This was flagged as an issue by codeQL
> Server crash [High]
> The server of this route handler will terminate when an
> uncaught exception from this location escapes an
> asynchronous callback.
The auth functions are a bloody mess and need to be cleaned up.
using various callback functions and using variables as pointers makes the logic
hard to follow and hence idiotic to type too, as multiple orthogonal logic paths
are mixed up into one function.
This really needs to be untangled
The sort event bundled networks and channels for no reason at all.
They share none of the actual logic, so combining them just makes
the typing poor but serves no benefit.
Node apparently throws even on valid ipv6 input in certain environments,
probably due to the DNS server returning SERVFAIL.
Guard against it and fallback with the plain IP
Fixes: https://github.com/thelounge/thelounge/issues/4768
Prior to this, the search is still racy but one tends to notice
this only when the DB is large or network is involved.
The user can initiate a search, get bored, navigate to another chan
issue a different search.
Now however, the results of the first search come back in and
hilarity ensues as we are now confused with the state.
To avoid this, keep track of the last search done and any result
that comes in that isn't equal to the active query is garbage and
can be dropped.
TS type assertions need to be avoided.
The following trivial example demonstrates why
```
type Person = {
name: string;
isBad: boolean;
};
function makePerson(): Person {
const p: Person = {name: 'whatever'} as Person
p.isBad = false
return p // theoretically we are now good, p is a Person
}
```
Should the type ever change though, TS will happily trot along
```
type Person = {
name: string;
isBad: boolean;
omgHowCouldYou: number;
};
function makePerson(): Person {
const p: Person = {name: 'whatever'} as Person
p.isBad = true
return p // p is *not* a Person, omgHowCouldYou is missing
}
```
But we pinky swore to the compiler that p is in fact a Person.
In other words, the types are now wrong and you will fail during
runtime.