Idea #13111
closed[WebDAV] Support browsing of project hierarchies
Added by Tom Morris over 6 years ago. Updated over 6 years ago.
Description
Expose tree of project/collection names, e.g., keep-web-host/users/bob/projectname/collectionname/foo.txt
This is an initial read-only implementation that exposes the /users/*/ hierarchy with some limitations. There will be followup work (write access, shared projects, better performance), see #13272.
Related issues
Updated by Tom Morris over 6 years ago
- Tracker changed from Task to Idea
- Description updated (diff)
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
A good portion of this is currently sitting on an unmerged #12308 branch.
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
- Related to Idea #13146: [API] Endpoint to get projects shared with me added
Updated by Tom Morris over 6 years ago
- Description updated (diff)
- Assigned To set to Tom Clegg
- Target version changed from To Be Groomed to 2018-03-28 Sprint
Updated by Tom Morris over 6 years ago
- Related to Idea #13218: Support browsing of projects shared with me in WebDAV added
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
Will it be too confusing if https://keep-web-host/home/$collectionname
serves different content depending on the auth token? It certainly seems to violate the spirit of URIs.
https://keep-web-host/home/$collectionname
→ 307 redirect tohttps://keep-web-host/by_id/$userUUID/$collectionname
(how many webdav clients will follow this?)https://keep-web-host/users/$username/$collectionname
(don't supporthttps://keep-web-host/home/$collectionname
at all)https://$username.keep-web-domain/home/$collectionname
https://keep-web-host/users/$username/$collectionname
has an advantage that it can map directly to FUSE as $keepmount/users/$username/$collectionname
Updated by Tom Morris over 6 years ago
I believe that we agreed that
https://keep-web-host/users/$username/$collectionname
is the way to go here.
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
- Blocks Feature #13272: [keep-web] read/write support for /by_id and /users added
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
From discussion offline: we're aiming to get the "projects tree" part of the Go SDK merged and exposed through keep-web with some simplifying restrictions. Some real-world experience is likely to help guide further development (especially performance); besides, doing the whole thing at once would mean reviewing an unnecessarily large chunk.
13111-webdav-projects @ 127c8584fa1a2336fd6569d9d6013f3f2b166088 https://ci.curoverse.com/job/developer-run-tests/668/
Specifically:/users
tree is read-only- no performance tuning (in particular, no cache)
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
- Target version changed from 2018-03-28 Sprint to 2018-04-11 Sprint
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
- is there a sensible way to split the branch so that the go FUSE stuff isn't getting merged along with the webdav changes?
- can we stop giving things confusing names? like crunchrunner vs crunch-run and now arvadosclient vs arvados-client
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
I don't know if this was on your master plan, but apparently cgofuse supports WinFSP, which means a future Go FUSE driver could run natively on Windows, as an alternative to our current plan to use Windows' WebDAV support?
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Apologies if some of these comments arn't directly related to the branch, the diff is very large and includes refactoring of existing code (which appears as additions in the patch) so I'm wandering around a bit trying to get a handle on it.
// A File is an *os.File-like interface for reading and writing files // in a FileSystem. type File interface { io.Reader io.Writer io.Closer io.Seeker Size() int64 Readdir(int) ([]os.FileInfo, error) Stat() (os.FileInfo, error) Truncate(int64) error Sync() error }
This comment need more information.
- "reading and writing files in a FileSystem." but presumably a given instance only refers to one file
- Since it has Readdir, It can also represent a directory?
- it's more like a filehandle, and the underlying file data and metadata is represented by an inode?
// TODO: If the nearest common ancestor ("nca") of olddirf and // newdirf is on a different filesystem than fs, we should // call nca.FS().Rename() instead of proceeding. Until then // it's awkward for filesystems to implement their own Rename // methods effectively: the only one that runs is the one on // the root filesystem exposed to the caller (webdav, fuse, // etc).
This is a confusing, is this talking about separate file system mounts (from the kernel POV) or Filesystem objects within the Go program? Does this mean moving a file from one collection to another doesn't work?
