This is mostly just "cargo fix --edition" + Cargo.toml changes.
There's one fix for upgrading to NLL in db/writer.rs:
Writer::previously_opened wouldn't build with NLL because of a
double-borrow the previous borrow checker somehow didn't catch.
Restructure to avoid it.
I'll put elective NLL changes in a following commit.
I moved the clocks member from LockedDatabase to Database to make this happen,
so the new DatabaseGuard (replacing a direct MutexGuard<LockedDatabase>) can
access it before acquiring the lock.
I also made the type of clock a type parameter of Database (and so several
other things throughout the system). This allowed me to drop the Arc<>, but
more importantly it means that the Clocks trait doesn't need to stay
object-safe. I plan to take advantage of that shortly.
The idea is to avoid the problems described in src/schema.proto; those
possibilities have bothered me for a while. A bonus is that (in a future
commit) it can replace the sample file uuid scheme in favor of using
<camera_uuid>-<stream_type>/<recording_id> for several advantages:
* on data integrity problems (specifically, extra sample files), more
information to use to understand what happened.
* no more reserving sample files prior to using them. This avoids some extra
database transactions on startup (now there's an extra two total rather
than an extra one per stream). It also simplifies an upcoming change I
want to make in which some streams are not flushed immediately, reducing
the write load significantly (maybe one per minute total rather than one
per stream per minute).
* get rid of eight bytes per playback cache entry in RAM (and nine bytes
per recording_playback row on flash).
The implementation is still pretty rough in places:
* Lack of tests.
* Poor ode organization. In particular, SampleFileDirectory::write_meta
shouldn't be exposed beyond db. I'm thinking about moving db.rs and
SampleFileDirectory to a new crate, moonfire_nvr_db. This would improve
compile times as well.
* No tooling for renaming a sample file directory.
* Config subcommand still panics in conditions that can be reasonably
expected to happen.