The user object was triggering the creation of a user context that tried to grab something from the session. The later code never tried to use this due to the checkPerm flag.
I'm assuming the user model used to have a sane constructor w/o side effects in the times where this code had it's heyday.
Makes the first tab remoeable and the tracks page be full width after removing the last tab. You can press the "Dashboard" link to open it back up again.
This makes LibreTime check its version against github releases and lets the user know when to update. It uses the red exclamation point when there is a patch release or if LibreTime is more than one major release ahead. The orange icon is used when LibreTime is on a git install, a single major update is available, or a pre-release version is installed. The green update icon gets used to signify that a new minor release is available. Finally the green checkmark will be used when you are on a stable release.
This makes subform validation work for everything again. I also had to slightly unhack the corresponding js. It's still not very nice in that it still reloads even though ajax would have been enough but I could figure out why the mast source field was not getting the proper values (You can reproduce this by commenting the window.location.reload() in the js).
The previous constraint of NOT NULL made it impossible to create a placeholder entry for later downloading. This uses a 0 default instead of the constraint and downloading as well as the green checkbox work again.
This changes the Vagrant setup to support multiple installations as multiple
boxes. In addition to Ubuntu Vagrant can now be used to install on Debian
as well as on CentOS.
I took the chance to clean up the .deb install a bit and backported analyzer
and celery to SysV proper so it runs there. Some of the distro specfics were
moved to the install script from the python setup scripts to acheive this.
For the CentOS support I added a rather involved OS prepare script. In the
long term this will be added to the preparing-the-server docs we already have.
I had to switch the default port to http-alt (8080). On CentOS 9080 is registered
for ocsp and getting it to work for apache without hacking SELinux is hard. I
think 8080 is the RFC way to go anyhow. If anyone want to override this it
should be rather easy using the --web-port arg and by hacking Vagrantfile.
The PyOpenSSL code has been refactored for all the distros that the Vagrantfile
now supports.
As far as my checks go, I tried this code with all the distros, uploaded a track
and downloaded a unicode and a ssl podcast and was able to listen to them
in each case.
In the experimental CentOS case, the UI is not up to spec since services
need to get scheduled through systemctl and the status overview (ie. on the /?config page)
do not work properly. They need to be as follows:
```
sudo systemctl start airtime-playout
sudo systemctl start airtime-liquidsoap
sudo systemctl start airtime_analyzer.service
sudo systemctl start airtime-celery.service
```