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
I assume this logic means the default / "root" projectnode is the current user, but shouldn't that be initialized by whoever created the projectnode?
if pn.uuid == "" { var resp User pn.err = fs.RequestAndDecode(&resp, "GET", "arvados/v1/users/current", nil, nil) if pn.err != nil { return } pn.uuid = resp.UUID }
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
for { var resp CollectionList pn.err = fs.RequestAndDecode(&resp, "GET", "arvados/v1/collections", nil, params) if pn.err != nil { return } if len(resp.Items) == 0 { break } for _, i := range resp.Items { coll := i if coll.Name == "" { continue } pn.inode.Child(coll.Name, func(inode) (inode, error) { return deferredCollectionFS(fs, pn, coll), nil }) } params.Filters = append(filters, Filter{"uuid", ">", resp.Items[len(resp.Items)-1].UUID}) }
- Could paging be generalized in a function that returned results on a channel instead of having to be manually coded everwhere?
- It looks like it just appends filters, so after the first loop you'll have [uuid > 123], the next loop you'll have [uuid > 123, uuid > 456], on the next loop you'll have [uuid > 123, uuid > 456, uuid > 789] etc? This looks like another case of confusion where where append(N) may or may not modify N?
- Based on recent query optimization adventures, I'm curious if there is a performance difference with sorting by uuid and using a uuid filter compared to using offset.
filters = append(filters, Filter{"group_class", "=", "project"})
Similarly, this may include all the [uuid > 123, ...] filters
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
Peter Amstutz wrote:
- is there a sensible way to split the branch so that the go FUSE stuff isn't getting merged along with the webdav changes?
Yes, I think I can split off the lib/mount dirs and the line that adds the mount subcommand to arvados-client.
- can we stop giving things confusing names? like crunchrunner vs crunch-run and now arvadosclient vs arvados-client
arvados-client is the future replacement for "arv". When we get around to packaging things nicely we'll want an "arvados-client" package that has all the Apache-licensed stuff and none of the GPL-licensed stuff, and a shim or other mechanism so "arvados foo" runs Apache commands everywhere and GPL commands where available. arvadosclient was a bad name and we're fixing that by deleting it.
Given the different contexts (go library vs. command line tool) I think it's not necessarily bad to have two different things called "arvados".
But we digress...
I don't know if this was on your master plan, but apparently cgofuse supports WinFSP, which means a future Go FUSE driver could run natively on Windows, as an alternative to our current plan to use Windows' WebDAV support?
Yes, that's the biggest reason for trying cgofuse before bazil. I've built windows and osx binaries but I haven't gotten as far as finding systems to test them on. The notes for the fuse stuff are back at #12308.
Peter Amstutz wrote:
Apologies if some of these comments arn't directly related to the branch, the diff is very large and includes refactoring of existing code (which appears as additions in the patch) so I'm wandering around a bit trying to get a handle on it.
Yeah, lots happened. I tried to make a sensible git log, but reading that might be just as tedious. (Is there a git diff mode that tries harder to show "moved" vs. deleted + added...?)
[...]
This comment need more information.
- "reading and writing files in a FileSystem." but presumably a given instance only refers to one file
Right, that should probably say "... a file in a FileSystem".
- Since it has Readdir, It can also represent a directory?
- it's more like a filehandle, and the underlying file data and metadata is represented by an inode?
Yes to both -- just like os.File.
[...]
This is a confusing, is this talking about separate file system mounts (from the kernel POV) or Filesystem objects within the Go program? Does this mean moving a file from one collection to another doesn't work?
Different FileSystem objects. (I should camelcase that.)
Yes, it means renaming files across collections doesn't work.
Peter Amstutz wrote:
I assume this logic means the default / "root" projectnode is the current user, but shouldn't that be initialized by whoever created the projectnode?
That works too, but if you ask for a projectnode with uuid=="" then it gives you "home" behavior instead of an error. Aside from being convenient it means you can mount /home in your filesystem but avoid using/waiting on an API call unless/until it's actually used.
- Could paging be generalized in a function that returned results on a channel instead of having to be manually coded everwhere?
Yes, a filepath.Walk-like thing would be a good addition to the client library. (I think callers who want a channel should just supply a walkfn that sends to a channel, though -- foisting concurrency patterns on callers tends to be annoying.)
We can try a private one for now, and make it public when we decide it's an API worth supporting.
