Commit Graph

24 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matthew Holt
f5720fecd6
Change all import paths: mholt/caddy -> caddyserver/caddy
Includes updating go.mod to use new module path
2019-07-02 12:49:20 -06:00
Matthew Holt
721c100bb0 Use CertMagic's HTTP and HTTPS port variable
Slightly inconvenient because it uses int type and we use string, but
oh well. This fixes a bug related to setting -http-port and -https-port
flags which weren't being used by CertMagic in some cases.
2019-06-19 16:57:45 -06:00
Matthew Holt
d1171af679
httpserver: Don't obtain certs for unmanaged configs (fixes #2387) 2018-12-11 19:37:08 -07:00
Matthew Holt
f03ad80701
Update tests after large refactor 2018-12-10 20:08:29 -07:00
Matthew Holt
e0f1a02c37
Extract most of caddytls core code into external CertMagic package
All code relating to a caddytls.Config and setting it up from the
Caddyfile is still intact; only the certificate management-related
code was removed into a separate package.

I don't expect this to build in CI successfully; updating dependencies
and vendor is coming next.

I've also removed the ad-hoc, half-baked storage plugins that we need
to finish making first-class Caddy plugins (they were never documented
anyway). The new certmagic package has a much better storage interface,
and we can finally move toward making a new storage plugin type, but
it shouldn't be configurable in the Caddyfile, I think, since it doesn't
make sense for a Caddy instance to use more than one storage config...

We also have the option of eliminating DNS provider plugins and just
shipping all of lego's DNS providers by using a lego package (the
caddytls/setup.go file has a comment describing how) -- but it doubles
Caddy's binary size by 100% from about 19 MB to around 40 MB...!
2018-12-10 19:49:29 -07:00
Matt Holt
09188981c4
tls: Add support for the tls-alpn-01 challenge (#2201)
* tls: Add support for the tls-alpn-01 challenge

Also updates lego/acme to latest on master.

TODO: This implementation of the tls-alpn challenge is not yet solvable
in a distributed Caddy cluster like the http challenge is.

* build: Allow building with the race detector

* tls: Support distributed solving of the TLS-ALPN-01 challenge

* Update vendor and add a todo in MITM checker
2018-12-05 17:33:23 -07:00
Matthew Holt
b7091650f8 Revert "bind: support multiple values (#2128)"
This reverts commit 3a810c6502.
2018-11-27 15:57:38 -07:00
zhsj
3a810c6502 bind: support multiple values (#2128)
Signed-off-by: Shengjing Zhu <i@zhsj.me>
2018-11-26 18:27:58 -07:00
Matthew Holt
37c852c382
tls: Add 'wildcard' subdirective to force wildcard certificate
Should only be used when many sites are defined in the Caddyfile, and
you would run up against Let's Encrypt rate limits without a wildcard.
2018-03-17 11:29:19 -06:00
Matthew Holt
a03eba6fbc
tls: In HTTP->HTTPS redirects, preserve redir port in some circumstances
Only strip the port from the Location URL value if the port is NOT the
HTTPSPort (before, we compared against DefaultHTTPSPort instead of
HTTPSPort). The HTTPSPort can be changed, but is done so for port
forwarding, since in reality you can't 'change' the standard HTTPS port,
you can only forward it.
2018-02-16 12:36:28 -07:00
Matthew Holt
8db80c4a88
tls: Fix HTTP->HTTPS redirects and HTTP challenge when using custom port 2018-02-16 12:05:34 -07:00
Matthew Holt
fc2ff9155c
tls: Restructure and improve certificate management
- Expose the list of Caddy instances through caddy.Instances()

- Added arbitrary storage to caddy.Instance

- The cache of loaded certificates is no longer global; now scoped
  per-instance, meaning upon reload (like SIGUSR1) the old cert cache
  will be discarded entirely, whereas before, aggressively reloading
  config that added and removed lots of sites would cause unnecessary
  build-up in the cache over time.

- Key certificates in the cache by their SHA-256 hash instead of
  by their names. This means certificates will not be duplicated in
  memory (within each instance), making Caddy much more memory-efficient
  for large-scale deployments with thousands of sites sharing certs.

- Perform name-to-certificate lookups scoped per caddytls.Config instead
  of a single global lookup. This prevents certificates from stepping on
  each other when they overlap in their names.

- Do not allow TLS configurations keyed by the same hostname to be
  different; this now throws an error.

