Remove the SFTP file storage backend. Downstream users can use either
sshfs (which is what Danbooru now uses in production) or rclone instead.
The Ruby SFTP gem was much slower than sshfs.
Upgrade bootsnap to 1.9.3 too because Ruby 3.0.3 has a bug that causes
Rails to fail to boot when bootsnap is enabled. Bootsnap 1.9.3 works
around this bug.
Also add libgmp to build with bignum support.
Add a Ruby wrapper library around the libseccomp library. Seccomp is
used to restrict the syscalls a program can make. See comments in
app/logical/seccomp.rb for further details.
This is not used for anything yet. It's simply adding part of the
sandboxing infrastructure for later use.
No longer used now that we use Puma in production. If you still used
Unicorn in your install, switch to `bin/rails server` instead. See
config/puma.rb for config settings.
No longer used now that we use Kubernetes to deploy the site instead of
Capistrano.
If you run your own installation of Danbooru, and you used Capistrano to
deploy your site, it is recommended that you switch to either the Docker
Compose file (for personal installs), the Procfile (for non-Dockerized,
development environments), or Kubernetes (for production environments;
see https://github.com/danbooru/danbooru-infrastructure/tree/master/k8s
for Danbooru's production configuration).
When processing an alias, rename, implication, mass update, or nuke,
update the posts in parallel. This means that if we alias foo to bar,
for example, then we use four processes at once to retag the posts from
foo to bar.
This doesn't mean that if we have two aliases in a BUR, we process both
aliases in parallel. It simply means that when processing an alias, we
update the posts in parallel for that alias.
Unlike Unicorn, Puma doesn't have a builtin HTTP request timeout
mechanism, so we have to use Rack::Timeout instead.
See the caveats in the Rack::Timeout documentation [1]. In Unicorn, a
timeout would send a SIGKILL to the worker, immediately killing it. This
would result in a dropped connection and a Cloudflare 502 error to the
user. In Puma, it raises an exception, which we can catch and return a
better error to the user. On the other hand, raising an exception can
potentially corrupt application state if it's sent at the wrong time, or
be delayed indefinitely if the app is stuck in IO or C extension code.
The default request timeout is 65 seconds. 65 seconds is to give things
like HTTP requests on a 60 second timeout enough time to complete. Set
the RACK_REQUEST_TIMEOUT environment variable to change the timeout.
1: https://github.com/sharpstone/rack-timeout#further-documentation
Using `Rails.logger` here causes server boot to fail with a `Undefined
method 'tagged'` error, possibly because `Rails.logger` isn't ready yet
during early initialization.
Remove a workaround added in 2c06766c9. meta_request had a bug that
caused Rails to fail to launch under Rails 6.1. The fix was finally
merged upstream.
hxxps://github.com/dejan/rails_panel/pull/177.
* Export daily public database dumps to BigQuery and Google Cloud Storage.
* Only data visible to anonymous users is exported. Some tables have
null or missing fields because of this.
* The bans table is excluded because some bans have an expires_at
timestamp set beyond year 9999, which BigQuery doesn't support.
* The favorites table is excluded because it's too slow to dump (it
doesn't have an id index, which is needed by find_each).
* Version tables are excluded because dumping them every day is
inefficient, streaming insertions should be used instead.
Links:
* https://console.cloud.google.com/bigquery?project=danbooru1
* https://console.cloud.google.com/storage/browser/danbooru_public
* https://storage.googleapis.com/danbooru_public/data/posts.json
Add a new color palette and rework all site colors (both light mode and dark mode) to
use the new palette.
This ensures that colors are used consistently, from a carefully designed color palette,
instead of being chosen at random.
Before, colors in light mode were chosen on an ad-hoc basis, which resulted in a lot of
random colors and inconsistent design.
The new palette has 7 hues: red, orange, yellow, green, blue, azure (a lighter blue), and
purple. There's also a greyscale. Each hue has 10 shades of brightness, which (including
grey) gives us 80 total colors.
Colors are named like this:
var(--red-0); /* very light red */
var(--red-2); /* light red */
var(--red-5); /* medium red */
var(--red-7); /* dark red */
var(--red-9); /* very dark red */
var(--green-7); /* dark green */
var(--blue-5); /* medium blue */
var(--purple-3); /* light purple */
/* etc */
The color palette is designed to meet the following criteria:
* To have close equivalents to the main colors used in the old color scheme,
especially tag colors, so that changes to major colors are minimized.
* To produce a set of colors that can be used as as main text colors, as background
colors, and as accent colors, both in light mode and dark mode.
* To ensure that colors at the same brightness level have the same perceived brightness.
Green-4, blue-4, red-4, purple-4, etc should all have the same brightness and contrast
ratios. This way colors look balanced. This is actually a difficult problem, because human
color perception is non-linear, so you can't just scale brightness values linearly.
There's a color palette test page at https://danbooru.donmai/static/colors
Notable changes to colors in light mode:
* Username colors are the same as tag colors.
* Copyright tags are a deeper purple.
* Builders are a deeper purple (fixes#4626).
* Moderators are green.
* Gold users are orange.
* Parent borders are a darker green.
* Child borders are a darker orange.
* Unsaved notes have a thicker red border.
* Selected notes have a thicker blue (not green) border.
Fix tests not working in Github. They were failing because the latest
version of Webpack needs a version of Node newer than the version in
shipped Ubuntu 20.04.
Also fix the Docker build failing because of the system timezone
database not being installed in Ubuntu 20.10.