To clarify, listening on wildcard interfaces is NOT the default and
should only be done under certain circumstances and when you know
what you're doing. Emits a warning in the log.
Fixes https://github.com/caddyserver/caddy-docker/issues/71
* 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>
Config auto-saving is on by default and can be disabled. The --environ
flag (or environ subcommand) now print more useful information from
Caddy and the runtime, including some nifty paths.
This commit goes a long way toward making automated documentation of
Caddy config and Caddy modules possible. It's a broad, sweeping change,
but mostly internal. It allows us to automatically generate docs for all
Caddy modules (including future third-party ones) and make them viewable
on a web page; it also doubles as godoc comments.
As such, this commit makes significant progress in migrating the docs
from our temporary wiki page toward our new website which is still under
construction.
With this change, all host modules will use ctx.LoadModule() and pass in
both the struct pointer and the field name as a string. This allows the
reflect package to read the struct tag from that field so that it can
get the necessary information like the module namespace and the inline
key.
This has the nice side-effect of unifying the code and documentation. It
also simplifies module loading, and handles several variations on field
types for raw module fields (i.e. variations on json.RawMessage, such as
arrays and maps).
I also renamed ModuleInfo.Name -> ModuleInfo.ID, to make it clear that
the ID is the "full name" which includes both the module namespace and
the name. This clarity is helpful when describing module hierarchy.
As of this change, Caddy modules are no longer an experimental design.
I think the architecture is good enough to go forward.
* fix OOM issue caught by fuzzing
* use ParsedAddress as the struct name for the result of ParseNetworkAddress
* simplify code using the ParsedAddress type
* minor cleanups
Fixed several bugs and made other improvements. All config changes are
now mediated by the global config state manager. It used to be that
initial configs given at startup weren't tracked, so you could start
caddy with --config caddy.json and then do a GET /config/ and it would
return null. That is fixed, along with several other general flow/API
enhancements, with more to come.
* Always cleanup admin endpoint first
* Error out if no config has been set (#2833)
* Ignore explicitly missing admin config (#2833)
* Separate config loading from admin initialization (#2833)
* Add admin option to specify admin listener address (#2833)
* Use zap for reporting admin endpoint status
* logging: Initial implementation
* logging: More encoder formats, better defaults
* logging: Fix repetition bug with FilterEncoder; add more presets
* logging: DiscardWriter; delete or no-op logs that discard their output
* logging: Add http.handlers.log module; enhance Replacer methods
The Replacer interface has new methods to customize how to handle empty
or unrecognized placeholders. Closes#2815.
* logging: Overhaul HTTP logging, fix bugs, improve filtering, etc.
* logging: General cleanup, begin transitioning to using new loggers
* Fixes after merge conflict
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.
Use piles from which to draw config values.
Module values can return their name, so now we can do two-way mapping
from value to name and name to value; whereas before we could only map
name to value. This was problematic with the Caddyfile adapter since
it receives values and needs to know the name to put in the config.
Along with several other changes, such as renaming caddyhttp.ServerRoute
to caddyhttp.Route, exporting some types that were not exported before,
and tweaking the caddytls TLS values to be more consistent.
Notably, we also now disable automatic cert management for names which
already have a cert (manually) loaded into the cache. These names no
longer need to be specified in the "skip_certificates" field of the
automatic HTTPS config, because they will be skipped automatically.
* Add stop command to admin. Exit after stop.
* Return error on incorrect http Method and provide better logging.
* reuse stopAndCleanup function for all graceful stops