Before this commit, webaccess.checkAccess saved the authorization in
user.padAuthorizations[padId] with padId being the read-only pad ID,
however later stages, e.g. in PadMessageHandler, use the real pad ID for
access checks. This led to authorization being denied.
This commit fixes it by only storing and comparing the real pad IDs and
not read-only pad IDs.
This fixes test case "authn user readonly pad -> 200, ok" in
src/tests/backend/specs/socketio.js.
* code tidy up: always evaluates
* tidy up: is always true
* tidy up: remove unused code
* always true/false variables
* unused variable
* tidy up: remove unused code in caretPosition.js
* for squash: Revert "tidy up: remove unused code in caretPosition.js"
The `if` condition was previously always true, so the body should be
preserved. If the body is preserved, other logic can be deleted. I
opened PR #4845 to clean it all up.
This reverts commit 75b03e5a7d.
* for squash: simplify
* for squash: Explain that the getter is used for its side effects
It's very weird to call a getter without using its return value. Add a
comment explaining why this is done so that the reader doesn't get
confused.
* for squash: Revert "tidy up: remove unused code"
The exception test was the purpose of the code.
This reverts commit 85153b1676.
* for squash: Log the tsort results
Co-authored-by: Richard Hansen <rhansen@rhansen.org>
Normally I would let `eslint --fix` do this for me, but there's a bug
that causes:
const x = function ()
{
// ...
};
to become:
const x = ()
=> {
// ...
};
which ESLint thinks is a syntax error. (It probably is; I don't know
enough about the automatic semicolon insertion rules to be confident.)
This will be a breaking change for some people.
We removed all internal password control logic. If this affects you, you have two options:
1. Use a plugin for authentication and use session based pad access (recommended).
1. Use a plugin for password setting.
The reasoning for removing this feature is to reduce the overall security footprint of Etherpad. It is unnecessary and cumbersome to keep this feature and with the thousands of available authentication methods available in the world our focus should be on supporting those and allowing more granual access based on their implementations (instead of half assed baking our own).
There's no need to perform an authentication check in the socket.io
middleware because `PadMessageHandler.handleMessage` calls
`SecurityMananger.checkAccess` and that now performs authentication
and authorization checks.
This change also improves the user experience: Before, access denials
caused socket.io error events in the client, which `pad.js` mostly
ignores (the user doesn't see anything). Now a deny message is sent
back to the client, which causes `pad.js` to display an obvious
permission denied message.
This also fixes a minor bug: `settings.loadTest` is supposed to bypass
authentication and authorization checks, but they weren't bypassed
because `SecurityManager.checkAccess` did not check
`settings.loadTest`.
The export request hook wasn't testing if the pad's id was from a read-only
pad before validating with the pad manager.
This includes an extra step that makes the read-only id verification and also
avoids setting the original pad's id as the file's name.
Where feasible I put the await at the end of the function to
minimize the impact on latency.
My motivation for this change: Eliminate a race condition in tests I
am writing.
* `src/node/server.js` can now be run as a script (for normal
operation) or imported as a module (for tests).
* Move shutdown actions to `src/node/server.js` to be close to the
startup actions.
* Put startup and shutdown in functions so that tests can call them.
* Use `await` instead of callbacks.
* Block until the HTTP server is listening to avoid races during
test startup.
* Add a new `shutdown` hook.
* Use the `shutdown` hook to:
* close the HTTP server
* call `end()` on the stats collection to cancel its timers
* call `terminate()` on the Threads.Pool to stop the workers
* Exit with exit code 0 (instead of 1) on SIGTERM.
* Export the HTTP server so that tests can get the HTTP server's
port via `server.address().port` when `settings.port` is 0.
Avoid dereferencing `DB.db` until it is used so that it is possible to
`require('SessionStore')` before calling `DB.init()`. (This is useful
when writing tests.)