If a user on a remote instances changes their profile to manually accept
follow requests, this change may not immediately be federated. Because of
this, a user may get stuck seeing "processing".
This should reduce the performance hit when adding large numbers of
instances to the deliver queue by making the check for suspended and
dead instances a bulk operation.
Changelog: Changed
Reviewed-on: FoundKeyGang/FoundKey#215
The UUIDs are no longer used for errors and all errors should now have
a descriptive message attached to them. Also, all errors should now have
the proper HTTP status code for a reply instead of the generic 400 and 500
response codes. Because the errors all have more specific error codes, the
"kind" of client or server is also abolished.
- Add a rate limit analogous to request-reset-password.
See also a0ef32f4f6.
- Delete an expired reset request if found.
- Return a proper error.
- Use time constants.
Changelog: Changed
Since you are also allowed to react to your own notes, it seems sensible
that you should be allowed to like your own gallery posts.
Analogous to commit 4c5aa9e538.
Changelog: Changed
`createdAt` in `insertNote` now will default to the current date.
Also refactor poll insert:
Instead of testing hasPoll, just do a null check on data.poll since it's
a more reliable indicator for whether a poll exists (and also tsc won't
complain about data.poll being possibly null).
Refactor to use $ref sugar.
Also forego the API call to fetch endpoint information if the endpoint
name is not in the list of available endpoints that has already been
fetched.
Squashed commit of the following:
commit 8636adab6455bea29659a6799a7f3aad9e7cc10d
Author: Johann150 <johann.galle@protonmail.com>
Date: Mon Oct 17 22:53:24 2022 +0200
fix: remove comment
commit 7ff8d45bfa2ed5c07c9a053e817604ef2eb115ad
Author: Johann150 <johann.galle@protonmail.com>
Date: Mon Oct 17 21:55:48 2022 +0200
fix paginations reloading
The Pagination type actually specifies that just the params property
should be a Ref.
commit 55fe9210c15785611603e3a7a2535ebf8008ea64
Author: Johann150 <johann.galle@protonmail.com>
Date: Mon Oct 17 18:55:54 2022 +0200
fix variable name
commit a464d1363bc8c62606a4d2acc148ce269973bede
Author: Johann150 <johann.galle@protonmail.com>
Date: Sun Oct 16 22:36:11 2022 +0200
fix: don't display empty drive message while loading
commit 52905b398f683ff3c71c2d5592851b2d2a428550
Author: Johann150 <johann.galle@protonmail.com>
Date: Fri Oct 14 22:19:13 2022 +0200
remove unavailable i18n strings
commit d491a71cbec05f991864a06b8e0001d40da006a3
Author: Johann150 <johann.galle@protonmail.com>
Date: Fri Oct 14 22:18:42 2022 +0200
client refactor: use pagination in drive component
This majorly refactors the drive component to use the proper pagination
component instead of reimplementing pagination.
The drive component is also refactored to use ref sugar (i.e. $ref).
This should also have better latency due to being a single query.
Furthermore, it's no longer a linear scan, since host is indexed.
Would be cool to simplify it further to a single query for blocks also...
Why exactly are blocks not in the db?
It works by having a day-long cache of
"when did we last successfully communicate with this instance?"
Anything over a specified threshold (1 month) will act as though the instance
is suspended - all outgoing jobs are dropped on processing.
The day-long cache is in place because the ordering is necessarily a
linear scan.
Once an instance comes back online, we will detect that is the case as soon as
we receive an activity from them (which will update the "last communicated at")
field.
Potential future TODOs:
* Improve the caching system, it's actually pretty inefficient as it is.
CacheBox with a call override?
* Think of ways to make it not-a-linear-scan, since the instances table can get
pretty big. It's around 4500 on toast cafe.
ChangeLog: Added
I'm not sure how it managed to work so far, but the function is the default
export, using the namespace like a function should not have worked,
maybe something under the hood was correcting it back
This is oriented on this paragraph from the AP spec:
> Additionally, if an object is addressed to the Public special collection,
> a server MAY deliver that object to all known sharedInbox endpoints
> on the network.