when re-doing makefile, I removed the part where CSS is written to
bundle.css, then later moved to v3bundle.css. To solve, crash.html now
just directly requests web/css/v3bundle.css (and web/js/crash.js,
removing the `mv` line in the makefile too).
all build steps (apart from swagger, which generates go code) are stored
in BUILDDEPS, which is now a dependency of all. if INTERNAL=on,
BUILDDEPS is added to GO_TARGET, so the executable is rebuilt with new
content. Used the .DEFAULT_GOAL feature so I could move all: to the
bottom, where I think it belongs.
pseudo-links are now just links, because i'm lazy and it's easier than
fixing an issue. They now take the form `/?invite=code` and
`/accounts/?user=userid`.
ts/modules.tabs.ts is now a wrapper for ts/modules/pages.ts.
Also, fixed no section appearing when visiting the settings tab.
if I had taken a second to actually read the documentation, i'd have
realized the mjml command can process a bunch of files at once.
On my machine, cuts time down from ~800ms to ~500ms.
While there are still some scripts using python, none are needed to
build the software anymore, so no python build deps!
config-base.yaml is almost identical to json version, except there's no "order" field, as
"sections" and "settings" fields are now lists themselves and so Go can
parse the correct order. As such, removed enumerate_config.py. Also,
rewrote scripts/generate_ini.py in Go as scripts/ini/. Config structure
in Go form is now in common/config.go, and is used by jfa-go and the ini
script. app.configBase is now untouched once read from config-base.yaml,
and instead copied to and patched in app.patchedConfig. Patching occurs
at program start and config modification, so GetConfig is now just a
couple of lines. Discord role patching still occurs in GetConfig, as the
available roles can change regularly. Also added new "Disabled" field to
sections, to avoid the nightmare of deleting from an array.
Makefile enables E2EE by default. Due to the CGO and hence cross
compilers required, only linux amd64/arm64/armhf and windows amd64 is being built with the
feature included. Uses a new jfa-go-build-docker with
arm-linux-gnueabihf-gcc.
jellyseerr already did this, but it's been standardised a little more.
Mediabrowser uses it's own genericErr function and error types due to
being a separate package, while jellyseerr and ombi now share errors
defined in common/.
Probably still a little rough around the edges, but supports the actual
use case of GMake, which I believe are called incremental builds. Builds
will only occur when the code is changed, and only the necessary bits
are re-compiled.
many issues occur with setup, all this does is tell the user something
bad happened and to check the logs. Might help with solving issues.
Also fixed some now invalid typescript.
local testing was being done with an older version of esbuild which
didn't mind @tailwind statements before @imports (it complained, but did
its job). On the latest version used in Docker builds, it would leave
the @import statements intact which broke things like modals.
a17t v0.10 became a tailwind plugin rather than standalone css, and made
some other changes. Much of the original custom CSS now uses tailwind
classes, and there have been some other UI changes.
since this is so broken and requires CGO deps, E2EE support is now only
included with "make E2EE=on ...". The option to enable will then appear
in settings.
unnecessary (inline-source-cli already includes its functionality) and a
dependency of it had a high-severity CVE (wouldn't have affected anyone,
but w/e).
The last 100 lines of logs are now cached, and when a crash occurs, they
are saved to a file in the temp directory ("/tmp" on *nix), and pretty
HTML version is also created and opened in the browser.
* Currently only handles panics, will be included in more places soon
* Copy button and button to generate a GH issue will be added
When enabled (in Settings > Password Resets), a magic link will be sent
instead of a PIN when the user tries reset their password. By doing
this the user doesn't have to keep the Jellyfin tab open to enter the
code.
If enabled, jfa-go pings buildrone (hosted at builds.hrfee.pw) every 30
min for new updates. If there is one, it gets information (and if
applicable, a binary) from the appropriate source (buildrone, github, or
dockerhub) and displays it on the admin page. You can switch update
channels between stable and unstable. For binary releases, updates are
downloaded automatically and installed when the user presses update.
Since this obviously introduces some "phone-home" functionality into
jfa-go, I just want to say IPs are not and will not be logged by
buildrone, although I may later introduce functionality to give a rough
idea of the number of users (again, no IPs stored). The whole thing can
also be turned off in settings.