- backend routines should contain minimal logic, and should call
into a routine on the collection
- instead of copying the giant-string approach the Python code was taking,
we use a HashSet to keep track of seen tags as we loop through the
notes, which should be more efficient
See https://github.com/ankitects/anki/pull/900#issuecomment-758284016
- Leave tag names alone and add the collapsed and config columns to the tags table.
- Update The DB check code to preserve the collapse state of used tags.
- Add a simple test for clearing tags and their children
- use the TimestampSecs newtype instead of raw i64s
- use FixedOffset instead of a minutes_west offset
- check localOffset each time the timing is calculated, and set it
if it's stale - even for v1.
- check for and fix missing rollover when calculating timing
- stop explicitly passing localOffset in the sync/start call
Running and testing should be working on the three platforms, but
there's still a fair bit that needs to be done:
- Wheel building + testing in a venv still needs to be implemented.
- Python requirements still need to be compiled with piptool and pinned;
need to compile on all platforms then merge
- Cargo deps in cargo/ and rslib/ need to be cleaned up, and ideally
unified into one place
- Currently using rustls to work around openssl compilation issues
on Linux, but this will break corporate proxies with custom SSL
authorities; need to conditionally use openssl or use
https://github.com/seanmonstar/reqwest/pull/1058
- Makefiles and docs still need cleaning up
- It may make sense to reparent ts/* to the top level, as we don't
nest the other modules under a specific language.
- rspy and pylib must always be updated in lock-step, so merging
rspy into pylib as a private module would simplify things.
- Merging desktop-ftl and mobile-ftl into the core ftl would make
managing and updating translations easier.
- Obsolete scripts need removing.
- And probably more.
The previous implementation had some slightly questionable memory safety
properties (older versions of PyO3 didn't uphold the Rust aliasing rules
and would thus create multiple &mut references to #[pyclass] objects).
This explains why Backend has internal Mutex<T>s even though all of its
methods took &mut self.
The solution is to simply make all methods take &self, which luckily
doesn't pose too make issues -- most of the code inside Backend already
has sufficient locking. The only two things which needed to be
explicitly handled where:
1. "self.runtime" which was fairly easy to handle. All usages of
the Runtime only require an immutable reference to create a new
Handle, so we could switch to OnceCell which provides
lazy-initialisation semantics without needing a more heavy-handed
Mutex<tokio::runtime::Handle>.
2. "self.sync_abort" was simply wrapped in a Mutex<>, though some of the
odd semantics of sync_abort (not being able to handle multiple
processes synchronising at the same time) become pretty obvious with
this change (for now we just log a warning in that case). In
addition, switch to an RAII-style guard to make sure we don't forget
to clear the abort_handle.
As a result, we now no longer break Rust's aliasing rules and we can
build with newer versions of PyO3 which have runtime checks for these
things (and build on stable Rust).
Signed-off-by: Aleksa Sarai <cyphar@cyphar.com>