For request transparency, HTTP proxies may set the Forwarded header to
specify who the original requester is.
For requests from localhost only, we make Eyre respect the Forwarded
header, and adjust the handled ip address accordingly.
Note that we do not support X-Forwarded or other non-standard variants.
The header remains in the request, so server applications can handle
them as desired.
Fixes#2723.
When sending a response to an authenticated request, update the session
to last for +session-timeout again, and send an updated cookie to match.
Assuming the user makes an actual HTTP request at least once a week,
this will make sure they don't get logged out automatically. Simply
keeping a channel open, unfortunately, doesn't count.
Instead of setting a timer for every session, we set a single expiry
timer when the first session is created. On the subsequent wake event,
we clear all cookies that have expired at that time, then set a timer
for when the next session expires.
This approach gives us flexibility wrt sessions going forward, allowing
extending or early deleting of sessions without having to care about the
related timers.
Note that in +load, we clear all existing sessions. We would start the
expiry timer flow there, but can't. Forcing the user to login again
post-ota once isn't the end of the world.
We inspect the wire of our subscriber to see if we need to produce the
result as a %public-keys or a %boon. This is bad -- we should proxy the
subscription to avoid this need, but this doesn't make that change yet.
%pubs is an old name that doesn't exist anymore (last existed around
September 2019). The new version is /public-keys, but it's worked so
far because /public-keys has only one item in the path, so it missed the
conditional. This commit makes the intent more clear.
The [%a @ @ *] could be just [%a @ *], but I leave it to reduce the
chance of breaking stuff.
Somehow we ended up with flows which expected to awaken but did not wake
up. This was likely caused by the error in r920j OTA, urbit-os-v1.0.18.
This adds a command which ensures that every flow has an active timer.
I expect this to be needed only once, but it's a pretty general tool, so
it's worth keeping.
I've included an unused @t parameter to more easily add simple debug
commands to ames without having to add a new task
The subscription changes in drum broke existing subscriptions. This
worked alright (though loud) for dojo, but it left chat-cli "frozen"
unless you manually unlinked/relinked. This does that automatically.
It also includes a refactoring of +on-load in drum, to avoid vain
repetition.
We need to get updates directly into %home in case the marks depend on
changes to hoon.hoon. %base has no reason to exist.
Our ota strategy is now to merge from parent/kids to home, then
parent/kids to kids.
* origin/release/link-dojo:
chat-cli: allow sending • character
chat-cli: always talk to local ship only
chat-cli: single-target sole effects as needed
chat-cli: don't allow excessively small cli widths
chat-cli: pull in sole-sur namespace where relevant
chat-cli: remove unused entropy from state
chat-cli: print newlines correctly
chat-cli: support multiple sole connections
chat-cli: don't crash on %bad-text
dojo: rename remote access generators
gall: fix handling of empty path list
dojo: remove unused %json poke
dojo: add remote access controls
drum: switch to per-ship /sole/drum duct
Signed-off-by: Philip Monk <phil@pcmonk.me>
At some point this should be more properly styled similar to +by, +in,
and +to, but for now this reduces duplication and makes the ordered map
available to everyone.
* origin/philip/ames-dedup:
clay: don't send peers to message pump
ames: only dedupe long messages
ames: don't split messages until ready to send
ames: dedup new messages and fragments
This will fix the issue described in #2867 for ducts that have already
triggered the bug. This will also send spurious acks for any messages
that are outstanding at the time of the upgrade, but I don't believe
this will cause a serious problem.
Support /=peers= and /=peer=/~ship scries for getting at all peers and
a specific peer's connection state, respectively.
Moves some internal types into zuse for easier external use.
Trying to reduce the size of ames queues. This deduplicates incoming
message-blobs by comparing with existing message-blobs in other queues.
It also stops splitting into fragments in +feed-packets. Instead, it
splits into fragments at the last moment, in +encrypt. This means we
don't have to store a large number of packets in our home road.
-merge will replace |merge so that. Once they reach feature parity and
%info is rewritten to forward to -commit, we can rip out about half of
clay.hoon
Makes it so that |cancel %force skips the next thing in the queue if
you're not in the middle of something. If you are in the middle of
something, it skips the thing you're in the middle of (just like naked
|cancel).
This should resolve issues where |cancel doesn't drain the queue.
%park is a plumbing commit task. It guarantees completion in a single
event, so you have to do much of the work before calling it. -commit
is an example of how to do this.
When a ship breaches, we remove all messages that have yet to be
delivered to an app (eg if it's not yet started). We also add
|gall-sear to do this manually, but this shouldn't be needed in normal
operation.
Finally, to unblock ~zod and ~bus on mainnet, we sear one particular
ship automatically on loading hood. It cannot be done manually because
no userpace changes can be made until it's unblocked.
