This gives much better information to the UI layer, getting rid of a
whole troubleshooting guide entry. See #119#132#218#219
I also restructured the code in anticipation of a new WebSocket event
stream (#40).
Improves #70: this reduces binary size from 12.3 MiB to 11.9 MiB (3%) on
macOS/arm64.
The user experience is almost the same. (The help output's `Usage:`
lines lack the e.g. `moonfire-nvr run` prefix of argv[0] and subcommand,
which isn't ideal, but I guess it's pretty minor in the grand scheme of
things.)
In particular, the docs now talk about the CSRF protection. This is
increasing relevant as we start having more mutation endpoints. And
make the signals api expect a csrf for session auth to match the newer
users api.
This is useful for e.g. deciding whether or not to present the user
admin UI in navigation.
As part of this change, I adjusted the casing in Permissions, and then
all the toml stuff for consistency. Noted in changelog.
I mistakenly left this out. Also, fix the behavior if something is
forgotten. Before, it'd silently ignore it. Now, it correctly returns
Unimplemented, in both POST /api/users/:id and PUT /api/users.
Now you can set a password for a user while the server is running,
e.g. via the following command:
```shell
curl \
-H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
-d '{"update": {"password": "asdf"}}' \
--unix-socket /var/lib/moonfire-nvr/sock \
http://nvr/api/users/1
```
Symptom: in `nvr config`, if you create a dir and then immediately try
to delete it, it would fail saying it's in-use. This check is supposed
to be for having a running syncer on the directory, which would be
an arc count > 1.
* In 0866b239, while fixing a clippy error, I accidentally inverted the
error condition.
* While I'm at it, improve the diagnostics. Print which field we're
talking about and the expected URL schemes.
This stops using parking_lot entirely. Since Rust 1.62, the std
implementations on Linux are direct futexes, not the boxed pthread
mutexes they used to be. No real reason to use parking_lot anymore, so
shed this dependency.
error[E0106]: missing lifetime specifier
--> base/time.rs:26:68
|
26 | fn fixed_len_num<'a>(len: usize) -> impl FnMut(&'a str) -> IResult<&'a str, i32> {
| ^ expected named lifetime parameter
|
= help: this function's return type contains a borrowed value with an elided lifetime, but the lifetime cannot be derived from the arguments
help: consider using the `'a` lifetime
Fixes#206. 307a388 switched to creating a single-threaded runtime for
each stream, then destroying prior to waiting for TEARDOWN on shutdown.
This meant that the shutdown process could panic with this error:
```
panic at '/home/slamb/git/retina/src/client/mod.rs:219:22': teardown Sender shouldn't be dropped: RecvError(())
```
Let's switch back to expecting a multithreaded runtime context.
Create one for the config subcommand, too.
Don't go all the way back to the old code with its channels, though.
That had the downside that the underlying retina::Session might outlive
the caller, so there could still be an active session when we start
the next one. I haven't seen this cause problems in practice but it
still doesn't seem right.
This alone improves interop and diagnostics, as noted in Retina's
release notes. We also now give the camera name to the session group
(for improved logging of TEARDOWN operations) and expose the RTSP
server's "tool" attribute in debug logs and the config UI's "Test"
button.
Fixes#209Fixes#213