Ideally I'd just remove the parameter to caddy.Context.Logger(), but
this would break most Caddy plugins.
Instead, I'm making it variadic and marking it as partially deprecated.
In the future, I might completely remove the parameter once most
plugins have updated.
* fileserver: Support glob expansion in file matcher
* Fix tests
* Fix bugs and tests
* Attempt Windows fix, sigh
* debug Windows, WIP
* Continue debugging Windows
* Another attempt at Windows
* Plz Windows
* Cmon...
* Clean up, hope I didn't break anything
* fileserver: Support virtual file systems (close#3720)
This change replaces the hard-coded use of os.Open() and os.Stat() with
the use of the new (Go 1.16) io/fs APIs, enabling virtual file systems.
It introduces a new module namespace, caddy.fs, for such file systems.
Also improve documentation for the file server. I realized it was one of
the first modules written for Caddy 2, and the docs hadn't really been
updated since!
* Virtualize FS for file matcher; minor tweaks
* Fix tests and rename dirFS -> osFS
(Since we do not use a root directory, it is dynamic.)
Hahaha this is the ultimate "I have no idea what I'm doing" commit but it
compiles and the tests pass and I declare victory!
... probably broke something, should be tested more.
It is nice that the protobuf dependency becomes indirect now.
This makes it easier for users to find the default browse template if they
want to create a custom template based on that. It also makes it easier to
view the template with proper syntax highlighting.
* caddyhttp: Add support for triggering errors from `try_files`
* caddyhttp: Use vars instead of placeholders/replacer for matcher errors
* caddyhttp: Add comment for matcher error var key
This commit fixes the `sortByNameDirFirst` variable inside fileserver to
match what browse's default template has.
Co-authored-by: Francis Lavoie <lavofr@gmail.com>
This is the more correct implementation of 23dadc0d86 (#4179)... I think. This commit effectively undoes the revert in 8848df9c5d, but with corrections to the logic.
We *do* need to use the original request path (the path the browser knows) for redirects, since they are external, and rewrites are only internal.
However, if the path was rewritten to a non-canonical path, we should not redirect to canonicalize that, since rewrites are intentional by the site owner. Canonicalizing the path involves modifying only the suffix (base element, or filename) of the path. Thus, if a rewrite involves only the prefix (like how handle_path strips a path prefix), then we can (hopefully!) safely redirect using the original URI since the filename was not rewritten.
So basically, if rewrites modify the filename, we should not canonicalize those requests. If rewrites only modify another part of the path (commonly a prefix), we should be OK to redirect.
Templates are parsed at request-time (like they are in the templates middleware) to allow live changes to the template while the server is running. Fixes race condition.
Also refactored use of a buffer so a buffer put back in the pool will not continue to be used (written to client) in the meantime.
A couple of benchmarks removed due to refactor, which is fine, since we know pooling helps here.
* fileserver: Fix `file` matcher with empty `try_files`
Fixes https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/4146
If `TryFiles` is empty, we fill it with `r.URL.Path`. In this case, this is `/`. Then later, in `prepareFilePath()`, we run the replacer (which turns `{path}` into `/` at that point) but `file` remains the original value (and the placeholder is still the placeholder there).
So then `strings.HasSuffix(file, "/")` will be `false` for the placeholder, but `true` for the empty `TryFiles` codepath, because `file` was `/` due to being set to the actual request value beforehand.
This means that `suffix` becomes `//` in that case, so after `sanitizedPathJoin`, it becomes `./`, so `strictFileExists`'s `strings.HasSuffix(file, separator)` codepath will return true.
I think we should change the `m.TryFiles == nil` codepath to `m.TryFiles = []string{"{http.request.uri.path}"}` for consistency. (And maybe consider hoisting this to `Provision` cause there's no point doing this on every request). I don't think this "optimization" of directly using `r.URL.Path` is so valuable, cause it causes this edgecase with directories.
* Update modules/caddyhttp/fileserver/matcher.go
Co-authored-by: Matt Holt <mholt@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Matt Holt <mholt@users.noreply.github.com>
After reading a question about the `handle_response` feature of `reverse_proxy`, I realized that we didn't have a way of serving an arbitrary file with a status code other than 200. This is an issue in situations where you want to serve a custom error page in routes that are not errors, like the aforementioned `handle_response`, where you may want to retain the status code returned by the proxy but write a response with content from a file.
This feature is super simple, basically if a status code is configured (can be a status code number, or a placeholder string) then that status will be written out before serving the file - if we write the status code first, then the stdlib won't write its own (only the first HTTP status header wins).
* encode: implement prefer setting
* encode: minimum_length configurable via caddyfile
* encode: configurable content-types which to encode
* file_server: support precompressed files
* encode: use ReponseMatcher for conditional encoding of content
* linting error & documentation of encode.PrecompressedOrder
* encode: allow just one response matcher
also change the namespace of the encoders back, I accidently changed to precompressed >.>
default matchers include a * to match to any charset, that may be appended
* rounding of the PR
* added integration tests for new caddyfile directives
* improved various doc strings (punctuation and typos)
* added json tag for file_server precompress order and encode matcher
* file_server: add vary header, remove accept-ranges when serving precompressed files
* encode: move Suffix implementation to precompressed modules
At some point we changed how paths are represented down the function calls of browse listings and forgot to update the canGoUp logic. I think this is right? It's simpler now.