Commit Graph

82 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Scott Lamb
6187aa64cf Merge branch 'master' into new-schema 2020-06-03 15:47:10 -07:00
Scott Lamb
04ab8cdc7d more readable async web code
This uses "async fn" throughout rather than a mix of async and the older
futures style. And it takes advantage of the "self: Arc<Self>" syntax
to avoid having a ServiceInner. It was confusing to have some methods
on Service and some on ServiceInner; now that distinction is gone.

One downside is there's a little more atomic reference-counting. Before,
service_fn essentially took an &Arc<Self>, which means it could call
Arc::clone where its use of self actually outlived the future (see
stream_live_m4s) but didn't need to otherwise. After, it calls
an async fn that takes Arc<Self>. Using &Arc<Self> is apparently
possible (as of Rust 1.41) but using that with "async fn" means the
returned future is tied to its lifetime. The workaround is to use
async blocks as described here:
<https://rust-lang.github.io/async-book/03_async_await/01_chapter.html>
but that's really ugly: it brings back the explicit Future reference,
requires futures::future::Either in some cases, and introduces another
level of indenting. I think it's better to just pay the arc costs which
are probably negligible, or at least cheaper than the boxing was before.

Oh, and I make this compile on Rust 1.40 again as it claimed to.
http-serve accidentally used the &Arc<Self> thing which broke this.
Update to a freshly-pushed commit which doesn't do that.
2020-05-30 21:34:37 -07:00
Scott Lamb
45abeb22de overhaul HTTP serving and caching
* use content-hashed paths for static resources (except the top-level
  request), with immutable Cache-Control headers. This should improve
  cache behavior in both directions: avoid preventable HTTP requests and
  cause immediate refresh when needed. I had some staleness when
  browsing with my phone.

* set up the favicons properly while I'm at it (closes #50). I used the
  convenient favicons-webpack-plugin to build everything from a .svg.
  I've hit an error similar to lovell/sharp#1593 at least once though so
  I might change my mind about that part if it continues to be
  problematic.

* use http-serve's new directory traversal code for static file serving.
  This removes the odd behavior where files that weren't present at
  server startup couldn't be served. (I wasn't comfortable switching to
  the content-hashed paths before doing this.) It also means the static
  files can be served compressed. JSON API responses were already served
  compressed, so this closes #25.

* for a given API URL, decide if we want it to be cached or not
  server-side. Stop using jQuery's kludgy cache-defeating _=<timestamp>
  URL parameter. I might start setting etags on some of these things
  and could serve 304 Not Modified responses if it's genuinely
  unmodified.
2020-05-29 21:20:15 -07:00
Scott Lamb
c7c0d5a6c1 Merge branch 'master' into new-schema 2020-05-08 16:33:49 -07:00
Scott Lamb
482d8a3074 use mylog::Format::from_str 2020-04-21 22:19:17 -07:00
Scott Lamb
474d96803c Merge branch 'master' into new-schema 2020-04-19 22:53:42 -07:00
Scott Lamb
de56739571 upgrade deps
Both a "cargo update" and a bump of major versions of a few deps.
I left a few alone:

* base64 because some of the deps depend on 0.11 (and 0.9), so I don't
  want to pull in a third version (0.12).
* ring because libpasta depends on this version and I don't want to pull
  in two of them.
* time because it's not trivial. Last I checked, time 0.2 couldn't even
  do what I wanted at all.

I also made tokio use parking_lot, since I pull it in anyway.
2020-04-19 22:19:57 -07:00
Scott Lamb
618d0d71be Merge branch 'master' into new-schema 2020-04-17 23:33:46 -07:00
Scott Lamb
af9e568344 replace regex use with nom
This reduces the binary size noticeably on my macOS machine (#70):

                             unstripped  stripped
1  before switching to clap    11.1 MiB   6.7 MiB
2  after switching to clap     11.4 MiB   6.9 MiB
3  without regex               10.1 MiB   5.9 MiB
2020-04-17 21:53:52 -07:00
Scott Lamb
e8eb764b90 switch from docopt to structopt
A couple reasons for this:

* the docopt crate is "unlikely to see significant future evolution",
  and the wider docopt project is "mostly unmaintained at this point".
  clap/structopt is more full-featured, has more natural subcommand
  support, etc.

* it may allow me to shrink the binary (#70). This change alone seems
  to be a slight regression, but it's a step toward getting rid of
  regex, which is pretty large. And I feel less ridiculous now that I
  don't have two parsing crates anyway; prettydiff was pulling in
  structopt.

