This migrates a feature that was previously reserved for enterprise
users, according to https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/2786.
Custom certificate selection policies allow advanced control over which
cert is selected when multiple qualify to satisfy a TLS handshake.
This migrates a feature that was previously reserved for enterprise
users, according to https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/2786.
TLS session ticket keys are sensitive, so they should be rotated on a
regular basis. Only Caddy does this by default. However, a cluster of
servers that rotate keys without synchronization will lose the benefits
of having sessions in the first place if the client is routed to a
different backend. This module coordinates STEK rotation in a fleet so
the same keys are used, and rotated, across the whole cluster. No other
server does this, but Twitter wrote about how they hacked together a
solution a few years ago:
https://blog.twitter.com/engineering/en_us/a/2013/forward-secrecy-at-twitter.html
This migrates a feature that was previously reserved for enterprise
users, according to https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/2786.
The PEM loader allows you to embed PEM files (certificates and keys)
directly into your config, rather than requiring them to be stored on
potentially insecure storage, which adds attack vectors. This is useful
in automated settings where sensitive key material is stored only in
memory.
Note that if the config is persisted to disk, that added benefit may go
away, but there will still be the benefit of having lesser dependence on
external files.
This migrates a feature that was previously reserved for enterprise
users, according to https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/2786.
The local circuit breaker is a simple metrics counter that can cause
the reverse proxy to consider a backend unhealthy before it actually
goes offline, by measuring recent latencies over a sliding window.
Credit to Danny Navarro
This migrates a feature that was previously reserved for enterprise
users, according to https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/2786.
The cache HTTP handler will be a high-performing, distributed cache
layer for HTTP requests. Right now, the implementation is a very basic
proof-of-concept, and further development is required.
This integrates a feature that was previously reserved for enterprise
users, according to https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy/issues/2786.
The /config and /id endpoints make granular config changes possible as
well as the exporting of the current configuration.
The /load endpoint has been modified to wrap the /config handler so that
the currently-running config can always be available for export. The
difference is that /load allows configs of varying formats and converts
them using config adapters. The adapted config is then processed with
/config as JSON. The /config and /id endpoints accept only JSON.
* v2: introduce CI for v2 branch
* v2-ci: split test report generation from test pass to preserve exit code
* v2-ci: spilt lint results from unit test results
* v2-ci: fix testRunTitle name
* v2-ci: break up the steps for more accurate status indicators
* v2-ci: break steps into different jobs
* v2-ci: revert back to single-job pattern
* v2-ci: reflect the true result by coercing SucceededWithIssues into Failed in the last step
* v2-ci: don't fail the build on lint errors
* cli: Change command structure, add help subcommand (#328)
* cli: improve subcommand structure
- make help command as normal subcommand
- add flag usage message for each command
* cmd: Refactor subcommands and command line help; make commands pluggable
Modules that return an error during provisioning should still be cleaned
up so that they don't leak any resources they may have allocated before
the error occurred. Cleanup should be able to run even if Provision does
not complete fully.
Making them pointers makes for cleaner JSON when adapting configs, if
the struct is empty now it will be omitted entirely.
The x/time/rate package was updated to support changing the burst, so
we've incorporated that here and removed a TODO.
Newlines (\n) can be escaped outside of quoted areas and the newline
will be treated as whitespace but not as an actual line break. Escaping
newlines inside a quoted area is not necessary, and because quotes
trigger literal interpretation of the contents, the escaping backslash
will be parsed as a literal backslash, and the newline will not be
escaped.
Caveat: When a newline is escaped, tokens after it until an unescaped
newline will appear to the parser be on the same line as the initial
token after the last unescaped newline. This may technically lead to
some false line numbers if errors are given, but escaped newlines are
counted so that the next token after an unescaped newline is correct.
See #2766