro generates one object for each connection with the diesel macros, a generic object, and methods to convert between the connection-specific and the generic ones
- Separate connection queries, the db_run! macro allows writing only one that gets compiled for all databases or multiple ones
Currently, favorites are tracked at the cipher level. For org-owned ciphers,
this means that if one user sets it as a favorite, it automatically becomes a
favorite for all other users that the cipher has been shared with.
During migrations some queries are out of order regarding to foreign
keys.
Because of this the migrations fail when the sql database has this
enforced by default.
Turning of this check during the migrations will fix this and this is
only per session.
panic!()'s only appear on stderr, this makes tracking down some strange
issues harder with the usage of docker since stderr does not get logged
into the bitwarden.log file. This change logs the message to stdout and
the logfile when activated.
Use LOG_LEVEL debug or trace to recover them.
Removed LOG_MOUNTS and bundled it with LOG_LEVEL debug and trace.
Removed duplicate error messages
Made websocket not proxied message more prominent, but only print it once.
Now creates icon cache directory at startup.
And it also creates the directory if it went missing during runtime.
Also modified the icon_save/mark_negcache to be one.
This includes migrations as well as Dockerfile's for amd64.
The biggest change is that replace_into isn't supported by Diesel for the
PostgreSQL backend, instead requiring the use of on_conflict. This
unfortunately requires a branch for save() on all of the models currently
using replace_into.