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
This fixes a real cross-site WebSocket hijacking (CSWSH) vulnerability.
If the attacker knows the URL of an NVR installation this user is
authenticated to and the UUID of a camera, and can trick the user into
visiting their webpage, they can grab the live stream. At least there's
some entropy in the camera UUID, but it was never intended to be a
secret.
* switch the config interface over to use Retina and make the test
button honor rtsp_transport = udp.
* adjust the threading model of the Retina streaming code.
Before, it spawned a background future that read from the runtime and
wrote to a channel. Other calls read from this channel.
After, it does work directly from within the block_on calls (no
channels).
The immediate motivation was that the config interface didn't have
another runtime handy. And passing in a current thread runtime
deadlocked. I later learned this is a difference between
Runtime::block_on and Handle::block_on. The former will drive IO and
timers; the latter will not.
But this is also more efficient to avoid so many thread hand-offs.
Both the context switches and the extra spinning that
tokio appears to do as mentioned here:
https://github.com/scottlamb/retina/issues/5#issuecomment-871971550
This may not be the final word on the threading model. Eventually
I may not have per-stream writing threads at all. But I think it will
be easier to look at this after getting rid of the separate
`moonfire-nvr config` subcommand in favor of a web interface.
* in tests, read `.mp4` files via the `mp4` crate rather than ffmpeg.
The annoying part is that this doesn't parse edit lists; oh well.
* simplify the `Opener` interface. Formerly, it'd take either a RTSP
URL or a path to a `.mp4` file, and they'd share some code because
they both sometimes used ffmpeg. Now, they're totally different
libraries (`retina` vs `mp4`). Pull the latter out to a `testutil`
module with a different interface that exposes more of the `mp4`
stuff. Now `Opener` is just for RTSP.
* simplify the h264 module. It had a lot of logic to deal with Annex B.
Retina doesn't use this encoding.
Fixes#36Fixes#126
* switch from json to toml.
I think this will be more user-friendly. It allows comments and has
less punctuation. Fewer surprises than yaml (which has e.g. the
"Norway problem"). I might have stayed with JSON if I could see a
good serde json library that allows comments, but hson is unmaintained
and serde-json strictly follows the spec.
* switch from camelCase to snake_case. Seems more idiomatic for TOML
and matches the Rust source.
* forbid unknown keys. Better to spot errors sooner.
* rename "trust_forward_hdrs" to "trust_forward_headers". Nothing else
is abbreviated.
Fixes#204
* The docker container won't start if a bind refers to a path that
doesn't exist yet, so move the /etc/moonfire-nvr.json creation up
* Remove redundant command in the dedicated hard drive setup, and
improve its clarity
I did a full `cargo upgrade` and fixed what it broke:
* a couple things for the latest protobuf 3.0 alphas
(note alphas don't promise API stability)
* new minimum supported Rust version
This should have some other nice effects: parking_lot now uses inline
assembler, tokio has gotten faster, etc.
This keeps a coarser-grained `toplevel` property rather than `user`
and `session`. It also synthesizes a `streams` field within it with ids.
This makes it easier to put the streams in the URL by id.
I had to disable more of the Login tests to get this to work.
Frustrating, but I just can't figure out how to fake jest timers,
msw, and the testing libraries to all get along anymore.
For whatever reason, these aren't caught in my current setup. I'm trying
to upgrade the whole frontend mess (typescript version, react-scripts
version) and they're caught then.
Currently the workspace's version is older than VS Code's default.
VS Code complains about things that aren't errors according to the
workspace. (In particular, typing of catched exceptions has become
stricter.) With this setting, you can select the workspace's Typescript
version in the VS Code UI so the two are consistent.