- It looks like it just appends filters, so after the first loop you'll have [uuid > 123], the next loop you'll have [uuid > 123, uuid > 456], on the next loop you'll have [uuid > 123, uuid > 456, uuid > 789] etc? This looks like another case of confusion where where append(N) may or may not modify N?
Ever-growing filters list would happen if it were filters=append(filters,...) but this is params.Filters=append(filters,...) -- the invariant is "params.Filters
is filters
plus the current paging condition."
append() might modify the filters
slice's backing array, but that's OK because it's only ever accessed by this one goroutine.
- Based on recent query optimization adventures, I'm curious if there is a performance difference with sorting by uuid and using a uuid filter compared to using offset.
Possibly. This is more predictable.
Similarly, this may include all the [uuid > 123, ...] filters
(addressed above -- filters
never includes a paging condition.)
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
var ( ErrReadOnlyFile = errors.New("read-only file") ErrNegativeOffset = errors.New("cannot seek to negative offset") ErrFileExists = errors.New("file exists") ErrInvalidOperation = errors.New("invalid operation") ErrInvalidArgument = errors.New("invalid argument") ErrDirectoryNotEmpty = errors.New("directory not empty") ErrWriteOnlyMode = errors.New("file is O_WRONLY") ErrSyncNotSupported = errors.New("O_SYNC flag is not supported") ErrIsDirectory = errors.New("cannot rename file to overwrite existing directory") ErrNotADirectory = errors.New("not a directory") ErrPermission = os.ErrPermission )
Could these be returned embedded in an os.PathError?
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Using gnome file browser, I tried opening it using dav://
- If you don't try to mount /users you get an error, maybe the root should return a listing with just a "users" folder?
- Users displayed the users just fine
- I tried to navigate to one of the users. It waited for a while (maybe 20-30 seconds?) and then returned an error. Here's the log:
2018-03-29_18:48:12.97985 2018/03/29 18:48:12 "172.17.0.1:54552" 207 "Multi-Status" 594 "PROPFIND" "172.17.0.2:9002" "/users/a" "" 2018-03-29_18:48:40.18259 2018/03/29 18:48:40 http: multiple response.WriteHeader calls 2018-03-29_18:48:40.18261 2018/03/29 18:48:40 error from webdav handler: "file does not exist" 2018-03-29_18:48:40.18261 2018/03/29 18:48:40 "172.17.0.1:54552" 500 "Internal Server Error" 146233 "PROPFIND" "172.17.0.2:9002" "/users/a/" ""
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Cadaver seems to be failing the same way:
dav:/a/? open http://172.17.0.2:9002/users/a Authentication required for collections on server `172.17.0.2': Username: none Password: dav:/users/a/> ls Listing collection `/users/a/': failed: XML parse error at line 1: Extra content at the end of the document
2018-03-29_19:44:07.82747 2018/03/29 19:44:07 "172.17.0.1:38050" 0 "" 0 "OPTIONS" "172.17.0.2:9002" "/users/a/" "" 2018-03-29_19:44:07.90527 2018/03/29 19:44:07 "172.17.0.1:38050" 207 "Multi-Status" 591 "PROPFIND" "172.17.0.2:9002" "/users/a/" "" 2018-03-29_19:44:31.61679 2018/03/29 19:44:31 http: multiple response.WriteHeader calls 2018-03-29_19:44:31.61682 2018/03/29 19:44:31 error from webdav handler: "file does not exist" 2018-03-29_19:44:31.61682 2018/03/29 19:44:31 "172.17.0.1:38050" 500 "Internal Server Error" 219216 "PROPFIND" "172.17.0.2:9002" "/users/a/" ""
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
This is just an arvbox test user but it probably has thousands of collections.
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
There's a length comment here but it doesn't say whether the Child() method takes a path or only names of direct children?
// Child() performs lookups and updates of named child nodes.
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Shouldn't it filter for "." and ".." on collection names as well?
func (pn *projectnode) load() { ... if coll.Name == "" { continue } ... if group.Name == "" || group.Name == "." || group.Name == ".." { continue } }
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Aha, maybe the problem is that it is returning HTML and not DAV XML?
