- we only need to provide the patch if we want to force Ghost to use a
specific version
- otherwise, we can just use major.minor because we use the tilde
versioning method
- having the patch version here just encourages you to bump it
unnecessarily, so removing it cleans up the usage for now
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/320
- Added more complex mobiledoc structure in the post.published test to check for correct transformation of special purpose `__GHOST_URL__`. The snapshot has a correct URL transformation, which gives confidence it works properly
- I lowered the code coverage on the repo to the point where
it started failing because I added a new export to the config library
- this wasn't easy to add tests for because the existing config tests
use the loader directly and not the library export
- instead, I'm just going to make the dev script access the loader, and
make a note to clean this up in the future when we pull out the config
module
- because the cwd of `.github/dev.js` is not `ghost/core`, it doesn't
pick up config.local.json files, so any configuration you set in there
isn't applied
- this meant that developers with HTTPS configured locally couldn't use
`--stripe` because it wouldn't configure the Stripe listening URL
correctly
- this adds an exports to the config lib to allow passing options in,
which I then utilize to pass the directory that config resides in
- this should fix the aforementioned problem with HTTPS
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/320
- There noe "roles" attached to the post's author when the 'post.added' event is fired. Webhooks function based of the model events and differ slightly with it's output comparing to the API response. For example, in case of Posts API, there'a an additional 'findOne' call (ref.: https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/blob/main/ghost/core/core/server/models/post.js#L1224-L1227) before returning the post to the endpoint handler and then passing that to the output serializer.
- If we want to have 1:1 copy of webhooks outputs and API outputs, we should rethink how we rely on model event data which is never the same as API controller level data.
refs a499f866f3
refs d817e5830d
- The user-agent used in outgoing Ghost requests (webhooks mostly) is dependent on the Ghost version - snapshots break if the matcher is not dynamic.
- There will be a few more webhooks tests coming soon, so makes sense to have this matcher moved to a common "framework matchers"
fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/14508
This change requires the frontend to send an explicit `emailType` when sending a magic link. We default to `subscribe` (`signin` for invite only sites) for now to remain compatible with the existing behaviour.
**Problem:**
When a member tries to login and that member doesn't exist, we created a new member in the past.
- This caused the creation of duplicate accounts when members were guessing the email address they used.
- This caused the creation of new accounts when using an old impersonation token, login link or email change link that was sent before member deletion.
**Fixed:**
- Trying to login with an email address that doesn't exist will throw an error now.
- Added new and separate rate limiting to login (to prevent user enumeration). This rate limiting has a higher default limit of 8. I think it needs a higher default limit (because it is rate limited on every call instead of per email address. And it should be configurable independent from administrator rate limiting. It also needs a lower lifetime value because it is never reset.
- Updated error responses in the `sendMagicLink` endpoint to use the default error encoding middleware.
- The type (`signin`, `signup`, `updateEmail` or `subscribe`) is now stored in the magic link. This is used to prevent signups with a sign in token.
**Notes:**
- Between tests, we truncate the database, but this is not enough for the rate limits to be truly reset. I had to add a method to the spam prevention service to reset all the instances between tests. Not resetting them caused random failures because every login in every test was hitting those spam prevention middlewares and somehow left a trace of that in those instances (even when the brute table is reset). Maybe those instances were doing some in memory caching.
fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/14508
This change requires the frontend to send an explicit `emailType` when sending a magic link. We default to `subscribe` (`signin` for invite only sites) for now to remain compatible with the existing behaviour.
**Problem:**
When a member tries to login and that member doesn't exist, we created a new member in the past.
- This caused the creation of duplicate accounts when members were guessing the email address they used.
- This caused the creation of new accounts when using an old impersonation token, login link or email change link that was sent before member deletion.
**Fixed:**
- Trying to login with an email address that doesn't exist will throw an error now.
- Added new and separate rate limiting to login (to prevent user enumeration). This rate limiting has a higher default limit of 8. I think it needs a higher default limit (because it is rate limited on every call instead of per email address. And it should be configurable independent from administrator rate limiting. It also needs a lower lifetime value because it is never reset.
- Updated error responses in the `sendMagicLink` endpoint to use the default error encoding middleware.
- The type (`signin`, `signup`, `updateEmail` or `subscribe`) is now stored in the magic link. This is used to prevent signups with a sign in token.
**Notes:**
- Between tests, we truncate the database, but this is not enough for the rate limits to be truly reset. I had to add a method to the spam prevention service to reset all the instances between tests. Not resetting them caused random failures because every login in every test was hitting those spam prevention middlewares and somehow left a trace of that in those instances (even when the brute table is reset). Maybe those instances were doing some in memory caching.
no issue
- All content-length snapshots should be using the same matcher for consistency - anyContentLength. It's more explicit about what the matcher is all about and might be useful to have content-length matchers in one place if it ever changes (the header value should be a damn digit after all, not a string!) (ref. https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc7230#section-3.3.2)
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2024
Without validation it was possible to send a string of comma separated
email addresses to the endpoint, and an email would be sent to each
address, bypassing any rate limiting.
This bug does not allow for an authentication bypass exploit. It is purely a
spam email concern.
Credit: Sandip Maity <maitysandip925@gmail.com>
no issue
- The milliseconds configuration here is different to "seconds" used in the max-age header value itself and other middlewares (like CORS). It's not going to be fixed upstream, so whenever this piece of code is touched again would be smart to get our own converter from seconds to milliseconds going, or some other mechanism making max-age configuration uniform across codebase
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/320
- The URL matcher is very likely to be reused in the future, so having it abstracted away gives two benefits:
1. Central place to document hacky behavior and easier future cleanup
2. The implementer of the e2e test does not have to see the "hacky note" and just concentrate on the implementation of the test
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/320
- Header snapshot matching was missing from webhook e2e tests. With a bumped version of webhook-mock-receiver it's now possible to record and match webhook request headers.
fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2017
We process clicks much faster than we process Mailgun events which can result in a higher click rater than open rate shown on the dashboard. This ensures that the open rate will never be lower than the click rate. This is a stopgap solution until we can get click events updating the opened_at time for email_recipients
fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Ghost/issues/15515
- The link relation of a member-click-event was still using the link_id as foreign key instead of redirect_id.
- The members_link_click_events table was renamed to members_click_events, but this change was not reflected in a recent change in the member model (which has the custom filters).
closesTryGhost/Team#2007
- uses request context to add referrer source and medium for a new member
- uses integration name as referrer medium if exists
fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/2008
- New column that stores email click tracking at the time it was created
- Improved frontend side checks for when to show analytics
fixes https://github.com/TryGhost/Team/issues/1993
- Allows filtering members by opened, clicked and received email
- Adds clicked_links filter relation to Member model.
- Adds emails filter relation to Member model.
- Adds opened_emails filter expansion to Member model.
- Updated GhResourceSelect to be able to only show list posts by setting the `type` attribute to `email`.
- Improved code reuse in `filter-value` component.
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/425
refs https://github.com/TryGhost/Toolbox/issues/280
- The versioned API responses vary based on requested version (passed in request's 'accept-version' header). shared caches that sit between Ghost's origin server and the browser would be putting responses with same Vary into the same caching bucket, which is incorrect.
- This change makes response's Vary more granular and tells caching mechanisms to take 'Accept-Version' request header into account when caching.
- Informative read on the topic - https://www.fastly.com/blog/getting-most-out-vary-fastly