Before this change we used the repo with an initial uppercase `U`. However it is now canonically spelled with a lower case `u`.
This package is too old to have a go.mod but the README clearly states the desired capitalization.
In 4b0d4b818a the
recommended capitalization was changed to lower case.
Co-authored-by: John Oxley <joxley@meta.com>
We upgraded our minimum Go version in commit ca24447090. We can now use
the built-in `min` and `max` functions directly.
Reference: https://go.dev/ref/spec#Min_and_max
Signed-off-by: Eng Zer Jun <engzerjun@gmail.com>
this has a couple of bug fixes and small enhancements.
we are working on reducing the size of this library, but this
version bump does not yet have those improvements.
Running with default set of checks, except disabling the following
- appendAssign: append result not assigned to the same slice (diagnostics check, many false positives)
- captLocal: using capitalized names for local variables (style check, too opinionated)
- commentFormatting: not having a space between `//` and comment text (style check, too opinionated)
- exitAfterDefer: log.Fatalln will exit, and `defer func(){...}(...)` will not run (diagnostics check, to be revisited)
- ifElseChain: rewrite if-else to switch statement (style check, many occurrences and a bit opinionated, to be revisited)
- singleCaseSwitch: should rewrite switch statement to if statement (style check, many occurrences and a bit opinionated, to be revisited)
The code currently hardcodes `text/srt` for all subtitles.
`text/srt` is wrong, it seems `application/x-subrip` is the official
extension coming from the official mime database, at least (and still
works with the Samsung TV I tested with). Also add that one to `fs/
mimetype.go`.
Compared to previous iterations of this PR, I dropped tests ensuring
certain mime types are present - as detection still seems to be fairly
platform-specific.
.idx and .sub subtitle files only work if both are present, but the code
was overwriting the first-inserted element to subtitlesByName, as it was
keyed by the basename without extension.
Make subtitlesByName point to a slice of nodes instead.
Apparently it seems pretty common for subtitles to be put in a
subdirectory called "Subs", rather than in the same directory as the
media file itself.
This covers that usecase, by checking the returned listing for a
directory called "Subs" to exist.
If it does, its child nodes are added to the list before they're being
passed to mediaWithResources, allowing these subtitles to be discovered
automatically.
Sometimes (particularly on macOS amd64) the serve s3 test fails with
TestIntegration/FsMkdir/FsPutError where it wasn't expecting to get an
object but it did.
This is likely caused by a race between the serve s3 goroutine
deleting the half uploaded file and the fstests code looking for it to
not exist.
This fix treats it like any other eventual consistency problem and
retries the check using the test framework.