- Updated relevant tests, with a stark awareness that more tests are
  needed.

- Change the NewContext function signature to include an *Instance.

- Strongly recommend (basically require) use of caddytls.NewConfig()
  to create a new *caddytls.Config, to ensure pointers to the instance
  certificate cache are initialized properly.

- Update the TLS-SNI challenge solver (even though TLS-SNI is disabled
  currently on the CA side). Store temporary challenge cert in instance
  cache, but do so directly by the ACME challenge name, not the hash.
  Modified the getCertificate function to check the cache directly for
  a name match if one isn't found otherwise. This will allow any
  caddytls.Config to be able to help solve a TLS-SNI challenge, with one
  extra side-effect that might actually be kind of interesting (and
  useless): clients could send a certificate's hash as the SNI and
  Caddy would be able to serve that certificate for the handshake.

- Do not attempt to match a "default" (random) certificate when SNI
  is present but unrecognized; return no certificate so a TLS alert
  happens instead.

- Store an Instance in the list of instances even while the instance
  is still starting up (this allows access to the cert cache for
  performing renewals at startup, etc). Will be removed from list again
  if instance startup fails.

- Laid groundwork for ACMEv2 and Let's Encrypt wildcard support.

Server type plugins will need to be updated slightly to accommodate
minor adjustments to their API (like passing in an Instance). This
commit includes the changes for the HTTP server.

Certain Caddyfile configurations might error out with this change, if
they configured different TLS settings for the same hostname.

This change trades some complexity for other complexity, but ultimately
this new complexity is more correct and robust than earlier logic.

Fixes #1991
Fixes #1994
Fixes #1303
2018-02-04 00:58:27 -07:00
Matthew Holt
baf6db5b57
Apply Apache license to all .go source files (closes #1865)
I am not a lawyer, but according to the appendix of the license,
these boilerplate notices should be included with every source file.
2017-09-22 23:56:58 -06:00
Matt Holt
5e0896305c SIGUSR2 triggers graceful binary upgrades (spawns new process) (#1814)
* SIGUSR2 triggers graceful binary upgrades (spawns new process)

* Move some functions around, hopefully fixing Windows build

* Clean up a couple file closes and add links to useful debugging thread

* Use two underscores in upgrade env var

To help ensure uniqueness / avoid possible collisions
2017-08-12 11:04:32 -06:00
Matthew Holt
5d7db89a90 httpserver: Proper HTTP->HTTPS for wildcard sites (fixes #1625) 2017-04-26 12:32:15 -06:00
Matthew Holt
4462e3978b
httpserver: max_certs now forces On-Demand TLS even if name is known
Original feature request in forum:
https://forum.caddyserver.com/t/caddy-with-specific-hosts-but-on-demand-tls/1704?u=matt

Before, Caddy obtained certificates for every name it could at startup.
And it would only obtain certificates during the handshake for sites
defined with a hostname that didn't qualify at startup (like
"*.example.com" or ":443"). This made sense for most situations, and
helped ensure that certificates were obtained as early and reliably as
possible.

With this change, Caddy will NOT obtain certificates for hostnames it
knows at startup (even if they qualify) if OnDemand is enabled.

But I think this change generalizes well, because a user who specifies
max_certs is deliberately turning on On-Demand TLS, fully aware of
the consequences. It seems dubious to ignore that config when the user
deliberately put it there. We'll see how this goes.
2017-04-17 19:53:15 -06:00
Matthew Holt
e3f2d96a5e
httpserver: Flags to customize HTTP and HTTPS ports (incl. for ACME)
This commit removes _almost_ all instances of hard-coded ports 80 and
443 strings, and now allows the user to define what the HTTP and HTTPS
ports are by the -http-port and -https-ports flags.

(One instance of "80" is still hard-coded in tls.go because it cannot
import httpserver to get access to the HTTP port variable. I don't
suspect this will be a problem in practice, but one workaround would be
to define an exported variable in the caddytls package and let the
httpserver package set it as well as its own HTTPPort variable.)

The port numbers required by the ACME challenges HTTP-01 and TLS-SNI-01
are hard-coded into the spec as ports 80 and 443 for good reasons,
but the big question is whether they necessarily need to be the HTTP
and HTTPS ports. Although the answer is probably no, they chose those
ports for convenience and widest compatibility/deployability. So this
commit also assumes that the "HTTP port" is necessarily the same port
on which to serve the HTTP-01 challenge, and the "HTTPS port" is
necessarily the same one on which to serve the TLS-SNI-01 challenge. In
other words, changing the HTTP and HTTPS ports also changes the ports
the challenges will be served on.