There are some behavior changes here:

* misc --help output changes and such as you'd expect from switching
  argument-parsing libraries

* I properly used PathBuf and OsString for stuff that theoretically
  could be non-UTF-8. I haven't tested that it actually made any
  difference. I'm also still storing the sample file dirname as "text"
  in the database to avoid causing a diff when not doing a schema
  change.
2020-04-17 21:53:37 -07:00
Scott Lamb
3ed397bacd first step toward object detection (#30)
When compiled with cargo build --features=analytics and enabled via
moonfire-nvr run --object-detection, this runs object detection on every
sub stream frame through an Edge TPU (a Coral USB accelerator) and logs
the result.

This is a very small step toward a working system. It doesn't actually
record the result in the database or send it out on the live stream yet.
It doesn't support running object detection at a lower frame rate than
the sub streams come in at either. To address those problems, I need to
do some refactoring. Currently moonfire_db::writer::Writer::Write is the
only place that knows the duration of the frame it's about to flush,
before it gets added to the index or sent out on the live stream. I
don't want to do the detection from there; I'd prefer the moonfire_nvr
crate. So I either need to introduce an analytics callback or move a
bunch of that logic to the other crate.

Once I do that, I need to add database support (although I have some
experiments for that in moonfire-playground) and API support, then some
kind of useful frontend.

Note edgetpu.tflite is taken from the Apache 2.0-licensed
https://github.com/google-coral/edgetpu,
test_data/mobilenet_ssd_v2_coco_quant_postprocess_edgetpu.tflite. The
following page says it's fine to include Apache 2.0 stuff in GPLv3
projects:
https://www.apache.org/licenses/GPL-compatibility.html
2020-04-13 23:03:49 -07:00
Scott Lamb
ad13935ed6 use extracted ffmpeg library 2020-03-28 00:59:25 -07:00
Scott Lamb
00991733f2 use Blake3 instead of SHA-1 or Blake2b
Benefits:

* Blake3 is faster. This is most noticeable for the hashing of the
  sample file data.
* we no longer need OpenSSL, which helps with shrinking the binary size
  (#70). sha1 basically forced OpenSSL usage; ring deliberately doesn't
  support this old algorithm, and the pure-Rust sha1 crate is painfully
  slow. OpenSSL might still be a better choice than ring/rustls for TLS
  but it's nice to have the option.

For the video sample entries, I decided we don't need to hash at all. I
think the id number is sufficiently stable, and it's okay---perhaps even
desirable---if an existing init segment changes for fixes like e5b83c2.
2020-03-20 21:46:53 -07:00
Scott Lamb
e5b83c21e1 schema version 6 with pixel aspect ratio
This makes anamorphic sub streams display correctly, even ones from old
Hikvision cameras that don't properly set the aspect ratio at the H.264
layer.
2020-03-19 21:40:59 -07:00
Scott Lamb
92266612b5 switch to websocket for live stream (#59)
The multipart stream / hanging GET approach worked in a prototype for a
single stream, but Chrome has a per-host limit of six connections. If I
try streaming all my cameras at once, I hit that limit. I can't open all
the streams, much less additional connections to load init segments and
such. Websockets apparently has a much higher limit of 256.
2020-02-29 14:39:16 -08:00
Scott Lamb
dd3c3f2f84 update some deps, including cursive
cursive renamed a few methods, so keep up with that. No functional
changes.
2020-01-21 08:58:11 -08:00
Scott Lamb
038fc574e9 upgrade some deps, including reqwest
The reqwest one is particularly notable because it means not having two
versions of hyper/http/tokio/futures/bytes. It also drops a number of
transitive deps; with some work I think I could stop depending on regex
now.
2020-01-09 20:06:30 -08:00
Scott Lamb
8af7bca6c2 upgrade to hyper 0.13 ecosystem
This doesn't take much advantage of async fns so far. For example, the
with_{form,json}_body functions are still designed to be used with
future combinators when it'd be more natural to call them from async
fns now. But it's a start.

Similarly, this still uses the old version of reqwest. Small steps.

Requires Rust 1.40 now. (1.39 is a requirement of async, and 1.40 is a
requirement of http-serve 0.2.0.)
2020-01-09 16:07:46 -08:00
Scott Lamb
fce0c5b014 use a released version of nix 2019-12-30 07:46:53 -06:00
Scott Lamb
e8a00d4639 use parking_lot::Once in ffmpeg
I'm getting deprecation warnings for std::sync::ONCE_INIT, and I'm
not sure when std::sync::Once::new() became a const fn. Just as easy to
switch to parking_lot.
2019-12-28 08:03:05 -06:00
Scott Lamb
0a29f62fd3 better logs during normal operation
* don't log every time we delete stuff; leave it for the flush
* when flushing, break apart counts by sample file dir and include
  human-readable sizes
2019-09-26 16:09:58 -07:00
Scott Lamb
01d20960ef improve error messages on unparseable text protos
Takes advantage of stepancheg/rust-protobuf#428
2019-07-20 16:22:24 -07:00
Scott Lamb
79ac89dc7c use the nix repository again
nix-rust/nix#1097 is merged so it does what we need now.
2019-07-20 16:13:12 -07:00
Scott Lamb
18c693fa46 update deps
The immediate motivation is that Cargo.lock referred to a commit version
in a PR branch of my nix fork that no longer exists. (I didn't know, but
it makes sense, that "git push -f" not only forcibly updates the branch
to refer to a new commit but also gets rid of orphaned commits.) Use a
moonfire branch that I'll keep stable until I'm ready to move on.

