To avoid duplicated load of the same data in an HTTP request, we can set
a context cache to do that. i.e. Some pages may load a user from a
database with the same id in different areas on the same page. But the
code is hidden in two different deep logic. How should we share the
user? As a result of this PR, now if both entry functions accept
`context.Context` as the first parameter and we just need to refactor
`GetUserByID` to reuse the user from the context cache. Then it will not
be loaded twice on an HTTP request.
But of course, sometimes we would like to reload an object from the
database, that's why `RemoveContextData` is also exposed.
The core context cache is here. It defines a new context
```go
type cacheContext struct {
ctx context.Context
data map[any]map[any]any
lock sync.RWMutex
}
var cacheContextKey = struct{}{}
func WithCacheContext(ctx context.Context) context.Context {
return context.WithValue(ctx, cacheContextKey, &cacheContext{
ctx: ctx,
data: make(map[any]map[any]any),
})
}
```
Then you can use the below 4 methods to read/write/del the data within
the same context.
```go
func GetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any) any
func SetContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key, value any)
func RemoveContextData(ctx context.Context, tp, key any)
func GetWithContextCache[T any](ctx context.Context, cacheGroupKey string, cacheTargetID any, f func() (T, error)) (T, error)
```
Then let's take a look at how `system.GetString` implement it.
```go
func GetSetting(ctx context.Context, key string) (string, error) {
return cache.GetWithContextCache(ctx, contextCacheKey, key, func() (string, error) {
return cache.GetString(genSettingCacheKey(key), func() (string, error) {
res, err := GetSettingNoCache(ctx, key)
if err != nil {
return "", err
}
return res.SettingValue, nil
})
})
}
```
First, it will check if context data include the setting object with the
key. If not, it will query from the global cache which may be memory or
a Redis cache. If not, it will get the object from the database. In the
end, if the object gets from the global cache or database, it will be
set into the context cache.
An object stored in the context cache will only be destroyed after the
context disappeared.
This should solve the main problem of dynamic assets getting stale after
a version upgrade. Everything not affected will use query-string based
cache busting, which includes files loaded via HTML or worker scripts.
Introduce a separate .eslintrc in the Vue components folder to
selectively enable vue-eslint-parser there, so that the rest of the
files can use eslint's core parser which can deal with hashbangs.
The fact that the eslint-disable comments worked in HTML was a
unintended side-effect of the files being parsed via vue-eslint-parser,
so I had to disable the parsing of these files in .eslintrc.yaml to make
it work, and finally decided to remove eslint-plugin-html as it causes
more issues than it solves.
* Refactor `i18n` to `locale`
- Currently we're using the `i18n` variable naming for the `locale`
struct. This contains locale's specific information and cannot be used
for general i18n purpose, therefore refactoring it to `locale` makes
more sense.
- Ref: https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/20096#discussion_r906699200
* Update routers/install/install.go
* ROOT_URL issues: some users did wrong to there app.ini config, then:
* The assets can not be loaded (AppSubUrl != "" and users try to access http://host:3000/)
*The ROOT_URL is wrong, then many URLs in Gitea are broken.
Now Gitea show enough information to users.
* JavaScript error issues, there are many users affected by JavaScript errors, some are caused by frontend bugs, some are caused by broken customized templates. If these JS errors can be found at first time, then maintainers do not need to ask about how bug occurs again and again.
* Some people like to modify the `head.tmpl`, so we separate the script part to `head_script.tmpl`, then it's much safer.
* use specialized CSS class "js-global-error", end users still have a chance to hide error messages by customized CSS styles.