The standard lib pprof library doesn't set its own Content-Type header
properly. If pprof is used with gzip, the index endpoint will be
interpreted as a .gz file; so we force its hand and set the header.
* proxy: use a new context for the outgoing request
fix issue #1345
Signed-off-by: Tw <tw19881113@gmail.com>
* proxy: add test for canceling the request
Signed-off-by: Tw <tw19881113@gmail.com>
* Generate meta elements from useful front matters.
Limited to the default template and specific elements.
* Rerun gofmt
* Add "keywords" and remove "language" to/from the list of meta tags.
* Add a simple positive list test for the meta tag generation.
* Move the meta tag list to a var at the begin of the file.
Seperate the Meta tags from the other front matters:
- Don't override user settings with name `meta`
- Cleaner Code.
* Remove the uneccessary `[:]` in the []Bytes to String casting.
@mholt was right ;)
* One minor refinement. Combining two statements.
The loop which performs renewals in the background obtains a read lock
on the certificate cache map, so that it can be safely iterated. Before
this fix, it would obtain the renewals in the read lock. This has been
fine, except that the TLS-SNI challenge, when invoked after Caddy has
already started, requires adding a certificate to the cache. Doing this
requires an exclusive write lock. But it cannot obtain a write lock
because a read lock is obtained higher in the stack, while the loop
iterates. In other words, it's a deadlock.
I was able to reproduce this issue consistently locally, after jumping
through many hoops to force a renewal in a short time that bypasses
Let's Encrypt's authz caching. I was also able to verify that by queuing
renewals (like we do deletions and OCSP updates), lock contention is
relieved and the deadlock is avoided.
This only affects background renewals where the TLS-SNI(-01) challenge
are used. Users report seeing strange errors in the logs after this
happens ("tls: client offered an unsupported, maximum protocol version
of 301"), but I was not able to reproduce these locally. I was also not
able to reproduce the leak of sockets which are left in CLOSE_WAIT.
I am not sure if those are symptoms of running in production on Linux
and are related to this bug, or not.
Either way, this is an important fix. I do not yet know the ripple
effects this will have on other symptoms we've been chasing. But it
definitely resolves a deadlock during renewals.
Because of this commit(6e36811c37399d60cbce587b7c48e611009c5aec) on go tip,
it will probe the request's body to determine whether to use chunked transfer
encoding which trailers depend on it.
So we just offer a non empty body to make trailers work.
fix issue #1359
Signed-off-by: Tw <tw19881113@gmail.com>
* Add {whenISO} to record timestamp in ISO 8601 format in UTC.
ISO 8601 is the standard time format and is easy to parse.
This change assumes users desiring ISO 8016 generally prefer UTC for simplicity.
This results in {whenISO} to be significantly shorter than {when}:
{when} = "02/Jan/2006:15:04:05 +0000"
{whenISO} = "2006-01-02T15:04:12Z"
Add unit test to verify both, as there was no unit test for {when}.
* Rename {whenISO} to {when_iso}
* Allow -validate flag to validate caddyfile and return
* Ensure logging without -log flag
* Changes to validate seperatly to Starup func
* Removed change to Start signature. Created function to ValidateCaddyfile
* comment and tidyup
* ValidateandExecuteDirectives with justValidate option
* remove debugging code
* Tidy up comments
* additional parameter added to calls to mustLogFataf
* ValidateAndExecuteDirectives needs to only return err
If only one upstream is defined we don't need to buffer the body.
Instead we directly stream the body to the upstream host,
which reduces memory usage as well as latency.
Furthermore this enables different kinds of HTTP streaming
applications like gRPC for instance.
If a site owner protects a path with basicauth, no need
to use the Authorization header elsewhere upstream, especially since it
contains credentials.
If this breaks anyone, it means they're double-dipping. It's usually
good practice to clear out credentials as soon as they're not needed
anymore. (Note that we only clear credentials after they're used,
they stay for any other reason.)
* Added path cleanup functions with masking to preserve certain patterns + unit tests, #1298
* Use custom PathClean function instead of path.Clean to apply masks to preserve protocol separator in the path
* Indentation corrected in the test data map to pass the lint
* Fixing ineffassign of a temporary string variable
* Improved variable naming and documentation
* Improved variable naming
* Added benchmarks and improved variable naming in tests
* Removed unnecessary value capture when iterating over a map for keys
* A typo correction
This issue was caused by connHijackerTransport trying to record HTTP
response headers by "hijacking" the Read() method of the plain net.Conn.
This does not simply work over TLS though since this will record the TLS
handshake and encrypted data instead of the actual content.
This commit fixes the problem by providing an alternative transport.DialTLS
which correctly hijacks the overlying tls.Conn instead.