I also updated parking_lot and rusqlite to new major versions (nothing
in the interface that I care about has changed) and did a full cargo
update.
2019-07-17 14:32:09 -07:00
Scott Lamb
bb227491b6 use nix to remove many uses of unsafe 2019-07-11 21:59:01 -07:00
Scott Lamb
d7a918d397 schema comparison in new upgrade tests, "moonfire-nvr check"
The .sql files here are copied from earlier revisions:

v0.sql  fee4141:src/schema.sql
v1.sql  0d69f4f:src/schema.sql
v3.sql  422cd2a:db/schema.sql
2019-07-11 13:31:33 -07:00
Scott Lamb
13b192949d use cstr crate rather than unsafe
This removes a few uses of unsafe, and it verifies statically that there
are no interior NUL bytes.
2019-07-04 16:51:38 -05:00
Scott Lamb
fda7e4ca2b add concept of user/session permissions
(I also considered the names "capabilities" and "scopes", but I think
"permissions" is the most widely understood.)

This is increasingly necessary as the web API becomes more capable.
Among other things, it allows:

* non-administrator users who can view but not access camera passwords
  or change any state
* workers that update signal state based on cameras' built-in motion
  detection or a security system's events but don't need to view videos
* control over what can be done without authenticating

Currently session permissions are just copied from user permissions, but
you can also imagine admin sessions vs not, as a checkbox when signing
in. This would match the standard Unix workflow of using a
non-administrative session most of the time.

Relevant to my current signals work (#28) and to the addition of an
administrative API (#35, including #66).
2019-06-19 15:34:20 -07:00
Scott Lamb
cb1bb5d810 upgrade cursive to latest major version 2019-05-31 16:35:07 -07:00
Scott Lamb
225e1fd75b upgrade db's parking_lot dependency too 2019-05-31 16:21:10 -07:00
Scott Lamb
b629fe6ac1 upgrade rusqlite, bump required Rust to 1.33
The new rusqlite requires the transpose_result feature, stabilized in
this Rust version.
2019-05-31 16:19:04 -07:00
Scott Lamb
428f5a3ba4 update a few deps
cursive & rusqlite are more significant; I'll do those separately
2019-05-31 15:08:49 -07:00
Scott Lamb
36f3bda9c6 update deps 2019-02-13 22:43:30 -08:00
Scott Lamb
579150c9d5 redact URLs within stream.rs; fixes #13 2019-02-13 22:34:19 -08:00
Scott Lamb
3ba3bf2b18 backend support for live stream (#59)
This is so far completely untested, for use by a new UI prototype.

It creates a new URL endpoint which sends one video/mp4 media segment
per key frame, with the dependent frames included. This means there will
be about one key frame interval of latency (typically about a second).
This seems hard to avoid, as mentioned in issue #59.
2019-01-21 15:58:52 -08:00
Scott Lamb
1ce52e334c fix #64 (extraneous flushes)
Now each syncer has a binary heap of the times it plans to do a flush.
When one of those times arrives, it rechecks if there's something to do.
Seems more straightforward than rechecking each stream's first
uncommitted recording, especially with the logic to retry failed flushes
every minute.

Also improved the info! log for each flush to see the actual recordings
being flushed for better debuggability.

No new tests right now. :-( They're tricky to write. One problem is that
it's hard to get the timing right: a different flush has to happen
after Syncer::save's database operations and before Syncer::run calls
SimulatedClocks::recv_timeout with an empty channel[*], advancing the
time. I've thought of a few ways of doing this:

   * adding a new SyncerCommand to run something, but it's messy (have
     to add it from the mock of one of the actions done by the save),
     and Box<dyn FnOnce() + 'static> not working (see
     rust-lang/rust#28796) makes it especially annoying.

   * replacing SimulatedClocks with something more like MockClocks.
     Lots of boilerplate. Maybe I need to find a good general-purpose
     Rust mock library. (mockers sounds good but I want something that
     works on stable Rust.)

   * bypassing the Syncer::run loop, instead manually running iterations
     from the test.

Maybe the last way is the best for now. I'm likely to try it soon.

