Simplify the variable expansion code. Instead of using a separate goroutine
and two channels, use a struct + a simple function call.
No functional changes.
Simplify the code for the two-way variables' value-to-variable replacement.
Instead of using a goroutine and two channels, use a separate struct and
call a function on that directly.
No functional changes.
Implement the `deleteJob` API endpoint. Calling this endpoint will mark
the job as "deletion requested", after which it's queued for actual
deletion. This makes the API response fast, even when there is a lot of
work to do in the background.
A new background service "job deleter" keeps track of the queue of such
jobs, and performs the actual deletion. It removes:
- Shaman checkout for the job (but see below)
- Manager-local files of the job (task logs, last-rendered images)
- The job itself
The removal is done in the above order, so the job is only removed from the
database if the rest of the removal was succesful.
Shaman checkouts are only removed if the job was submitted with Flamenco
version 3.2. Earlier versions did not record enough information to reliably
do this.
Implement the `getSharedStorage` operation in the Manager, and use it in
the add-on to get the shared storage location in a way that makes sense
for the platform of the user.
Manifest task: T100196
Two-way variable implementation in the job submission end-point. Where
Flamenco v2 did the variable replacement in the add-on, this has now
been moved to the Manager itself. The only thing the add-on needs to
pass is its platform, so that the right values can be recognised.
This also implements two-way replacement when tasks are handed out, such
that the `{jobs}` value gets replaced to a value suitable for the
Worker's platform as well.
This adds a `-wizard` CLI option to the Manager, which opens a webbrowser
and shows the First-Time Wizard to aid in configuration of Flamenco.
This is work in progress. The wizard is just one page, and doesn't save
anything yet to the configuration.
After processing an image in the "last-rendered" processor, a SocketIO
object is sent to clients to indicate the last-rendered image needs to
be (re)loaded.
This also moves the previously existing "done callback" from a single
function to a per-image callback, so that it can be called with the
right information in there, and only when that particular image is
actually done processing.
The notification message sent via SocketIO also contains the necessary
info to render the image, so that the web client doesn't have to call
the `fetchJobLastRenderedInfo` operation.
Add a handler for the OpenAPI `taskOutputProduced` operation, and an
image thumbnailing goroutine.
The queue of images to process + the function to handle queued images
is managed by `last_rendered.LastRenderedProcessor`. This queue currently
simply allows 3 requests; this should be improved such that it keeps
track of the job IDs as well, as with the current approach a spammy job
can starve the updates from a more calm job.
`persistence.Model` contains the common database fields for most model
structs. It is a copy of `gorm.Model`, but without the `DeletedAt`
field (which triggers Gorm's soft deletion).
Soft deletion is not used by Flamenco. If it ever becomes necessary to
support soft-deletion, see https://gorm.io/docs/delete.html#Soft-Delete
This introduces some more conceptual changes to Shaman. The most important
one is that there is no longer a "checkout ID", but a "checkout path".
The Shaman client can request any subpath of the checkout directory,
so that it can handle things like project- or scene-specific prefixes.
The add-on code was copy-pasted from other addons and used the GPL v2
license, whereas by accident the LICENSE text file had the GNU "Affero" GPL
license v3 (instead of regular GPL v3).
This is now all streamlined, and all code is licensed as "GPL v3 or later".
Furthermore, the code comments just show a SPDX License Identifier
instead of an entire license block.
The build chain got a bit confused when doing things from scratch, as
`test_support.go` was used in the non-test builds. Renaming it to
`support_test.go` was the easiest way to avoid that.