When using MariaDB v10.5+ Foreign-Key errors were popping up because of
some changes in that version. To mitigate this on MariaDB and other
MySQL forks those errors are now catched, and instead of a replace_into
an update will happen. I have tested this as thorough as possible with
MariaDB 10.5, 10.4, 10.3 and the default MySQL on Ubuntu Focal. And
tested it again using sqlite, all seems to be ok on all tables.
resolves#1081. resolves#1065, resolves#1050
Diesel requires the following changes:
- Separate connection and pool types per connection, the generate_connections! macro generates an enum with a variant per db type
- Separate migrations and schemas, these were always imported as one type depending on db feature, now they are all imported under different module names
- Separate model objects per connection, the db_object! macro generates one object for each connection with the diesel macros, a generic object, and methods to convert between the connection-specific and the generic ones
- Separate connection queries, the db_run! macro allows writing only one that gets compiled for all databases or multiple ones
Main changes:
- Splitted up settings and users into two separate pages.
- Added verified shield when the e-mail address has been verified.
- Added the amount of personal items in the database to the users overview.
- Added Organizations and Diagnostics pages.
- Shows if DNS resolving works.
- Shows if there is a posible time drift.
- Shows current versions of server and web-vault.
- Optimized logo-gray.png using optipng
Items which can be added later:
- Amount of cipher items accessible for a user, not only his personal items.
- Amount of users per Org
- Version update check in the diagnostics overview.
- Copy/Pasteable runtime config which has sensitive data changed or removed for support questions either on the forum or github issues.
- Option to delete Orgs and all its passwords (when there are no members anymore).
- Etc....
This includes migrations as well as Dockerfile's for amd64.
The biggest change is that replace_into isn't supported by Diesel for the
PostgreSQL backend, instead requiring the use of on_conflict. This
unfortunately requires a branch for save() on all of the models currently
using replace_into.