* Don't capitalize local variables
ValidCodecs -> validCodecs
* Capitalize deprecation markers
A deprecated marker should be capitalized.
* Use re.MustCompile for static regexes
If the regex fails to compile, it's a programmer error, and should be
treated as such. The regex is entirely static.
* Simplify else-if constructions
Rewrite
else { if cond {}}
to
else if cond {}
* Use a switch statement to analyze formats
Break an if-else chain. While here, simplify code flow.
Also introduce a proper static error for unsupported image formats,
paving the way for being able to check against the error.
* Rewrite ifElse chains into switch statements
The "Effective Go" https://golang.org/doc/effective_go#switch document
mentions it is more idiomatic to write if-else chains as switches when
it is possible.
Find all the plain rewrite occurrences in the code base and rewrite.
In some cases, the if-else chains are replaced by a switch scrutinizer.
That is, the code sequence
if x == 1 {
..
} else if x == 2 {
..
} else if x == 3 {
...
}
can be rewritten into
switch x {
case 1:
..
case 2:
..
case 3:
..
}
which is clearer for the compiler: it can decide if the switch is
better served by a jump-table then a branch-chain.
* Rewrite switches, introduce static errors
Introduce two new static errors:
* `ErrNotImplmented`
* `ErrNotSupported`
And use these rather than forming new generative errors whenever the
code is called. Code can now test on the errors (since they are static
and the pointers to them wont change).
Also rewrite ifElse chains into switches in this part of the code base.
* Introduce a StashBoxError in configuration
Since all stashbox errors are the same, treat them as such in the code
base. While here, rewrite an ifElse chain.
In the future, it might be beneifical to refactor configuration errors
into one error which can handle missing fields, which context the error
occurs in and so on. But for now, try to get an overview of the error
categories by hoisting them into static errors.
* Get rid of an else-block in transaction handling
If we succesfully `recover()`, we then always `panic()`. This means the
rest of the code is not reachable, so we can avoid having an else-block
here.
It also solves an ifElse-chain style check in the code base.
* Use strings.ReplaceAll
Rewrite
strings.Replace(s, o, n, -1)
into
strings.ReplaceAll(s, o, n)
To make it consistent and clear that we are doing an all-replace in the
string rather than replacing parts of it. It's more of a nitpick since
there are no implementation differences: the stdlib implementation is
just to supply -1.
* Rewrite via gocritic's assignOp
Statements of the form
x = x + e
is rewritten into
x += e
where applicable.
* Formatting
* Review comments handled
Stash-box is a proper noun.
Rewrite a switch into an if-chain which returns on the first error
encountered.
* Use context.TODO() over context.Background()
Patch in the same vein as everything else: use the TODO() marker so we
can search for it later and link it into the context tree/tentacle once
it reaches down to this level in the code base.
* Tell the linter to ignore a section in manager_tasks.go
The section is less readable, so mark it with a nolint for now. Because
the rewrite enables a ifElseChain, also mark that as nolint for now.
* Use strings.ReplaceAll over strings.Replace
* Apply an ifElse rewrite
else { if .. { .. } } rewrite into else if { .. }
* Use switch-statements over ifElseChains
Rewrite chains of if-else into switch statements. Where applicable,
add an early nil-guard to simplify case analysis. Also, in
ScanTask's Start(..), invert the logic to outdent the whole block, and
help the reader: if it's not a scene, the function flow is now far more
local to the top of the function, and it's clear that the rest of the
function has to do with scene management.
* Enable gocritic on the code base.
Disable appendAssign for now since we aren't passing that check yet.
* Document the nolint additions
* Document StashBoxBatchPerformerTagInput
* Replace error assertions with Go 1.13 style
Use `errors.As(..)` over type assertions. This enables better use of
wrapped errors in the future, and lets us pass some errorlint checks
in the process.
The rewrite is entirely mechanical, and uses a standard idiom for
doing so.
* Use Go 1.13's errors.Is(..)
Rather than directly checking for error equality, use errors.Is(..).
This protects against error wrapping issues in the future.
Even though something like sql.ErrNoRows doesn't need the wrapping, do
so anyway, for the sake of consistency throughout the code base.
The change almost lets us pass the `errorlint` Go checker except for
a missing case in `js.go` which is to be handled separately; it isn't
mechanical, like these changes are.
