The goal is to separate initialization logic from command business
logic. Some initialization requires modifying the environment before we
instantiate many objects needed for implementing command behavior. If
those objects get instantiated, they will most likely already start
using files/directories/environment on the system and we can't modify
those while they're in use.
When using filters like `exclude`, it was possible for terms to not get
synced when they should have. This was due to a misunderstanding of how
`ExceptBy()` and `IntersectBy()` work. According to [an issue][1] on the
dotnet runtime repo, this is by design. The fix is to just avoid those
in favor of `Where()`.
Fixes#69.
[1]: https://github.com/dotnet/dotnet-api-docs/issues/7656
The removal of the markdown parsing logic in v2.0 accidentally also
deleted the logic responsible for handling this property. The code has
been refactored to introduce a "filter pipeline" system that handles
include/exclude filtering as well as strict negative score support.
Previously, Trash Updater would crawl & parse the Trash Guide's markdown
files to obtain information about release profiles. This is complex and
error prone. Thanks to work done by Nitsua, we now have JSON files
available that describe release profiles in a more concise way. These
files are located at `docs/json/sonarr` in the [Trash Guide repo][1].
All of the markdown parsing code has been removed from Trash Updater.
Now, it shares the same git clone of the Trash Guide repository
originally used for Radarr custom formats to access those release
profile JSON files.
BREAKING CHANGE: The old `type:` property for release profiles is
removed in favor of `trash_id:`, which identifies a specific JSON file
to pull data from. Users are required to update their `trash.yml` and
other configuration files to use the new schema. Until changes are made,
users will see errors when they run `trash sonarr` commands.
[1]: https://github.com/TRaSH-/Guides/tree/master/docs/json/sonarr
When `IncludeOptionals` was set to false, release profiles with only
optional terms in them would fail to sync to Sonarr because they were
empty. The filter profile logic now considers this config setting and if
set to false, it will ensure that optionals-only release profiles get
filtered out and not pushed to Sonarr.
The Trash sonarr guide was restructured so that optionals were in a
dedicated release profile that had no non-optional terms in it. Logic
was only checking if a profile had non-optional terms in it, and if not,
it got tossed out. Logic now also checks to make sure there are no
optional terms as well.
Code for cloning the repository refactored to handle failures better.
Namely this means deleting the repository and cloning it again if there
is a failure.
The Sonarr developers made a backward-breaking API change resulting in
Trash Updater being unable to obtain, create, or update release
profiles. This fix keeps backward compatibility with the previous and
current schema at the cost of additional code complexity.
The specific breakage was in the Ignored and Required properties of the
Release Profile JSON schema. They were converted from string type to
array.
Offending change:
deed85d2f9/src/NzbDrone.Core/Datastore/Migration/162_release_profile_to_array.csFixes#16
Move non-CLI specific code from Trash project to TrashLib. This is for
future code sharing with Recyclarr. Trash project is officially
deprecated and will eventually go away in favor of the web app.