Gives you a poor man's progress bar. For example, to determine how much
of an OTA you've downloaded from your sponsor, run:
|ames-sift (sein:title our now our)
|ames-verb %rcv
and then to turn it off:
|ames-verb
* master: (484 commits)
king: Slight CLI cleanup and fix test build.
king: Add command-line flags to configure HTTP and HTTPS ports.
groups: reduce metadata updates, removal
chat: reducer handles metadata removal
groups: exclude group metadata from channels list
groups: set and surface group name metadata
groups: remove dummy 'share' flow, 'default' group
contacts: rename, migrate '~contacts' to '~groups'
sh/release: rename vere release tarballs
vere: patch version bump (v0.10.3 -> v0.10.4.rc1) [ci skip]
pills: updated brass and solid
chat: pull room contacts from associated group
chat: spell 'permanent' correctly
eyre: remove padding from 'access' input
chat: only delete metadata for a chat if you created it
chat: settings inputs add borders on focus
vere: disables gc on |mass in the daemon process
chat: remove console.log from metadataAction
chat: style fixes during review, use metadata-hook
chat: edit description, color settings
...
* origin/os1-rc: (439 commits)
pills: updated brass and solid
chat: pull room contacts from associated group
chat: spell 'permanent' correctly
eyre: remove padding from 'access' input
chat: only delete metadata for a chat if you created it
chat: settings inputs add borders on focus
chat: remove console.log from metadataAction
chat: style fixes during review, use metadata-hook
chat: edit description, color settings
chat: add update-metadata to metadata reducer
chat: revise api.js to match data structures
metadata-json: add json to action parsers
chat: construct settings page for metadata
chat: correct bottom border on join links
chat: copy shortcodes
chat: linkify unmanaged chats
metadata-hook: support group members other than host creating shared resources
contacts: add bg-gray0 to root page
chat + contact views: updated for style and to assert that group-path must be equal to app-path if there are ships in the members set
contacts: changed color + copy of "add to group" button
...
It's hard to say what's the safest thing to do when we get an ack we
weren't expecting due to losing outstanding.agents.state in +load
3-to-4, so this gives both a watch-ack and a poke-ack. This seems most
likely to succeed.
Does not change state type, but clears outstanding.agents.state since
it's full of garbage values. This introduces a possibility that we may
have been in the middle of something, so we handle that in a reasonably
sane way.
outstanding.agents.state is a queue of what sort of message we sent to a
foreign app. We use it so that when the acknowledgment comes back we
know whether to treat it as a watch-ack, poke-ack, or neither. We used
to put this info in the wire, but this gave us a different ames flow,
which meant %leave and %watch didn't get associated (causing #2079).
The error was that when when retrieving the item from the queue, we put
the new 1-item-shorter queue back in outstanding.agents.state at a
different wire than it came from, so the queues never actually got
shorter, and acknowledgments of the wrong sort were commonly produced.
This caused problems mainly in situations where we poke and peer on the
same wire, and possibly when a subscription was cancelled.
Possibly related to #2206 and #2176. I would expect this bug to cause
those issues, but I haven't verified the converse. Also possibly
related to #2153 and #2079.
Due to asynchronicity, Ford can receive responses from Clay to requests
that it has already attempted to cancel. This removes some overzealous
assertions that this wouldn't happen.
@ixv recently uncovered a bug (#2180) in Ford that caused certain
rebuilds to crash. @Fang- and I believe this change should fix the bug,
and we have confirmed that the reproduction that used to fail about two
thirds of the time now has not failed at all in the ten or so times
we've run it since then. @Fang- is still running more tests to confirm
the fix with more certainty.
It turned out the cause was that (depending on the rebuild order, which
is unspecified and should not need to be specified), Ford could enqueue
a provisional sub-build to be run but then, later in the same +gather
call, discover that the sub-build was in fact an orphan and delete it
from builds.state accordingly. Then when Ford tried to run the
sub-build, it would have already been deleted from the state, so Ford
would crash when trying to process its result in +reduce.
The fix was to make sure that when we discover a provisional sub-build
is orphaned, dequeue it from candidate-builds and next-builds to make
sure we don't try to run it. I'm about 95% sure this fix completely
solves the bug.
Uses Zuse's previously unused +harden helper function to streamline
+task unwrapping in vanes.
(Arguably, in landlocked vanes like Ford, we should crash if we get a
%soft task, since no events should be coming in directly from the
outside.)
There was a typo in the routing logic that was comparing equality
against a value where it should have been doing a pattern match. The
value compared against contained the literal * gate, which would never
match route.peer-state, so this condition was always true, meaning the
fix that had added this extra condition (5406f06) did not actually
change the behavior from what it been previously.
If we receive the naxplanation before the nack, the assertion in the gte
direction fails. The intent of the assertion is to make sure top of the
live queue never falls behind current.state, so it was simply in the
wrong direction.
Instead of providing a (unit path), allows for (list path), which better
supports the "update to path and subpath cases".
For example, if /things wants updates about everything, and
/things/specific wants updates about the specific thing, they'll both
need to receive a %fact when the specific thing changes.
Previously, these would have been two separate moves. Now, gall handles
the multi-targeting for you.