As relict from very early designs of `connlib`, the `Callbacks` trait is still present and defines how the host app receives events from a running `Session`. Callbacks are not a great design pattern however because they force the running code, i.e. `connlib`s event-loop to execute unknown code. For example, if that code panics, all of `connlib` is taken down. Additionally, not all consumers may want to receive events via callbacks. The GUI and headless client for example already have their own event-loop in which they process all kinds of things. Having to deal with the `Callbacks` interface introduces an odd indirection here. To fix this, we instead return an `EventStream` when constructing a `Session`. This essentially aligns the API of `Session` with that of a channel. You receive two handles, one for sending in commands and one for receiving events. A `Session` will automatically spawn itself onto the given runtime so progress is made even if one does not poll on these channel handles. This greatly simplifies the code: - We get to delete the `Callbacks` interface. - We can delete the threaded callback adapter. This was only necessary because we didn't want to block `connlib` with the handling of the event. By using a channel for events, this is automatically guaranteed. - The GUI and headless client can directly integrate the event handling in their event-loop, without having to create an indirection with a channel. - It is now clear that only the Apple and Android FFI layers actually use callbacks to communicate these events. - We net-delete 100 LoC
gui-client
This crate houses a GUI client for Linux and Windows.
Setup (Ubuntu)
To compile natively for x86_64 Linux:
- Install rustup
- Install pnpm
sudo apt-get install build-essential curl file libayatana-appindicator3-dev librsvg2-dev libssl-dev libwebkit2gtk-4.1-dev libxdo-dev wget
Setup (Windows)
To compile natively for x86_64 Windows:
- Install rustup
- Install pnpm
Recommended IDE Setup
(From Tauri's default README)
Building
Builds are best started from the frontend tool pnpm. This ensures typescript
and css is compiled properly before bundling the application.
See the package.json script for more details as to what's
going on under the hood.
# Builds a release exe
pnpm build
# Linux:
# The release exe and deb package are up in the workspace.
stat ../target/release/firezone
stat ../target/release/bundle/deb/*.deb
# Windows:
# The release exe and MSI installer should be up in the workspace.
# The exe can run without being installed
stat ../target/release/Firezone.exe
stat ../target/release/bundle/msi/Firezone_0.0.0_x64_en-US.msi
Signing the Windows MSI in GitHub CI
The MSI is signed in GitHub CI using the firezone/firezone repository's
secrets. This was originally set up using these guides for inspiration:
- https://melatonin.dev/blog/how-to-code-sign-windows-installers-with-an-ev-cert-on-github-actions/
- https://support.globalsign.com/code-signing/code-signing-using-azure-key-vault
Renewing / issuing a new code signing certificate and associated Azure entities is outside the scope of this section. Use the guides above if this needs to be done.
Instead, you'll most likely simply need to rotate the Azure CodeSigning Application's client secret.
To do so, login to the Azure portal using your @firezoneprod.onmicrosoft.com account.
Try to access it via the following deep-link.
If that doesn't work:
- Go to the
Microsoft Entra IDservice - Click on
App Registrations - Make sure the tab
All applicationsis selected - Find and navigate to the
CodeSigningapp registration - Client on
client credentials - Click
New client secret - Note down the secret value. This should be entered into the GitHub repository's secrets as
AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET.
Running
From this dir:
# This will start the frontend tools in watch mode and then run `tauri dev`
pnpm dev
# You can call debug subcommands on the exe from this directory too
# e.g. this is equivalent to `cargo run -- debug hostname`
cargo tauri dev -- -- debug hostname
# The exe is up in the workspace
stat ../target/debug/Firezone.exe
The app's config and logs will be stored at
C:\Users\$USER\AppData\Local\dev.firezone.client.
Platform support
Ubuntu 22.04 and newer is supported.
Tauri says it should work on Windows 10, Version 1803 and up. Older versions may work if you manually install WebView2
x86_64 architecture is supported for Windows. aarch64 and x86_64 are supported for Linux.
Threat model
See Security