This makes us use TLS 1.3+ on sync connections by default. A new option
`insecureAllowOldTLSVersions` exists to allow communication with TLS
1.2-only clients (roughly Syncthing 1.2.2 and older). Even with that
option set you get a slightly simplified setup, with the cipher suite
order fixed instead of auto detected.
No longer hide the web UI controls for the new untrusted/encrypted
device feature. Testing hasn't been very widespread, but there has been
some and quite a few bugs have been caught and fixed. I believe its time
to not hide it anymore, and cautiously recommend usage. E.g. mention
that the feature hasn't been widely used yet and anyone using it is an
early adopter, but drop the bit about not using it with production data.
We can maybe stress the need for backups in general and especially
using this.
This loosens the ‘is this localhost?’ check to include *.localhost host
names.
This allows for clearer (hence better) names to be used in browsers,
e.g. when accessing a remote syncthing instance ‘foo’ using a ssh port
forward, one can use foo.localhost to remind oneself which one is which.
💡 Without these changes, Syncthing shows a ‘Host check error’ when
pointing a browser at http://foo.localhost/, and with these changes, the
interface loads as usual.
The .localhost top level domain is a reserved top-level domain (RFC 2606):
> The ".localhost" TLD has traditionally been statically defined in
> host DNS implementations as having an A record pointing to the
> loop back IP address and is reserved for such use. Any other use
> would conflict with widely deployed code which assumes this use.
> – https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc2606
As Wikipedia puts it:
> This allows the use of these names for either documentation purposes
or in local testing scenarios. – https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/.localhost
On Linux systems, systemd-resolved resolves *.localhost, on purpose:
https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-resolved.service.html
See also #4815, #4816.
This splits the ignore getting to two methods, one that loads from disk
(the old one) and one that just returns whatever is already loaded (the
new one). The folder summary service which is just interested in stats
now uses the latter method. This means that it, and API calls that call
it, does not get blocked by folder I/O.
Our authentication is based on device ID (certificate fingerprint) but
we also check the certificate name for ... historical extra security
reasons. (I don't think this adds anything but it is what it is.) Since
that check breaks in Go 1.15 this change does two things:
- Adds a manual check for the peer certificate CommonName, and if they
are equal we are happy and don't call the more advanced
VerifyHostname() function. This allows our old style certificates to
still pass the check.
- Adds the cert name "syncthing" as a DNS SAN when generating the
certificate. This is the correct way nowadays and makes VerifyHostname()
happy in Go 1.15 as well, even without the above patch.
* Fix ui, hide report date
* Undo Goland madness
* UR now web scale
* Fix migration
* Fix marshaling, force tick on start
* Fix tests
* Darwin build
* Split "all" build target, add package name as a tag
* Remove pq and sql dep from syncthing, split build targets
* Empty line
* Revert "Empty line"
This reverts commit f74af2b067.
* Revert "Remove pq and sql dep from syncthing, split build targets"
This reverts commit 8fc295ad00.
* Revert "Split "all" build target, add package name as a tag"
This reverts commit f4dc889951.
* Normalise contract types
* Fix build add more logging
This changes the error handling in loading ignores slightly:
- There is a new ParseError type that is returned as the error
(somewhere in the chain) when the problem was not an I/O error loading
the file, but some issue with the contents.
- If the file was read successfully but not parsed successfully we still
return the lines read (in addition to nil patterns and a ParseError).
- In the API, if the error IsParseError then we return a successful
HTTP response with the lines and the actual error included in the JSON
object.
- In the GUI, as long as the HTTP call to load the ignores was
successful we can edit the ignores. If there was an error we show this
as a validation error on the dialog.
Also some cleanup on the Javascript side as it for some reason used
jQuery instead of Angular for this editor...
Group the global list of files by version, instead of having one flat list for all devices. This removes lots of duplicate protocol.Vectors.
Co-authored-by: Jakob Borg <jakob@kastelo.net>
As foretold by the prophecy, "once the database refactor is merged, then
shall appear a request to propagate errors from the store known
throughout the land as the NamedspacedKV, and it shall be good".
This adds a certificate lifetime parameter to our certificate generation
and hard codes it to twenty years in some uninteresting places. In the
main binary there are a couple of constants but it results in twenty
years for the device certificate and 820 days for the HTTPS one. 820 is
less than the 825 maximum Apple allows nowadays.
This also means we must be prepared for certificates to expire, so I add
some handling for that and generate a new certificate when needed. For
self signed certificates we regenerate a month ahead of time. For other
certificates we leave well enough alone.
This adds a field `guiAddressUsed` to the system status response, that
holds the current listening address actually in use. This may be
different from the one stored in the config because it may have been
overridden by environment or command line flag.
The GUI now checks this field to see if we are listening on localhost.
If we are not, the authentication required warning is displayed,
regardless of the *configured* listening address.
This is an experiment in testing, based on the advise to always call
t.Parallel() at the start of every test. Doing so makes tests run in
parallel, which is usually faster, but also exposes package level state
and potential race conditions better.
To support this I had to redesign the CSRF manager to not be package
global, which was indeed an improvement. And tests run five times faster
now.