### Purpose
Path autocompletion wasn't working when using `~` as a shortcut for the
home directory. The issue occurred because the tilde was expanded to
/home/user, which caused the suggestion to no longer match the input
(thus preventing the autocompletion from appearing in the suggestion
list).
To fix this, I replaced the custom `parentAndBase` function, which
handled path splitting in a more complex way, with `filepath.Split` from
the standard `path/filepath` package. This prevents tilde expansion
while keeping the expected behavior for path splitting.
### Testing
The issue has been tested manually on Linux.
### Screenshots

This is extracted from PR #9175. This deduplicates `SetPassword` calls
and makes `postAdjustGui` a single place where PR #9175 can add
another adjustment step for sanitizing changes to WebAuthn
credentials.
This also adds tests to validate that the refactored logic was not
broken.
These refactorizations were made in [PR #9175][1] to accommodate a few
new variants of authentication method and body content. On request from
reviewers, this PR extracts it as a smaller refactorization to review in
isolation.
### Purpose
This extracts a shared `httpRequest` base function from `httpGet` and
`httpPost`, which will be used in PR #9175 for new helper functions
`httpGetCsrf` (hiding all optional parameters except the CSRF token),
`httpPostCsrf` (same) and `httpPostCsrfAuth` (hiding basic auth
parameters). A `getSessionCookie` function is also extracted from
`hasSessionCookie` and will be used to test that concurrent WebAuthn
authentications result in separate sessions (indicated by different
session cookies).
### Purpose
On iOS, the FSEvents API for watching files (also used on macOS) is not
available, but `kqueue` is. This PR ensures `kqueue` support is built on
iOS instead of the FSEvents based watcher implementation.
Before this PR, you could already use the `kqueue` build option to force
its usage. Unfortunately `gomobile`, the tool that I use to build
Syncthing for iOS and macOS for Synctrain, does not support setting
different build flags for iOS and macOS (unless I build separately for
each, which is a bit of a hassle because XCode nonsense). I am assuming
there are good reasons to support FSEvents even though `kqueue` is also
available on macOS (but I'm not sure why?). I do know FSEvents has been
working fine for me on macOS so it seems best to use FSEvents on macOS
and kqueue on iOS.
Note that this also requires https://github.com/syncthing/notify/pull/4
to be merged in `synchting/notify` (until that is done, this PR will
fail to build on iOS due to `notify` still trying to link to `fsevents`
stuff when the `kqueue` build flag is not set).
### Testing
I compiled both `syncthing/notify` and syncthing with this PR applied,
and used that to successfully build the Synctrain iOS app, which after
this PR works fine and should follow up file changes a bit quicker.
### Screenshots
n/a
### Documentation
n/a
## Authorship
Your name and email will be added automatically to the AUTHORS file
based on the commit metadata.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jakob Borg <jakob@kastelo.net>
### Purpose
This is a [new function](https://pkg.go.dev/slices@go1.21.0#Contains)
added in the go1.21 standard library, which can make the code more
concise and easy to read.
### Testing
Describe what testing has been done, and how the reviewer can test the
change
if new tests are not included.
### Screenshots
If this is a GUI change, include screenshots of the change. If not,
please
feel free to just delete this section.
### Documentation
If this is a user visible change (including API and protocol changes),
add a link here
to the corresponding pull request on https://github.com/syncthing/docs
or describe
the documentation changes necessary.
## Authorship
Your name and email will be added automatically to the AUTHORS file
based on the commit metadata.
Signed-off-by: dashangcun <907225865@qq.com>
Co-authored-by: Jakob Borg <jakob@kastelo.net>
The requirements for Windows code signing changed in 2023, so that newly
generated certificates can only be stored in hardware modules. Luckily,
I managed to snag a three year certificate before that so it hasn't
affected us so much. Now though, it does, because our cert is expiring
in March.
This changes the code signing process for Windows to use a cloud
service, Azure Trusted Signing. This appears to work equally well and
outsources the problem entirely, while also being cheaper than the
actual certificate was to begin with. 🤷
The signing entity will be Kastelo AB and not the Syncthing Foundation,
because the latter is almost impossible to get a certificate for as it's
not a normal corporate entity whose existence can be verified, etc. This
is also how it was prior to the latest certificate; it's not ideal, but
I think it's acceptable under the circumstances.
Currently, this just results in a very ambiguous `setting metadata: lookup
failed` while it could report what it's looking up and why it failed
(not found, etc).
Marshal() was called with the read lock held, and in turn called
Created() which also takes the read lock. This is fine by itself, but
there is a risk of deadlock if another call to lock the mutex happens
concurrently, as the lock call will block the inner rlock and the outer
rlock can never become unlocked.
It's an easy fix as marshalling is guaranteed to be called with a read
lock and does not need to call any methods that read lock themselves.
This was broken in the Protobuf refactor. The reason is that with the
previous library, generated types would have a JSON marshalling method
that would automatically return strings for enums. In the current
library you need to use the jsonpb marshaller for that, but these are
hand crafted structs so we can't do that. The easy solution is to just
use strings directly, since this is an API-only type anyway.
Commit dee920a840 was merged into
Weblate's repository, but later replaced on main by
2167ce9656. This led to a merge conflict,
which this commit fixes cleanly. After merging, we can unlock Weblate
again.
The GitHub checkout action does weird stuff with tags which breaks `git
describe`. This works around that so we get proper release builds on tag
pushes.
We must skip unix sockets, fifos, etc when scanning as these are not
filetypes we can handle. Currently we return a "bug" error, which
results in the walk being aborted and the rest of the tree being
essentially invisible to Syncthing. Instead, just ignore these files and
continue onwards.
This might well be #9859 as well but I can't confirm.