Adds a cors-registry to Eyre's state that tracks allowed and rejected
origins for the purposes of CORS request handling.
For preflight requests, generates a response in-line.
For simple requests, adds CORS headers onto whatever response is given.
See also:
https://groups.google.com/a/urbit.org/g/dev/c/bb82dwEJGzM/m/q2JjNSx5BwAJ
We used to not accept new indirect lanes if we already have a direct
lane. This means that if Bob, with a publicly-accessible lane, changes
lanes (eg by restarting the process and getting a new port or changing
ip addresses), tries to talk to Alice, who is behind a NAT, then Bob
will try directly but fail (because Alice is behind a NAT), so he will
route the message through her galaxy. This is good -- the message gets
to Alice. However, Alice had a direct route to Bob's old lane, so she
will try to ack on that lane, which fails. She will not time out this
lane because she doesn't know that Bob isn't getting the acks (acks
don't have their own acks).
The solution is that if Alice receives an indirect lane for Bob when she
already has a direct lane, she shouldn't ignore it. If the lane is the
same as what she has, she shouldn't change anything (in particular, she
shouldn't mark it as indirect). But if it's a new lane, she should
discard her old direct lane and use the new indirect lane.
RFC2396 defines[1] unreserved characters as alphanumerics and nine "mark"
characters. We were only parsing for four of those, leading to parsing failure
for valid URLs.
[1]: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2396#appendix-A
In Ford Fusion, Clay builds generators but Dojo and Eyre run them. Dojo
is already virtualized with a scry function, so +mule is fine, but Eyre
is not, so Eyre needs to use +mock and explicitly supply the scry
function. This does that. Fortunately, the produced result is simple
and easily clammable.
Fixes#3089
No longer abuse the desk field, instead making use of the path. Reject
any scries outside of the local ship, empty desk and current time as
invalid.
Expose ducts only under a debug endpoint, nothing else should care about
being able to inspect them.
Add scry endpoints for the very next timer (if any), and all timers up
to and including a specified timestamp.