$ curl -H "Authorization: Bearer 1pydv91bffip0sv10cq1k5f7qvndxou745h4snwljme3lk73v1" http://172.17.0.2:9002/users/a <!DOCTYPE HTML> <HTML><HEAD> ...
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Oh, maybe this is the problem:
<LI><A href="12213-keepref-wf.cwl/">12213-keepref-wf.cwl/</A></LI>
When I'm at "http://172.17.0.2:9002/users/a" and click on that link, it tries to go to "http://172.17.0.2:9002/users/12213-keepref-wf.cwl" and not "http://172.17.0.2:9002/users/a/12213-keepref-wf.cwl"
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
I navigated to a subfolder of home via Workbench and then via WebDAV. The workbench page loaded in 5 seconds, the WebDAV page took more like 30 seconds.
I think the problem is that it is loading the entire listing for home to determine if a single collection/subfolder exists. If we are not caching the listing between requests (or really, even if we do) I think projectnode.Child() needs to be able to look single entries to get reasonable performance.
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
Peter Amstutz wrote:
Using gnome file browser, I tried opening it using dav://
- If you don't try to mount /users you get an error, maybe the root should return a listing with just a "users" folder?
Seems reasonable. Now "/" lists "users" and "by_id" instead of error 404.
- I tried to navigate to one of the users. It waited for a while (maybe 20-30 seconds?) and then returned an error. Here's the log:
2018-03-29_18:48:40.18261 2018/03/29 18:48:40 "172.17.0.1:54552" 500 "Internal Server Error" 146233 "PROPFIND" "172.17.0.2:9002" "/users/a/" ""
Cadaver seems to be failing the same way:
I haven't been able to reproduce this, but I wonder whether it's related to the "trailing slash on dir" bug (see next point):
When I'm at "http://172.17.0.2:9002/users/a" and click on that link, it tries to go to "http://172.17.0.2:9002/users/12213-keepref-wf.cwl" and not "http://172.17.0.2:9002/users/a/12213-keepref-wf.cwl"
Indeed, I missed the "redirect /foo to /foo/ if /foo is a directory" thing in serveSiteFS. I've added that, along with tests, including tests for the same behavior in the non-serveSiteFS cases.
Aha, maybe the problem is that it is returning HTML and not DAV XML?
I think this is OK. GET should return HTML (or, in that specific case, a redirect). WebDAV uses PROPFIND, which should return XML.
There's a length comment here but it doesn't say whether the Child() method takes a path or only names of direct children?
It does not. In "Child() performs lookups and updates of named child nodes", "child" really just means child, not grandchild or anything else. Added a sentence to clarify (name is not . or .. and does not contain /).
Shouldn't it filter for "." and ".." on collection names as well?
Yes, added.
I navigated to a subfolder of home via Workbench and then via WebDAV. The workbench page loaded in 5 seconds, the WebDAV page took more like 30 seconds.
I think the problem is that it is loading the entire listing for home to determine if a single collection/subfolder exists. If we are not caching the listing between requests (or really, even if we do) I think projectnode.Child() needs to be able to look single entries to get reasonable performance.
Yes, this would be a good optimization. Do you think it should block a merge?
13111-webdav-projects @ 61a5f1cab58f4652a9f9bdd4f6bc26c887eae75b
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Tom Clegg wrote:
I haven't gotten back to looking at the branch yet, just responding to this one:
I navigated to a subfolder of home via Workbench and then via WebDAV. The workbench page loaded in 5 seconds, the WebDAV page took more like 30 seconds.
I think the problem is that it is loading the entire listing for home to determine if a single collection/subfolder exists. If we are not caching the listing between requests (or really, even if we do) I think projectnode.Child() needs to be able to look single entries to get reasonable performance.
Yes, this would be a good optimization. Do you think it should block a merge?
I think it is effectively unusable without it, so yes. (When we discussed it before I think I said one API call per path segment was an acceptable tradeoff for a first pass, but this is much worse).
13111-webdav-projects @ 61a5f1cab58f4652a9f9bdd4f6bc26c887eae75b
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Tom Clegg wrote:
13111-webdav-projects @ 61a5f1cab58f4652a9f9bdd4f6bc26c887eae75b
This doesn't seem to have been pushed.
