* run caddy tests in process
* call main with run args
* exclude tests - windows
* include json example
* disable caddyfile tests, include json test with non trusted local ca
* converted SNI tests to json syntax
* admin: Refactor /load endpoint out of caddy package
This eliminates the caddy package's dependency on the caddyconfig
package, which helps prevent import cycles.
* v2: adapter: register config adapters as Caddy modules
* v2: adapter: simplify adapter registration as adapters and modules
* v2: adapter: let RegisterAdapter be in charge of registering adapters as modules
* v2: adapter: remove underscrores placeholders
* v2: adapter: explicitly ignore the error of writing response of writing warnings back to client
* Implicitly wrap config adapters as modules
Co-authored-by: Matthew Holt <mholt@users.noreply.github.com>
The comments in the code should explain the new logic thoroughly.
The basic problem for the issue was that we were overriding a catch-all
automation policy's explicitly-configured issuer with our own, for names
that we thought looked like public names. In other words, one could
configure an internal issuer for all names, but then our auto HTTPS
would create a new policy for public-looking names that uses the
default ACME issuer, because we assume public<==>ACME and
nonpublic<==>Internal, but that is not always the case. The new logic
still assumes nonpublic<==>Internal (on catch-all policies only), but
no longer assumes that public-looking names always use an ACME issuer.
Also fix a bug where HTTPPort and HTTPSPort from the HTTP app weren't
being carried through to ACME issuers properly. It required a bit of
refactoring.
* WIP: Trying to make a new branch
* Create fuzzing.yml
* Update ci.yml
* Try using reviewdog for golangci-lint
* Only run lint on ubuntu
* Whoops, wrong matrix variable
* Let's try just ubuntu for the moment
* Remove integration tests
* Let's see what the tree looks like (where's the binary)
* Let's plant a tree
* Let's look at another tree
* Burn the tree
* Let's build in the right dir
* Turn on publishing artifacts
* Add gobin to path
* Try running golangci-lint earlier
* Try running golangci-lint on its own, with checkout@v1
* Try moving golangci-lint back into ci.yml as a separate job
* Turn off azure-pipelines
* Remove the redundant name, see how it looks
* Trim down the naming some more
* Turn on windows and mac
* Try to fix windows build, cleanup
* Try to fix strange failure on windows
* Print our the coerce reason
* Apparently $? is 'True' on Windows, not 1 or 0
* Try setting CGO_ENABLED as an env in yml
* Try enabling/fixing the fuzzer
* Print out github event to check, fix step name
* Fuzzer needs the code
* Add GOBIN to PATH for fuzzer
* Comment out fork condition, left in-case we want it again
* Remove obsolete comment
* Comment out the coverage/test conversions for now
* Set continue-on-error: true for fuzzer, it runs out of mem
* Add some clarification to the retained commented sections
Adds `Alt-Svc` to the list of headers that get removed when proxying
to a backend.
This fixes the issue of having the contents of the Alt-Svc header
duplicated when proxying to another Caddy server.
* caddyhttp: Implement CEL matcher (see #3051)
CEL (Common Expression Language) is a very fast, flexible way to express
complex logic, useful for matching requests when the conditions are not
easy to express with JSON.
This matcher may be considered experimental even after the 2.0 release.
* Improve CEL module docs
* rewrite: strip_prefix, strip_suffix, uri_replace -> uri (closes#3140)
* Add period, to satisfy @whitestrake :) and my own OCD
* Restore implied / prefix
It's hard to say whether this was actually a bug, but the linked issue
shows why the old behavior was confusing. Basically, we infer that a
rewrite handler is supposed to act as an internal redirect, which likely
means it will no longer match the matcher(s) it did before the rewrite.
So if the rewrite directive shares a matcher with any adjacent route or
directive, it can be confusing/misleading if we consolidate the rewrite
into the same route as the next handler, which shouldn't (probably) match
after the rewrite is complete.
This is kiiiind of a hacky workaround to a quirky problem.
For edge cases like these, it is probably "cleaner" to just use handle
blocks instead, to group handlers under the same matcher, nginx-style.
* added sni tests
* set the default sni when there is no host to match
* removed invalid sni test. Disabled tests that rely on host headers.
* readded SNI tests. Added logging of config load times
Wrapping listeners is useful for composing custom behavior related
to accepting, closing, reading/writing connections (etc) below the
application layer; for example, the PROXY protocol.
When using the default automation policy specifically, ap.Issuer would
be nil, so we'd end up overwriting the ap.magic.Issuer's default value
(after New()) with nil; this instead sets Issuer on the template before
New() is called, and no overwriting is done.