Ordinarily, eyre cleans up the relevant gall subscriptions whenever a
channel disappears. In yet unresolved erroneous behavior though, it may
leave a gall subscription open, despite wiping the channel from state.
Attempting to pass the response onto the deleted channel anyway results
in an %eyre-no-channel error later in the event. The volume of these
errors can degrade the user experience, as per #3196.
To resolve the annoyance (but not the underlying issue) we detect the
"subscription has no channel" case, and issue a %leave. Doing so
requires additional information in the wire, so we add that in,
refactoring the relevant wire building along the way.
Note that due to the wire requirements, this cannot resolve existing
cases. For that, we depend on bc929ba6d.
As part of the solution to #3196, we need to clean up any gall
subscriptions that eyre didn't properly clean up.
Since detecting that is hard, we opt to just wipe _all_ eyre-originating
subscriptions from gall. We inspect the duct, which isn't good, but it's
only just this once.
The main thing here is that we aggressively check whether we're in
ancestry of another mergebase candidate. This means we don't have to do
a 2nd pass to eliminate redundant candidates.
Change the definition of base-hash to be the mergebase of %home with the
OTA source. This means it's the most recent successfully-applied
update, which is usually the most important information.
Add sour-hash, which is the hash of the most recently *downloaded*
update, regardless of whether it applied successfuly (ie the old
base-hash).
Add a summary of the various hashes at the top of gen/trouble.
Only no-op if the incoming commit's parent is the old head of the desk.
Also move the printing near the end so we can know exactly if anything
changed.
Jael now stores a `step` that is combined with the original salt to
produce a new code. A `%step` card is used to increment that value,
and effectively resetting the keys. Because the first `step` is zero,
the first code is the same as before.
Eyre was changed to be notified with `%code-changed` so it can forget
old cookies, sessions and discard all the existing channels.
A new generator was added |code, that does both querying and
resetting the code
|code :: shows current code, step and help
|code %reset :: changes the code
The old +code generator still works correctly.
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.
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.
When merging, +reachable-takos is called roughly once per merge commit
in the ancestry of the new commit. +reachable-takos was exponential in
the number of merge commits in the ancestry of the commit it's looking
at, due to mishandling of the accumulator. This makes it linear.
Of course, linear x linear is still quadratic, which is not great. I
doubt +reachable-takos can be made asymptotically better, but
+reduce-merge-points/+find-merge-points probably can. 50 merge commits
already gives about 14.000 iterations through the loop in
+reachable-takos. Another option is to try to memoize this somehow, but
a simple ~+ is insufficient since `s` is usually different.
In local tests on macOS with a -L copy of ~wicdev-wisryt, this speeds up
OTAs significantly. The majority of time was spent on this.
Attempt to convert the scry result to the mark that was asked for,
failing the scry (with ~) if the conversion fails.
Eyre's scry logic, then, can pass the requested mark directly into gall.
Exposes a scry endpoint. Any requests made to the /app/scry.mark url
under the endpoint will scry into %app using a %gx scry, at the
/scry/noun path, and attempt to convert the scry result into the %mark,
before converting that into the %mime mark, and sending that as an http
response.
In addition to producing the action bound for a given request, now also
produces the subset of the request url that comes _after_ the path at
which the binding has been established.
Will allow some bindings to more easily dispatch off the relevant part
of the url.
If we failed the password check, the login page served to us would never
include any redirect details, even if they were there in the original request.
Now we simply (attempt to) parse out the redirect field a little earlier.
Associates channels with the authentication sessions that opened them,
and deletes the channel when its associated session expires.
Also updates the debug dashboard to display channel counts per session.
Turns +on-channel-timeout into +discard-channel, which cleans up the
entirety of the channel, based on its current state. This allows us to
simplify the %delete channel request into a simple function call.
Changes the HTTP status code of the redirect that occurs upon a
successful login from 307 to 303. 307 preserves the method of the
original request, so the redirected request is a POST. With the new SPA,
this causes a 404 as app/file-server validates the method of the
request, something that did not happen in earlier versions of landscape.
303 instead changes the method to always produce a GET request.
Set up, by default, on /~/logout.
Sending a POST request to this expires the current session and redirects
to the login page. If the "all" key is set in the request body, expires
all open sessions.
We build a reef for each desk but use the compiler from our kernel. At
some point we should use the compiler from the desk, but then we need to
validate any results we get from it.
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.