This adds our short device ID to the basic auth realm. This has at least
two consequences:
- It is different from what's presented by another device on the same
address (e.g., if I use SSH forwards to different dives on the same
local address), preventing credentials for one from being sent to
another.
- It is different from what we did previously, meaning we avoid cached
credentials from old versions interfering with the new login flow.
I don't *think* there should be things that depend on our precise realm
string, so this shouldn't break any existing setups...
Sneakily this also changes the session cookie and CSRF name, because I
think `id.Short().String()` is nicer than `id.String()[:5]` and the
short ID is two characters longer. That's also not a problem...
This adds the ability to have multiple concurrent connections to a single device. This is primarily useful when the network has multiple physical links for aggregated bandwidth. A single connection will never see a higher rate than a single link can give, but multiple connections are load-balanced over multiple links.
It is also incidentally useful for older multi-core CPUs, where bandwidth could be limited by the TLS performance of a single CPU core -- using multiple connections achieves concurrency in the required crypto calculations...
Co-authored-by: Simon Frei <freisim93@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: tomasz1986 <twilczynski@naver.com>
Co-authored-by: bt90 <btom1990@googlemail.com>
This adds an environment variable STVERSIONEXTRA that, when set, gets
added to the version information in the API and GUI.
The purpose of all this is to be able to communicate something about the
bundling or packaging, through the log & GUI and the end user, to the
potential person supporting it -- i.e., us. :) A wrapper can set this
variable to indicate that Syncthing is being run via `SyncTrayzor`,
`Syncthing-macOS`, etc., and thus indicate to the end user that the GUI
they are looking at is perhaps not the only source of truth and
management for this instance.
This fixes various test issues with Go 1.20.
- Most tests rewritten to use fakefs where possible
- Some tests that were already skipped, or dubious (invasive,
unmaintainable, unclear what they even tested) have been removed
- Some actual code rewritten to better support testing in fakefs
Co-authored-by: Eric P <eric@kastelo.net>
This adds the BlocksHash field from the FileInfo to our API output. It
can be useful for debugging, or for external tools. I'm intentionally
leaving it as an opaque base64 string because no meaning should be
derived from it: it's just a string.
This adds a word to the version string when running containerized. The
purpose is mostly to facilitate troubleshooting via screenshot by
"leaking" this rather important aspect of the setup. Additionally, the
version row gets "no-overflow-ellipsis" treatment so that the whole
thing is actually visible in the GUI and the (now useless) tooltip is
removed. In production releases this won't make a difference as the
whole thing will typically fit, but in odd setups it provides more info
up front.
There are some situations where an upgrade wouldn't be supported, even though the noUpgrade bool isn't set. So when handling the errors that are caused by this, when attempting an upgrade, it shouldn't lead to some sort of offline-message/restart/warning/etc...
I added some checks on specific errors related to this and return a 501 (Not Implemented) response instead, in case of an "UpgradeUnsupported"-error. Additionally, on the GUI-side, the 501-response is now not to be considered an error to act upon.
This adds support for syncing extended attributes on supported
filesystem on Linux, macOS, FreeBSD and NetBSD. Windows is currently
excluded because the APIs seem onerous and annoying and frankly the uses
cases seem few and far between. On Unixes this also covers ACLs as those
are stored as extended attributes.
Similar to ownership syncing this will optional & opt-in, which two
settings controlling the main behavior: one to "sync" xattrs (read &
write) and another one to "scan" xattrs (only read them so other devices
can "sync" them, but not apply any locally).
Co-authored-by: Tomasz Wilczyński <twilczynski@naver.com>
* lib/locations: Fix enum values camelCase.
* lib/locations: Remove unused FailuresFile.
* cmd/syncthing: Turn around role of locations storage.
Previously the locations package was used to provide default paths,
possibly with an overridden home directory. Extra paths supplied on
the command line were handled and passed around in the options object.
To make the changed paths available to any other interested package,
override the location setting from the option if supplied, instead of
vice versa when not supplied. Adapt code using this to read from the
locations package instead of passing through the options object.
* lib/locations: Refactor showPaths to locations package.
Generate a reusable string in locations.PrettyPrintPaths().
Enumerating all possible locations in different packages is error
prone, so add a new public function to generate the listing as a
string in the locations package. Adapt cmd/syncthing --paths to use
that instead of its own console output.
* lib/locations: Include CSRF token in pretty printed paths.
* lib/api: New endpoint /rest/system/paths.
The paths should be available for troubleshooting from a running
instance. Using the --paths CLI option is not easy in some
environments, so expose the locations mapping to a JSON endpoint.
Add utility function ListExpandedPaths() that also filters out any
entries which still contain variable placeholders.
* gui: List runtime paths in separate log viewer tab.
* Wrap paths.
