- Default setting is false for both conversions, as this will require
additional resources of the server, but is bandwidth friendly for
viewers
- WEBM conversion is slow, but better quality than MP4 conversion with
a typically smaller file size
- Tags are copied over from the original upload
- Snapshots are generated for the new auto posts
* Added functionality for administrators to directly add users to the
application
* Added permission users:create:any to handle level that users are
allowed to create other users
* Moved old permission users:create to users:create:self
- Added type hinting (for now, 3.5-compatible)
- Split `db` namespace into `db` module and `model` namespace
- Changed elastic search to be created lazily for each operation
- Changed to class based approach in entity serialization to allow
stronger typing
- Removed `required` argument from `context.get_*` family of functions;
now it's implied if `default` argument is omitted
- Changed `unalias_dict` implementation to use less magic inputs
- Don't cache default category in its entirety - cache only its name
- Purge cache on category name changes and default category changes
- Lock records for updates where applicable
Rather than flushing the post right away only to find out that there
were validation errors, try to postpone flushing for as long as
possible.
The previous behavior has led to too eager spending of post IDs - each
flush calls nextval(post_id_seq), and postgres sequences are not
affected by transaction rollbacks, so each erroneous post creation
discarded a post ID, which has led to gaps in post IDs.
Ignored only the rules about continuing / hanging indentation.
Also, added __init__.py to tests so that pylint discovers them. (I don't
buy pytest's BS about installing your package.)
For quite some time, I hated Falcon's class maps approach that caused
more chaos than good for Szurubooru. I've taken a look at the other
frameworks (hug, flask, etc) again, but they all looked too
bloated/over-engineered. I decided to just talk to WSGI myself.
Regex-based routing may not be the fastest in the world, but I'm fine
with response time of 10 ms for cached /posts.