During setting the latest commit hash for Rocket and updating all the
other crates, there were some messages regarding the usage of `String`
for the Rocket endpoint function calls. I acted upon this message and
changed all `String` types to `&str` and modified the code where needed.
This ended up in less alloc calls, and probably also a bit less memory usage.
- Updated all the crates and commit hashes
- Modified all `String` to `&str` where applicable
Previously the websocket notifications were using `app_id` as the
`ContextId`. This was incorrect and should have been the device_uuid
from the client device executing the request. The clients will ignore
the websocket request if the uuid matches. This also fixes some issues
with the Desktop client which is able to modify attachments within the
same screen and causes an issue when saving the attachment afterwards.
Also changed the way to handle removed attachments, since that causes an
error saving the vault cipher afterwards, complaining about a missing
attachment. Bitwarden ignores this, and continues with the remaining
attachments (if any). This also fixes #2591 .
Further some more websocket notifications have been added to some other
functions which enhance the user experience.
- Logout users when deauthed, changed password, rotated keys
- Trigger OrgSyncKeys on user confirm and removal
- Added some extra to the send feature
Also renamed UpdateTypes to match Bitwarden naming.
This is a rather large PR which updates the async branch to have all the
database methods as an async fn.
Some iter/map logic needed to be changed to a stream::iter().then(), but
besides that most changes were just adding async/await where needed.
For now only folder notifications are sent (create, rename, delete).
The notifications are only tested between two web-vault sessions in different browsers, mobile apps and browser extensions are untested.
The websocket server is exposed in port 3012, while the rocket server is exposed in another port (8000 by default). To make notifications work, both should be accessible in the same port, which requires a reverse proxy.
My testing is done with Caddy server, and the following config:
```
localhost {
# The negotiation endpoint is also proxied to Rocket
proxy /notifications/hub/negotiate 0.0.0.0:8000 {
transparent
}
# Notifications redirected to the websockets server
proxy /notifications/hub 0.0.0.0:3012 {
websocket
}
# Proxy the Root directory to Rocket
proxy / 0.0.0.0:8000 {
transparent
}
}
```
This exposes the service in port 2015.