* lib/syncthing: Utilize locations.Get() instead of passing an arg.
* Include base directories, move label to table caption.
* gui: Switch to hard-coded paths instead of iterating over all.
* gui: Break aboutModalView into tabs.
Use tabs to separate authors from included third-party software.
* gui: Move paths from log viewer to about modal.
* lib/locations: Adjust pretty print output order to match GUI.
* gui, authors: Remove additional bot names and fix indent.
The indentation changed because of the tabbed about dialog, fix the
authors script to respect that.
Skip Syncthing*Automation in authors list as well.
* Update AUTHORS list to remove bot names.
* Revert AUTHORS email order change.
* Do not emphasize DB and log file locations.
* Review line wrapping.
* review part 1: strings.Builder, naming
* Rename and extend locations.Set() with error handling.
Remodel the Override() function along the existing SetBaseDir() and
rename it to simply Set(). Make sure to use absolute paths when given
log file or GUI assets override options. Add proper error reporting
if that goes wrong.
* Remove obsolete comment about empty logfile option.
* Don't filter out unexpanded baseDir placeholders, only ${timestamp}.
* Restore behavior regarding special "-" logfile argument.
If the option is given, but with empty value, assume the no log
file (same as "-"). Don't try to convert the special value to an
absolute path though and document this fact in a comment for the Set()
function.
* Use template to check for location key validity.
* Don't filter out timestamp placeholders.
* lib/api: Remove paths from /rest/system/status.
* lib/ur: Properly initialize map in failure data (fixes#8479)
Co-authored-by: Jakob Borg <jakob@kastelo.net>
all: Add package runtimeos for runtime.GOOS comparisons
I grew tired of hand written string comparisons. This adds generated
constants for the GOOS values, and predefined Is$OS constants that can
be iffed on. In a couple of places I rewrote trivial switch:es to if:s,
and added Illumos where we checked for Solaris (because they are
effectively the same, and if we're going to target one of them that
would be Illumos...).
* lib/api: Note ItemStarted and ItemFinished for default filtering.
The reasoning why LocalChangeDetected and RemoteChangeDetected events
are not included in the event stream by default (without explicit
filter mask requested) also holds for the ItemStarted and ItemFinished
events. They should be excluded as well when we start to break the
API compatibility for some reason.
* gui: Enumerate unused event types in the eventService.
Define constants for the unused event types as well, for completeness'
sake. They are intentionally not handled in the GUI currently.
* cmd/syncthing: Harmonize uppercase CLI argument placeholders.
Use ALL-UPPERCASE and connecting dashes to distinguish argument
placeholders from literal argument options (e.g. "cpu" or "heap" for
profiling). The dash makes it clear which words form a single
argument and where a new argument starts.
This style is already used for the "syncthing cli debug file" command.
* lib/model: Simplify event data structure.
Using map[string]interface{} is not necessary when all values are
known to be strings.
This makes us use TLS 1.3+ on sync connections by default. A new option
`insecureAllowOldTLSVersions` exists to allow communication with TLS
1.2-only clients (roughly Syncthing 1.2.2 and older). Even with that
option set you get a slightly simplified setup, with the cipher suite
order fixed instead of auto detected.
No longer hide the web UI controls for the new untrusted/encrypted
device feature. Testing hasn't been very widespread, but there has been
some and quite a few bugs have been caught and fixed. I believe its time
to not hide it anymore, and cautiously recommend usage. E.g. mention
that the feature hasn't been widely used yet and anyone using it is an
early adopter, but drop the bit about not using it with production data.
We can maybe stress the need for backups in general and especially
using this.
This loosens the ‘is this localhost?’ check to include *.localhost host
names.
This allows for clearer (hence better) names to be used in browsers,
e.g. when accessing a remote syncthing instance ‘foo’ using a ssh port
forward, one can use foo.localhost to remind oneself which one is which.
💡 Without these changes, Syncthing shows a ‘Host check error’ when
pointing a browser at http://foo.localhost/, and with these changes, the
interface loads as usual.
The .localhost top level domain is a reserved top-level domain (RFC 2606):
> The ".localhost" TLD has traditionally been statically defined in
> host DNS implementations as having an A record pointing to the
> loop back IP address and is reserved for such use. Any other use
> would conflict with widely deployed code which assumes this use.
> – https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2606
As Wikipedia puts it:
> This allows the use of these names for either documentation purposes
or in local testing scenarios. – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.localhost
On Linux systems, systemd-resolved resolves *.localhost, on purpose:
https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-resolved.service.html
See also #4815, #4816.
This splits the ignore getting to two methods, one that loads from disk
(the old one) and one that just returns whatever is already loaded (the
new one). The folder summary service which is just interested in stats
now uses the latter method. This means that it, and API calls that call
it, does not get blocked by folder I/O.