This patch updates all dependencies but not "nom".
Done with `cargo upgrade --all` and manual editing.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>
Prior to this change, the IdPathProvider implementation would be
responsible for exiting the process on insufficient / wrong arguments.
However, such error handling should be performed together with the
business logic and not in CLI-parsing related code.
This change introduces a clear separation: both parsing errors and
insufficient id path arguments can now be return from inside the
`get_ids`-method, and get passed up to the application logic to be
handled.
This change is reflected in all instances of IdPathProvider and their
surrounding code.
Signed-off-by: Leon Schuermann <leon.git@is.currently.online>
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>
When installing (a subcrate) from crates.io, it fails because it cannot
find the buildscript. This is the quickfix, simply remove the
buildscript itself and the setup of the buildscript in all Cargo.toml
files.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>
With this patch we move the codebase to Rust-2018.
The diff was generated by executing
cargo fix --all --all-features --edition
on the codebase.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>
When printing the storepath with the ID (when requested by the user), we
have to ask the store for its path.
This is a rather naive implementation which could be improved by only
checking for a boolean in the last iteration and then use a prepared
variable, rather than making the storepath part of the iterator.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>
This patch removes the magic constant we used when calling
`trace_unwrap_exit()` or `map_err_trace_exit_unwrap()`.
We used to call it with `1` as parameter, where the number was the exit
code to use. Now the implementation of the function does it
automatically (using 1 (one) as exit code).
All calls of these functions were fixed. Thanks to vim this was easy.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>
Because this API only errors when write!() errors occur, we can return
the exit code as an error here.
This way the user of the API can immediately exit if there was an IO
error, but the API automatically takes care of the right return value,
returning (exiting) with zero (0) if there was an "Broken pipe" error
and with one (1) otherwise, which is the expected behaviour here.
All calls to that API were changed accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Beyer <mail@beyermatthias.de>