Rust 1.83 comes with a bunch of new lints for elidible lifetimes. Those
also trigger in the generated code of `derivative`. That crate is
actually unmaintained so we replace our usages of it with `derive_more`.
These customizations were from before we used `cargo cross` for all
architectures in CI.
1.77.1 has been tested to work with the following clients:
- [x] Apple
- [x] Android
- [x] Windows
Our caches in GitHub actions are hopelessly overflowing, plus for the
Kotlin and Swift jobs, we don't seem to be doing a particularly good job
at caching the build outputs because those jobs take forever.
Instead of using GitHub actions, this PR configures `sccache` for all
Rust compilation commands and uses a GCP bucket to store the artifacts.
This speeds up some of the builds a fair bit. Android now finishes in
~6minutes.
Apart from the self-hosted MacOS 14 runner, the Swift jobs are slow but
still a lot faster than what we currently have.
Windows seems to be quite slow at compiling / fetching artefacts which
is negatively impacted by this change because they now have to be
fetched from the bucket.
Overall, I think this is a net-positive though and should be much easier
to maintain going forward.
---------
Co-authored-by: Jamil <jamilbk@users.noreply.github.com>
This brindgs connlib from its own separated repo to firezone's monorepo.
On top of bringing connlib we also add and unify the Dockerfile for all
rust binaries and add a docker-compose that can run a headless client, a
relay and a gateway which eventually will test the whole flow between a
client and a resource. For this to work we also incorporated some elixir
scripts to generate portal tokens for those components.
Targets specified in the `rust-toolchain.toml` file are automatically installed by `rustup`. This avoid setup steps for other devs and also simplifies the CI setup.
To be able to compile native code to musl, we do need `musl-gcc` which comes with the `musl-tools` package on ubuntu.
This is an alternative to https://github.com/firezone/firezone/pull/1602
that implements the server using a library I've found called
`stun_codec`.
It already has support for parsing a variety of attributes.
The following is a nice website to test some of the functionality:
https://icetest.info/
The server is still listening on:
`ec2-3-89-112-240.compute-1.amazonaws.com:3478`.