* Remove goconst
goconst isn't a useful linter in many cases, because it's false positive
rate is high. It's 100% for the current code base.
* Avoid direct comparison of errors in recover()
Assert that we are catching an error from recover(). If we are,
check that the error caught matches errStop.
* Enable the "errorlint" checker
Configure the checker to avoid checking for errorf wraps. These are
often false positives since the suggestion is to blanket wrap errors
with %w, and that exposes the underlying API which you might not want
to do.
The other warnings are good however, and with the current patch stack,
the code base passes all these checks as well.
* Configure rowserrcheck
The project uses sqlx. Configure rowserrcheck to include said package.
* Mechanically rewrite a large set of errors
Mechanically search for errors that look like
fmt.Errorf("...%s", err.Error())
and rewrite those into
fmt.Errorf("...%v", err)
The `fmt` package is error-aware and knows how to call err.Error()
itself.
The rationale is that this is more idiomatic Go; it paves the
way for using error wrapping later with %w in some sites.
This patch only addresses the entirely mechanical rewriting caught by
a project-side search/replace. There are more individual sites not
addressed by this patch.
The strings.Replace function counts the number of replacements. If 0,
the original string is returned. Hence, there is no need to check if a
replacement will happen before doing the work.
* Remove stuff which isn't being used
Some fields, functions and structs aren't in use by the project. Remove
them for janitorial reasons.
* Remove more unused code
All of these functions are currently not in use. Clean up the code by
removal, since the version control has the code if need be.
* Remove unused functions
There's a large set of unused functions and variables in the code base.
Remove these, so it clearer what code to support going forward.
Dead code has been eliminated.
Where applicable, comment const-sections in tests, so reserved
identifiers are still known.
* Fix use-def of tsURL
The first def of tsURL doesn't matter because there's no use before
we hit the 2nd def.
* Remove dead code assignment
Setting logFile = "" is effectively dead code, because there's no use
of it later.
* Comment out found
The variable 'found' is dead in the function (because no post-process
action is following it). Comment it for now.
* Comment dead code in tests
These might provide hints as to what isn't covered at the moment.
* Dead code removal
In the case of constants where iota is involved, move the iota so it
matches the current key values.
This avoids problems with persistently stored key IDs.
* Unify scraped types
* Make name fields optional
* Unify single scrape queries
* Change UI to use new interfaces
* Add multi scrape interfaces
* Use images instead of image
* cleanup: remove dead code
removing some code that does nothing
* cleanup: fixing usage of deprecated gqlgen/graphql api in api/changeset_translator
* cleanup: changing to recommended comparison methods
Changing byte and case-insensitive string comparison to the recommended methods.
* cleanup: making staticcheck happy
* Add scraping support for performer tags
* Add performer count to tag cards
* Refactor sqlite test setup
* Add performer tag filtering in gallery and image
* Add bulk update performer
* Add Performers tab to tag page
* Add count filters and sort bys for tags
* Move scene count to icon in performer card #1148
* api/urlbuilders/movie: Auto format.
* graphql+pkg+ui: Implement scraping movies by URL.
This patch implements the missing required boilerplate for scraping
movies by URL, using performers and scenes as a reference.
Although this patch contains a big chunck of ground work for enabling
scraping movies by fragment, the feature would require additional
changes to be completely implemented and was not tested.
* graphql+pkg+ui: Scrape movie studio.
Extends and corrects the movie model for the ability to store and
dereference studio IDs with received studio string from the scraper.
This was done with Scenes as a reference. For simplicity the duplication
of having `ScrapedMovieStudio` and `ScrapedSceneStudio` was kept, which
should probably be refactored to be the same type in the model in the
future.
* ui/movies: Add movie scrape dialog.
Adds possibility to update existing movie entries with the URL scraper.
For this the MovieScrapeDialog.tsx was implemented with Performers and
Scenes as a reference. In addition DurationUtils needs to be called one
time for converting seconds from the model to the string that is
displayed in the component. This seemed the least intrusive to me as it
kept a ScrapeResult<string> type compatible with ScrapedInputGroupRow.
* Refactor xpath scraper code
* Make post-process a list
* Add map post-process action
* Add fixed xpath values
* Refactor scrapers into cache
* Refactor into mapped config
* Trim test html