* Tidy code a bit thanks to clippy
Clippy 1.54 newly detects some redundant constructs, that's nice.
sort_unstable() should yield exact same results as sort() for `Vec<&str>`
and could be faster, clippy says.
* Add clippy to CI
The past behavior of clients was to, on every fetch from the server, update each of its peer's endpoints with the one reported from the server. While this wasn't a problem on certain types of NATs to help with holepunching, in some situations it caused previously working connections to no longer work (when one peer had a port-restricted or symmetric cone type NAT).
This commit adds a subcommand to both the client and server to allow
changing the name of a peer. The peer retains all the same attributes as
before (public keys, IPs, admin/disabled status, etc.).
Closes#87
This subcommand takes a shell as an argument and generates shell
completions for that shell to stdout.
example:
```
$ innernet completions bash
OR
$ innernet-server completions bash
```
This commit adds a `delete-cidr` to both the client and server. It walks
through the prompts just like adding a CIDR.
Only eligible CIDRs are presented to the user. Eligibilty requires:
- CIDR has no child CIDRs
- CIDR has no assigned peers
Closes#23
Based on the conversation from #5 (comment) - this changes innernet's behavior on Linux from automatically falling back to the userspace, instead requiring --backend userspace to be specified.
This should help people avoid weird situations in environments like Docker.
The server now expects a UNIX timestamp after which the invitation will be expired. If a peer invite hasn't been redeemed after it expires, the server will clean up old entries and allow the IP to be re-allocated for a new invite.
Closes#24