improve parsing of gui-address overrides
make checks for whether the gui-address is overridden consistent by
checking whether the environment variable is set and not an empty
string. the `Network()` function however checked for the inclusion of
a slash instead of the presence of any characters. If the config file's
gui address was set to a unix socket and the gui override to a tcp
address, then the function would have wrongly returned "unix".
the `URL()` function always returned the config file's gui address if a
unix socket was configured, even if an override was specified.
the `URL()` function wrongly formatted unix addresses. the http(s)
protocol was used as the sheme and the path was percent escaped. because
of the previous bug, this could only be triggered if the config file's
gui address was tcp and an unix socket override was given.
simplify the `useTLS()` function's codepath for overrides.
Co-authored-by: digital <didev@dinid.net>
What hash is used to store the password should ideally be an
implementation detail, so that every user of the GUIConfiguration
object automatically agrees on how to handle it. That is currently
distribututed over the confighandler.go and api_auth.go files, plus
tests.
Add the SetHasedPassword() / CompareHashedPassword() API to keep the
hashing method encapsulated. Add a separate test for it and adjust
other users and tests. Remove all deprecated imports of the bcrypt
package.
When the GUI/API is bound to localhost, we enforce that the Host header
looks like localhost. This can be disabled by setting
insecureSkipHostCheck in the GUI config.
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3558
This adds a config to enable debug functions on the API server, which is
by default disabled. When enabled, the /rest/debug things become
available and become available without requiring a CSRF token (although
authentication is required if configured).
We also add a new endpoint /rest/debug/cpuprof?duration=15s (with the
duration being configurable, defaulting to 30s). This runs a CPU profile
for the duration and returns it as a file. It sets headers so that a
browser will save the file with an informative name.
The same is done for heap profiles, /rest/debug/heapprof, which does not
take any parameters.
The purpose of this is that any user can enable debugging under
advanced, then point their browser to the endpoint above and get a file
that contains a CPU or heap profile we can use, with the filename
telling us what version and architecture the profile is from.
On the command line, this becomes
curl -O -J http://localhost:8082/rest/debug/cpuprof?duration=5s
curl: Saved to filename
'syncthing-cpu-darwin-amd64-v0.14.3+4-g935bcc0-110307.pprof'
GitHub-Pull-Request: https://github.com/syncthing/syncthing/pull/3467