7.9 KiB
pict-rs 0.4.0
I am excited to announce a new stable version of pict-rs, version 0.4.0. There's a few big things in 0.4 that might be exciting to developers and admins. Below you'll find a list of changes from 0.3 to 0.4.
Overview
Headline Features:
Other Features:
- Published Dependencies
- HEAD Endpoints
- Healthcheck Endpoints
- Image Preprocessing
- GIF configuration
- JXL and AVIF
- H265, VP8, VP9, and AV1
- 404 Image
- DB Export
- Variant cleanup endpoint
- Client pool configuration
Fixes
Removals
Upgrade Notes
TODO
Descriptions
Reworked Configuration
Starting off with the most important information for server admins: The configuration format has
changed. The pict-rs.toml
is now far better organized, and includes more configuration options
than before. Every field has been moved, so please take a look at the example
pict-rs.toml file for
information on how configuration works in 0.4.
Notable changes:
RUST_LOG
no longer has an effect, seePICTRS__TRACING__LOGGING__TARGETS
andPICTRS__TRACING__OPENTELEMETRY__TARGETS
for configuring log levels.PICTRS__ADDRESS
has becomePICTRS__SERVER__ADDRESS
PICTRS__PATH
has becomePICTRS__OLD_DB__PATH
,PICTRS__REPO__PATH
andPICTRS__STORE__PATH
Reworked Commandline
Also notable for server admins: the commandline interface has changed. All configuration that can be expressed via the pict-rs.toml file or related environment variables can be set via the commandline as well.
Running the pict-rs server now requires invoking the run
subcommand. Here are some examples:
$ pict-rs run
$ pict-rs -c /etc/pict-rs.toml run
$ pict-rs run filesystem -p /path/to/files sled -p /path/to/metadata
There is one flag that I will call out here: --save-to <path>
. This can be incredibly helpful when
debugging pict-rs. It dumps the configuration that pict-rs is currently using to a file of your
choosing. Example:
$ PICTRS__SERVER__ADDRESS=127.0.0.1:1234 pict-rs --save-to debug.toml run
CTRL^C
$ cat debug.toml
It can also be useful to save your existing commandline arguments into a reusable configuration:
$ pict-rs --save-to config.toml \
--log-targets warn \
--log-format json \
--console-address '127.0.0.1:6669' \
--opentelemetry-url 'http://localhost:4317' \
run \
-a '127.0.0.1:1234' \
--api-key "$API_KEY" \
--client-pool-size 10 \
--media-max-width 200 \
--media-max-height 200 \
--media-max-file-size 1 \
--media-enable-full-video true \
--media-video-codec av1 \
--media-format webp \
filesystem \
-p /opt/pict-rs/files \
sled \
-p /opt/pict-rs/metadata \
-e /opt/pict-rs/exports
CTRL^C
$ cat config.toml
$ pict-rs -c config.toml run
Object Storage
This is the biggest feature for pict-rs 0.4, but it isn't new. pict-rs 0.3 had initial support for
uploading to object storage hidden behind the object-storage
compile flag. My docker images and
provided binaries did not enable this feature, so only folks compiling from source could even have
tried using it. In 0.4 I am now much more confident in the object storage support, and use it myself
for my personal setup.
Although pict-rs now supports object storage as a backend for storing uploaded media, it doesn't support generating URLs that bypass the pict-rs server for serving images. I've seen this misconception a couple times during the release candidate process and I would like to put these rumors to rest.
Using object storage when you're in a cloud environment is sensible. The cost for adding object storage is far less than for adding block storage, and although there are egress fees, they are typically very low. Admins currently running pict-rs on a VPS should consider moving to object storage if they find their disk usage is quickly growing.
Using object storage does not fully remove pict-rs' dependence on a local disk. pict-rs stores its metadata in an embedded key/value store called sled, which means it still requires disk access to function.
For new admins, using object storage from the start might be worth considering, but is not required. pict-rs provides a built-in migration path for moving from filesystem storage to object storage, which is documented in the pict-rs readme.
Backgrounded Uploads
This feature is important for keeping pict-rs fast. Since media needs to be processed on upload, upload times may grow long. This is especially true when considering pict-rs' other new features like full video and image preprocessing.
Backgrounded uploads work by deferring the image processing work to a background task in pict-rs,
and responding to the upload HTTP request as soon as the provided file has been stored
successfully. Instead of returning a file alias like the inline upload endpoint, it instead returns
a UUID that represents the current upload process. That UUID can be given to a new claim
endpoint
to retrieve the uploaded media's alias, or an error in the event the media was rejected or failed to
process. The claim endpoint uses a technique called "long polling" in order to notify clients on
completion of the background processing. Clients can request to claim uploaded media as soon as the
backgrounded endpoint reponds with an upload ID, and the server will hold the connection open for at
most 10 seconds while it waits for processing to complete. If processing did not complete in time,
the client can request again to claim the upload.
Full Video
pict-rs now supports uploading video with audio. In 0.3, pict-rs would always strip audio from
uploaded videos. This was intended as a gif-like feature, since pict-rs' primary use is for storing
pictures and not videos. By default, full video is disabled in pict-rs 0.4, but server admins can
opt into full video uploads by setting PICTRS__MEDIA__ENABLE_FULL_VIDEO=true
.
Along with supporting full video, an additional configuration option has been added to help keep
down on file sizes and processing time: PICTRS__MEDIA__MAX_FRAME_COUNT
. This option limits how
many frames an uploaded video is allowed to have, rejecting the upload if it exceeds the provided
value.
It is important to note that while pict-rs is capable of storing videos, it's processing functionality is limited to just the video's thumbnail.
Published Dependencies
pict-rs 0.3's experimental object storage support relied on a custom fork of the rust-s3
library,
which did useful things like enable re-use of an HTTP Client between connections, and making the
Client a trait
, so it could be implemented for any arbitrary HTTP Client. Since then, the PR that
was meant to upstream those changes was closed, and so pict-rs needed to find a replacement that
suited it's needs.
pict-rs now relies on the rusty-s3
library for
enabling object storage. This library takes a sans-io approach, and was simple to integrate with
awc
, my HTTP Client of choice.