- Use `Result` as much as possible
- Display errors instead of panicking
TODO (maybe in another PR? this one is already quite big):
- Find a way to merge Ructe/ErrorPage types, so that we can have routes returning `Result<X, ErrorPage>` instead of panicking when we have an `Error`
- Display more details about the error, to make it easier to debug
(sorry, this isn't going to be fun to review, the diff is huge, but it is always the same changes)
* Count items in database as much as possible
* Fix the tests
* Remove two useless queries
* Run pragma directive before each sqlite connection
* Pragma for tests too
* Remove debug messages
All the template are now compiled at compile-time with the `ructe` crate.
I preferred to use it instead of askama because it allows more complex Rust expressions, where askama only supports a small subset of expressions and doesn't allow them everywhere (for instance, `{{ macro!() | filter }}` would result in a parsing error).
The diff is quite huge, but there is normally no changes in functionality.
Fixes#161 and unblocks #110 and #273
* Run cargo clippy on plume-common
Run clippy on plume-common and adjuste code accordingly
* Run cargo clippy on plume-model
Run clippy on plume-model and adjuste code accordingly
* Reduce need for allocation in plume-common
* Reduce need for allocation in plume-model
add a quick compilation failure if no database backend is enabled
* Run cargo clippy on plume-cli
* Run cargo clippy on plume
With this patch, Plume will be use a more up-to-date revision of
Rocket, that works with nightly-2018-07-17. It may have been able to
make it work with a more recent revision, but it turns out rocket has
introduced several breaking changes so I’d rather fix those.
Besides updating rocket_i18n and rocket_csrf to use the same revision
than Plume, this patch deals with the new implementation of the
Uri<'_> type. It silents a class of warnings, to deal with a change in
rustc which affects diesel. This latter change should be reverted as
soon as diesel releases a new version of its crate.
The code is divided in three crates:
- plume-common, for the ActivityPub module, and some common utils
- plume-models, for the models and database-related code
- plume, the app itself
This new organization will allow to test it more easily, but also to create other tools that only reuse a little part of
the code (for instance a Wordpress import tool, that would just use the plume-models crate)