Improved sync speed by resolving the N+1 query issues.
Solves #1402 and Solves #1453
With this change there is just one query done to retreive all the
important data, and matching is done in-code/memory.
With a very large database the sync time went down about 3 times.
Also updated misc crates and Github Actions versions.
For a while now WebAuthn has replaced u2f.
And since web-vault v2.27.0 the connector files for u2f have been removed.
Also, on the official bitwarden server the endpoint to `/two-factor/get-u2f` results in a 404.
- Removed all u2f code except the migration code from u2f to WebAuthn
This is a rather large PR which updates the async branch to have all the
database methods as an async fn.
Some iter/map logic needed to be changed to a stream::iter().then(), but
besides that most changes were just adding async/await where needed.
- Decreased `recursion_limit` from 512 to 87
Mainly done by optimizing the config macro's.
This fixes an issue with the rust-analyzer which doesn't go beyond 128
- Removed Regex for masking sensitive values and replaced it with a map()
This is much faster then using a Regex.
- Refactored the get_support_json macro's
- All items above also lowered the binary size and possibly compile-time
- Removed `_conn: DbConn` from several functions, these caused unnecessary database connections for functions who didn't used that at all
- Decreased json response for `/plans`
- Updated libraries and where needed some code changes
This also fixes some rare issues with SMTP https://github.com/lettre/lettre/issues/678
- Using Rust 2021 instead of 2018
- Updated rust nightly
An incomplete 2FA login is one where the correct master password was provided,
but the 2FA token or action required to complete the login was not provided
within the configured time limit. This potentially indicates that the user's
master password has been compromised, but the login was blocked by 2FA.
Be aware that the 2FA step can usually still be completed after the email
notification has already been sent out, which could be confusing. Therefore,
the incomplete 2FA time limit should be long enough that this situation would
be unlikely. This feature can also be disabled entirely if desired.
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
Because of differences in how .on_conflict() works compared to .replace_into() the PostgreSQL backend wasn't correctly ensuring the unique constraint on user_uuid and atype wasn't getting violated.
This change simply issues a DELETE on the unique constraint prior to the insert to ensure uniqueness. PostgreSQL does not support multiple constraints in ON CONFLICT clauses.
- Added security check for previouse used codes
- Allow TOTP codes with 1 step back and forward when there is a time
drift. This means in total 3 codes could be valid. But only newer codes
then the previouse used codes are excepted after that.
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.