If you change the HTTP and HTTPS ports, you are responsible for
configuring your system to forward ports 80 and 443 properly.

Closes #918 and closes #1293. Also related: #468.
2017-03-06 18:18:49 -07:00
Matt Holt
73794f2a2c tls: Refactor internals related to TLS configurations (#1466)
* tls: Refactor TLS config innards with a few minor syntax changes

muststaple -> must_staple
"http2 off" -> "alpn" with list of ALPN values

* Fix typo

* Fix QUIC handler

* Inline struct field assignments
2017-02-21 09:49:22 -07:00
Matthew Holt
5d813a1b58
Close connection on automatic HTTP->HTTPS redirects 2017-01-01 10:27:53 -07:00
Matthew Holt
bedad34b25
Clean up some significant portions of the TLS management code 2016-09-14 22:30:49 -06:00
Matthew Holt
68be4a9161
Don't prompt for email when user is not there to provide one
Also don't bother showing stdout output in same situation
2016-08-10 23:46:04 -06:00
Matthew Holt
2e84fe4504
Replace auto-HTTPS info message and move a method to proper file 2016-06-28 23:01:06 -06:00
Matthew Holt
a798e0c951 Refactor how caddy.Context is stored and used
- Server types no longer need to store their own contexts; they are
  stored on the caddy.Instance, which means each context will be
  properly GC'ed when the instance is stopped. Server types should use
  type assertions to convert from caddy.Context to their concrete
  context type when they need to use it.
- Pass the entire context into httpserver.GetConfig instead of only the
  Key field.
- caddy.NewTestController now requires a server type string so it can
  create a controller with the proper concrete context associated with
  that server type.

Tests still need more attention so that we can test the proper creation
of startup functions, etc.
2016-06-20 11:59:23 -06:00
Matthew Holt
ac4fa2c3a9
Rewrote Caddy from the ground up; initial commit of 0.9 branch
These changes span work from the last ~4 months in an effort to make
Caddy more extensible, reduce the coupling between its components, and
lay a more robust foundation of code going forward into 1.0. A bunch of
new features have been added, too, with even higher future potential.

The most significant design change is an overall inversion of
dependencies. Instead of the caddy package knowing about the server
and the notion of middleware and config, the caddy package exposes an
interface that other components plug into. This does introduce more
indirection when reading the code, but every piece is very modular and
pluggable. Even the HTTP server is pluggable.

The caddy package has been moved to the top level, and main has been
pushed into a subfolder called caddy. The actual logic of the main
file has been pushed even further into caddy/caddymain/run.go so that
custom builds of Caddy can be 'go get'able.

The HTTPS logic was surgically separated into two parts to divide the
TLS-specific code and the HTTPS-specific code. The caddytls package can
now be used by any type of server that needs TLS, not just HTTP. I also
added the ability to customize nearly every aspect of TLS at the site
level rather than all sites sharing the same TLS configuration. Not all
of this flexibility is exposed in the Caddyfile yet, but it may be in
the future. Caddy can also generate self-signed certificates in memory
for the convenience of a developer working on localhost who wants HTTPS.
And Caddy now supports the DNS challenge, assuming at least one DNS
provider is plugged in.

Dozens, if not hundreds, of other minor changes swept through the code
base as I literally started from an empty main function, copying over
functions or files as needed, then adjusting them to fit in the new
design. Most tests have been restored and adapted to the new API,
but more work is needed there.

A lot of what was "impossible" before is now possible, or can be made
possible with minimal disruption of the code. For example, it's fairly
easy to make plugins hook into another part of the code via callbacks.
Plugins can do more than just be directives; we now have plugins that
customize how the Caddyfile is loaded (useful when you need to get your
configuration from a remote store).

Site addresses no longer need be just a host and port. They can have a
path, allowing you to scope a configuration to a specific path. There is
no inheretance, however; each site configuration is distinct.

Thanks to amazing work by Lucas Clemente, this commit adds experimental
QUIC support. Turn it on using the -quic flag; your browser may have
to be configured to enable it.

Almost everything is here, but you will notice that most of the middle-
ware are missing. After those are transferred over, we'll be ready for
beta tests.

I'm very excited to get this out. Thanks for everyone's help and
patience these last few months. I hope you like it!!
2016-06-04 17:00:29 -06:00