During migrations some queries are out of order regarding to foreign
keys.
Because of this the migrations fail when the sql database has this
enforced by default.
Turning of this check during the migrations will fix this and this is
only per session.
If SSL is disabled, the SMTP ClientSecurity of the lettre crate
defaults to None, that is, an insecure connection. This is changed to
Opportunistic, which uses TLS if available. If TLS is not available,
the insecure connection is used (i.e., this change is backward
compatible).
- Moved smtp test option to within the "SMTP Email" Settings block.
- Added optional option to prevent full page reload.
- SMTP Test and Backup do not reload the admin interface any more.
- Added a test button for checking the e-mail settings.
- Fixed a bug with the _post JavaScript function:
A function was overwriten with a variable and errors were not handled
correctly like a 500 for example.
panic!()'s only appear on stderr, this makes tracking down some strange
issues harder with the usage of docker since stderr does not get logged
into the bitwarden.log file. This change logs the message to stdout and
the logfile when activated.
I've checked the spots when `Invitation::new()` and `Invitation::take()`
are used and it seems like all spots are already correctly gated. So to
enable invitations via admin API even when invitations are otherwise
disabled, this check can be removed.
This was brought up today:
https://github.com/dani-garcia/bitwarden_rs/issues/752#issuecomment-586715073
I don't think it makes much sense in checking whether admin has the
right to send invitation as admin can change the setting anyway.
Removing the condition allows users to forbid regular users from
inviting new users to server while still preserving the option to do so
via the admin API.
Because of differences in how .on_conflict() works compared to .replace_into() the PostgreSQL backend wasn't correctly ensuring the unique constraint on user_uuid and atype wasn't getting violated.
This change simply issues a DELETE on the unique constraint prior to the insert to ensure uniqueness. PostgreSQL does not support multiple constraints in ON CONFLICT clauses.