Previous to this change, repositories were looked up unfiltered in six different queries, and then filtered using the permissions model, which issued a query per repository found, making search incredibly slow. Instead, we now lookup a chunk of repositories unfiltered and then filter them via a single query to the database. By layering the filtering on top of the lookup, each as queries, we can minimize the number of queries necessary, without (at the same time) using a super expensive join.
Other changes:
- Remove the 5 page pre-lookup on V1 search and simply return that there is one more page available, until there isn't. While technically not correct, it is much more efficient, and no one should be using pagination with V1 search anyway.
- Remove the lookup for repos without entries in the RAC table. Instead, we now add a new RAC entry when the repository is created for *the day before*, with count 0, so that it is immediately searchable
- Remove lookup of results with a matching namespace; these aren't very relevant anyway, and it overly complicates sorting
This feature is subtle but very important: Currently, when a user logs in via an "external" auth system (such as Github), they are either logged into an existing bound account or a new account is created for them in the database. While this normally works jut fine, it hits a roadblock when the *internal* auth system configured is not the database, but instead something like LDAP. In that case, *most* Enterprise customers will prefer that logging in via external auth (like OIDC) will also *automatically* bind the newly created account to the backing *internal* auth account. For example, login via PingFederate OIDC (backed by LDAP) should also bind the new QE account to the associated LDAP account, via either username or email. This change allows for this binding field to be specified, and thereafter will perform the proper lookups and bindings.
This API is still (apparently) being used by the Docker CLI for `docker search` (why?!) and we therefore have customers expecting this to work the same way as the DockerHub.
Moves all the external login services into a set of classes that share as much code as possible. These services are then registered on both the client and server, allowing us in the followup change to dynamically register new handlers
The tutorial can only be used by users, so no need to publish for robots, which can cause issues in pulling for builders and other prod mechanisms if Redis is being finicky
Adds warnings displayed in the superuser config tool that the changes made will only be applied to the local instance (in non-k8s case) or that a deployment is required (in the k8s case)
[Delivers #137537413]
If the feature is enabled and recaptcha keys are given in config, then a recaptcha box is displayed in the UI when creating a user and a recaptcha response code *must* be sent with the create API call for it to succeed.