When using `OR` in a where clause, a composite index can't be used. We should use a `UNION` to take advantages of it.
Instead, create 2 indexes on each hashed urls and make 2 queries to find an url. It'll be faster than the previous solution.
- Added index on entry table for given_url field
- Fix tests:
The previous `bit.ly` url redirected to doc.wallabag but that url doesn't exist in the fixtures.
I used our own internal "redirector" to create a redirect to an url which exist in the fixtures.
Also, updating current migration to use the new `WallabagMigration`.
We initially ignored the `composer.lock` because it generated a lock of rebase on PR when someone updated it and the master updated it too.
Now we have less contributions (sadly) so I think we won't run against that problem.
Also, it'll solve issue about people cloning the master and got angry because composer eat all the available memory to determine packages to install.
It'll also be much easier to make release.
Scrutinizer & Travis will be faster too.
Simplify the logic from #3158 by hashing all the urls from the request,
and only doing a search by hash. This allows to get performance benefits
from the new indexed hash column even when using older clients that do
not hash the URL in the request.
Fixes: #3158, #3919
Signed-off-by: Olivier Mehani <shtrom@ssji.net>
detail=metadata will nullify the content field of entries in order to
make smaller responses.
detail=full keeps the former behavior, it sends the content of entries.
It's the default, for backward compatibility.
Fixes#2817
Signed-off-by: Kevin Decherf <kevin@kdecherf.com>
Some issue appeared after the release of PHP 7.2.17 about Intl Memory
Leak / infinite loop.
To fix it we should upgrade to Symfony 3.4 (which is done in wallabag
2.4) but for the 2.3 branch, we'll use a temporary fix for the Locale
issue.
Essentially, same as commit 038fccd for single entry views. From that commit:
> Showing the preview picture usually leads to showing a duplicate
> image, and frequently leads to showing duplicate images directly
> adjacent to each other.