With `delete_old_custom_formats: false` and
`replace_existing_custom_formats: false`, if you comment out a CF in
your configuration, sync, uncomment it and sync again, you get an error
about duplicate CFs. This is because, once a CF is removed from the
configuration, it's also removed from the cache.
This change makes the cache more flexible. As long as a CF (created by
Recyclarr) exists either in the config OR in the service itself, it will
be kept in the cache. This means that temporarily disabling CFs in
configuration won't cause ownership issues.
As long as there's a valid clone available and no other git commands
fail, we allow `git fetch` to fail and proceed processing commands. Even
if internet connectivity is down, that shouldn't necessarily prevent
sync from functioning.
The primary motivation for this change is that we expect the Trash
Guides repo to be relocated soon and I do not want that to cause the
program to stop working between the change and when I can update the
URL.
When doing a `sync --preview`, new custom formats are not created and
thus they never get an ID greater than `0`. Because of this, a
dictionary that tracks duplicates based on ID would result in warnings
about duplicate scores that made no sense.
We now index by Trash ID instead of Format ID, which is more accurate.
In a previous commit (SHA: `76040df`), I forgot to mark it as a breaking
change. Thus, this commit also serves to mark that breaking change for
versioning purposes.
For most CF specifications, there is only one element in the `fields`
array, which has a `value` property inside of each of its objects. One
particular specification, however, deviates from this assumption. The
"SizeSpecification" has been observed with *two* field objects.
Logic for parsing custom format CFs no longer assumes that the fields
property may only have one element in it.
Fixes#178
Due to changes in v4.1.1, sometimes invalid cache entries (zero-value)
were written to the cache. These are now treated as invalid and matches
by name will be performed.
Fixes#160
Due to [an issue][1] with the `actions/upload-artifact` action, when
binaries are uploaded they lose permission bits and `xattr` properties.
Composite actions `upload-tar` and `download-tar` have been added that
tarball the artifacts before uploading them to retain those properties.
[1]: https://github.com/actions/upload-artifact/issues/38
Changelog:
- Sign & notarize Recyclarr on macOS platforms (arm64, x64)
- Use `tar.xz` instead of `zip` on mac & linux platforms
- Compile linux binaries on the ubuntu-latest Github runner
- Compile macOS binaries on the macos-latest Github runner
- Executable size reduced by disabling ReadyToRun
Fixes#39
This was caused by a logic error that thought that a file was empty just
because it didn't find any configuration data relevant to the current
subcommand. For example, a config file that only has Radarr config in it
when you run `recyclarr sonarr`.
- Better contextual logging for YAML files
- When there's a syntax error in file parsing, skip that file.
- When validation fails for instance config, skip just that instance.
- If a file is empty, print a warning and skip it.
- Print instance name (instead of URL) in more places.
- Simplify the comment style for YAML intended to be uncommented by the
user. Now they just need to delete the leading hash and YAML will be
at the appropriate indentation.
- Add additional explanation at the top about how to set up
configuration based on the guide.
- Fix link to the configuration reference.
This library was causing numerous issues related to git operations. The
straw that broke the camel's back is that it does not do automatic
garbage collection (`git gc --auto`). So a user's repo directory
continues to grow in size.
The replacement is CliWrap, which is just a simple wrapper library that
allows easy execution of shell commands. Specifically, `git` commands.
BREAKING CHANGE: This change now requires the `git` executable to be
installed by the user if run on a host system. The git executable will
be provided automatically for the docker image.
The `configs` directory may now be used to automatically load YAML
configuration files. Any YAML files in that directory are loaded without
using the `--config` option.
If custom formats are provided, run validation logic against them. This
also was an opportunity to make the ServiceConfiguration validation
logic reusable between Sonarr and Radarr.
BREAKING CHANGE: The deprecated feature that still allowed you to keep
your `recyclarr.yml` next to the executable has been removed. Your
`recyclarr.yml` configuration file must now be located in your
application data directory
When using multiple instances of Sonarr at v4 and v3, it was possible to
get a VersionException due to stale information carrying over between
processing instances.
Version enforcement was only running if the user specified release
profiles because that logic was unintentionally tightly coupled to them.
Now that logic runs regardless of whether the user is using RPs or CFs.
When logging HTTP response/request bodies during communication with
Radarr, Sonarr, etc, use a compact form instead. The previous form had
newlines in it which ended up making the logs vertically very long and
hard to follow.
It's been a sufficient amount of time since support for these variables
has been removed; users should no longer require an explicit error to
remind them to use `--user` from now on.
Fixes#115.
When using `--list-custom-formats` with either the `sonarr` or `radarr`
subcommand, custom formats will be grouped according to the respective
tables at the top of the "Collection of custom formats" page.
A new `log_janitor` setting added to `settings.yml` to allow the user to
specify the maximum number of files to keep when doing log cleanup.
Additionally, the way startup tasks occur has been cleaned up /
refactored to make it easier to integration test.
Users that do not do bind-mount for the `/config` volume saw permissions
issues with that directory because it was owned by the `root` user. This
change forces the ownership of `/config` to `1000:1000` for those that
plan to use vanilla docker volumes instead.