A new table is created to track which path_id attachments are images,
and for those their metadata, and which thumbnails have been created.
Using path_id as the effective primary key lets us ignore if the
attachment is archived or not, saving some foreign key messes.
A new worker is added to observe events when rows are added to this
table, and to generate and store thumbnails for those images in
differing sizes and formats.
We thumbnail and serve emoji with the same format as they were
uploaded. However, we preserved the original extension, which might
mismatch with the provided content-type.
Limit the content-type to a subset which is both (a) an image format
we can thumbnail, and (b) a media format which is widely-enough
supported that we are willing to provide it to all browsers. This
prevents uploading a `.tiff` emoji, for instance.
Based on this limited content-type, we then reverse to find the
reasonable extension to use when storing it. This is particularly
important because the local file storage uses the file extension to
choose what content-type to re-serve the emoji as.
This does nothing for existing emoji, which may have odd or missing
file extensions.
Hash the salt, user-id, and now avatar version into the filename.
This allows the URL contents to be immutable, and thus to be marked as
immutable and cacheable. Since avatars are served unauthenticated,
hashing with a server-side salt makes the current and past avatars not
enumerable.
This requires plumbing the current (or future) avatar version through
various parts of the upload process.
Since this already requires a full migration of current avatars, also
take the opportunity to fix the missing `.png` on S3 uploads (#12852).
We switch from SHA-1 to SHA-256, but truncate it such that avatar URL
data does not substantially increase in size.
Fixes: #12852.
Due to recent refactoring in 9fb03cb2c7, a user could not
upload avatar if the server uses local upload backend and there
was already an avatar file for that user.
This commit fixes it to just check if there exists a file only
when importing and not when the user is actually trying to
change the avatar.
Fixes#30676.
This is done in as much of a drop-in fashion as possible. Note that
libvips does not support animated PNGs[^1], and as such this
conversion removes support for them as emoji; however, libvips
includes support for webp images, which future commits will take
advantage of.
This removes the MAX_EMOJI_GIF_SIZE limit, since that existed to work
around bugs in Pillow. MAX_EMOJI_GIF_FILE_SIZE_BYTES is fixed to
actually be 128KiB (not 128MiB, as it actually was), and is counted
_after_ resizing, since the point is to limit the amount of data
transfer to clients.
[^1]: https://github.com/libvips/libvips/discussions/2000
In #23380, we are changing all occurrences of uri with url in order to
follow the latest URL standard. Previous PRs #25038 and #25045 has
replaced the occurences of uri that has no direct relation with realm.
This commit changes just the model property, which has no API
compatibility concerns.
Because loading boto3 is so slow, this saves a significant amount of
time (0.3s or so) in process startup on servers which are not using
the S3 file storage backend.
boto3 has two different modalities of making API calls -- through
resources, and through clients. Resources are a higher-level
abstraction, and thus more generally useful, but some APIs are only
accessible through clients. It is possible to get to a client object
from a resource, but not vice versa.
Use `get_bucket(...).meta.client` when we need direct access to the
client object for more complex API calls; this lets all of the
configuration for how to access S3 to sit within `get_bucket`. Client
objects are not bound to only one bucket, but we get to them based on
the bucket we will be interacting with, for clarity.
We removed the cached session object, as it serves no real purpose.
e883ab057f started caching the boto client, which we had identified
as slow call. e883ab057f went further, calling
`get_boto_client().generate_presigned_url()` once and caching that
result.
This makes the inner cache on the client useless. Remove it.
We add `Content-Disposition: inline` header to commonly supported
video MIME types so that when we `Open` them in lightbox, they
play in new tab.
This will require a follow-up database migration to apply to
previously uploaded videos.