[*] actually, it's calling Receiver::recv_timeout directly;
Clocks::recv_timeout is dead code now? oops.
2019-01-04 13:47:44 -08:00
Scott Lamb
b5387af3d4 lose "extern crate" everywhere (Rust 2018 edition) 2018-12-28 21:59:39 -06:00
Scott Lamb
ff58f24785 update deps 2018-12-28 10:13:03 -06:00
Scott Lamb
4f87c16c31 Merge branch 'master' into auth 2018-12-01 15:27:54 -08:00
Scott Lamb
35e6891221 update all Rust deps 2018-12-01 15:20:19 -08:00
Scott Lamb
422cd2a75e preliminary web support for auth (#26)
Some caveats:

  * it doesn't record the peer IP yet, which makes it harder to verify
    sessions are valid. This is a little annoying to do in hyper now
    (see hyperium/hyper#1410). The direct peer might not be what we want
    right now anyway because there's no TLS support yet (see #27).  In
    the meantime, the sane way to expose Moonfire NVR to the Internet is
    via a proxy server, and recording the proxy's IP is not useful.
    Maybe better to interpret a RFC 7239 Forwarded header (and/or
    the older X-Forwarded-{For,Proto} headers).

  * it doesn't ever use Secure (https-only) cookies, for a similar reason.
    It's not safe to use even with a tls proxy until this is fixed.

  * there's no "moonfire-nvr config" support for inspecting/invalidating
    sessions yet.

  * in debug builds, logging in is crazy slow. See libpasta/libpasta#9.

Some notes:

  * I removed the Javascript "no-use-before-defined" lint, as some of
    the functions form a cycle.

  * Fixed #20 along the way. I needed to add support for properly
    returning non-OK HTTP statuses to signal unauthorized and such.

  * I removed the Access-Control-Allow-Origin header support, which was
    at odds with the "SameSite=lax" in the cookie header. The "yarn
    start" method for running a local proxy server accomplishes the same
    thing as the Access-Control-Allow-Origin support in a more secure
    manner.
2018-11-27 11:08:33 -08:00
Scott Lamb
61af963a64 Merge branch 'master' into auth 2018-11-20 11:10:47 -08:00
Scott Lamb
071be03c6f update most deps, notably including reqwest
Fixes #60

The reqwest dependency is significant because the old version required
an old version of openssl, complicating compilation on newer platforms.
reqwest also pulled in old/duplicate versions of hyper, tokio, etc.
Nice to drop a lot of that cruft.

I left rusqlite and uuid alone because they had breaking changes I
didn't want to mess with at the moment.

Bumped the minimum Rust version to 1.30.0, as required by the
new encoding_rs crate (and perhaps other things).
2018-11-20 09:32:55 -08:00
Scott Lamb
75f233da79 initial db layer work for authentication (#26) 2018-11-01 23:25:06 -07:00
Scott Lamb
955a0a8c15 upgrade to hyper 0.12.x
Just one (intentional) functional change---now the streamers start
shutting down while the webserver shuts down gracefully.
2018-08-29 22:26:19 -07:00
Scott Lamb
a10e77d98e update cursive from 0.7 to 0.9 2018-08-24 22:14:03 -07:00
Scott Lamb
8c52c36b51 upgrade a few deps 2018-08-24 22:06:14 -07:00
Scott Lamb
b0071515e0 update deps
I want to use hyper::server::Request::bytes_mut(), so an update is
needed. Update everything at once. Most notably, the http-serve update
starts using the http crate types for some things. (More to come.)
2018-04-06 15:54:52 -07:00
Scott Lamb
d6fa470713 tests and fixes for Writer and Syncer
* separate these out into a new file, writer.rs, as dir.rs was getting
  unwieldy.
* extract traits for the parts of SampleFileDir and std::fs::File they needed;
  set up mock implementations.
* move clock.rs to a new base crate to be accessible from the db crate.
* add tests that exercise all the retry paths.
* bugfix: account for the new recording's bytes when calculating how much to
  delete.
* bugfix: when retrying an unlink failure in collect_garbage, we shouldn't
  warn about all the recordings no longer existing. Do this by retrying each
  step rather than the whole procedure again.
* avoid double-panic scenarios, which I hit while tweaking the mocks. These
  are quite annoying to debug as Rust doesn't print information about either
  panic. I ended up using lldb to get a backtrace. Better to be cautious about
  what we're doing when already panicking.
* give more context on raw::insert_recording errors, which I hit as well while
  tweaking the new tests.
2018-03-07 04:42:46 -08:00
Scott Lamb
31adbc1e9f initial split of database to a separate crate
It should reduce compile time / memory usage to put quite a bit of the code
into a separate crate. I also intend to limit visibility of some things to
only within the db crate, but that's for a future change. This is the smallest
move that will compile.
2018-02-20 23:15:39 -08:00