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Getting the root over webdav works. The "/users" path works, but the "/by_id/" path doesn't:
2018-04-10_18:44:42.74687 2018/04/10 18:44:42 "172.17.0.1:54770" 404 "Not Found" 0 "PROPFIND" "172.17.0.2:9002" "/by_id/" ""
Either it should do something reasonable, or it shouldn't return it.
When I try to get a listing of a user's home it still fails:
2018-04-10_18:45:00.78175 2018/04/10 18:45:00 "172.17.0.1:54770" 207 "Multi-Status" 591 "PROPFIND" "172.17.0.2:9002" "/users/a/" "" 2018-04-10_18:45:58.53421 2018/04/10 18:45:58 http: multiple response.WriteHeader calls 2018-04-10_18:45:58.53423 2018/04/10 18:45:58 error from webdav handler: "file does not exist" 2018-04-10_18:45:58.53424 2018/04/10 18:45:58 "172.17.0.1:54770" 500 "Internal Server Error" 360331 "PROPFIND" "172.17.0.2:9002" "/users/a/" ""
dav:/users/> cd a dav:/users/a/> ls Listing collection `/users/a/': failed: XML parse error at line 1: Extra content at the end of the document
I'll try to get more information.
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
- It seems the text "Internal Server Error" is literally being added to the end of the XML response:
$ curl -X PROPFIND -H "Authorization: Bearer 1pydv91bffip0sv10cq1k5f7qvndxou745h4snwljme3lk73v1" http://172.17.0.2:9002/users/a/ <?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><D:multistatus xmlns:D="DAV:">... ...</D:multistatus>Internal Server Error
- This section from doc.go is out of date:
// Indexes // // Currently, keep-web does not generate HTML index listings, nor does // it serve a default file like "index.html" when a directory is // requested. These features are likely to be added in future // versions. Until then, keep-web responds with 404 if a directory // name (or any path ending with "/") is requested.
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
There's two problems here:
- Finally figured out the mysterious "file does not exist" error is caused by a collection with the name "Docker image arvados/jobs:1.1.3.20180406152156", it is getting confused by the '/', from discussion we agreed the immediate fix is to filter out invalid filenames
- There's the error reporting issue where an error results in it responding with status code 500, the PROPFIND XML response, and the text "Internal Server Error" tacked onto the end of the body, which causes a parse error on the client.
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
- Target version changed from 2018-04-11 Sprint to 2018-04-25 Sprint
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
- Directory listings don't include projects and collections with "/" in their names (they can't be opened/stated anyway)
- Apply attachment policy (XSS protection) to /users/ and /by_id/
- Serve /by_id/ directory (was listed, but not routed to sitefs)
- Fix double-WriteHeader bugs
- Update docs
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
- avoid retrieving multiple [pages of] items until a caller asks for a dir listing
Caching from one request to the next will be necessary to make this usable as a mounted filesystem. I think the way to do this is to cache one sitefs per token, each protected with an RWMutex and discarded on write errors.
Meanwhile, this gets us to O(N) instead of O(N×M) on paths N levels deep with M children on each level.
Fixes for bugs encountered while testing:- unhandled errors in cgofuse driver
- keepclient too sensitive about response transfer encoding (didn't work with 9tee4 cluster)
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
Git shenanigans to remove "arvados-client mount" from this branch:
(13111-webdav-projects)$ git filter-branch -f --tree-filter 'git diff master...${GIT_COMMIT} build cmd | patch --silent -f -R -p1 && rm -rf lib/mount services/mount cmd/arvados-client/Makefile' --msg-filter 'sed -e "s/12308:/13111:/"' --prune-empty -- master..HEAD
↓
13111-webdav-projects @ fd95e7a933b1534b76e4820838e278595b4e1220
...then merged master.
13111-webdav-projects @ 98911cfe4792b20798858cefb353c451460e1a80
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
- So far so good. I can get a listing of "home" now (it takes a long time, but it works). I can also enter folders under "home" without waiting a long time.
- "by_id" works for collections. I guess we decided not to make it work for projects?
- Who's responsible for transforming "+" into a space? I thought we decided not to do things like that? Shouldn't this be /My%20Project/My%20Collection/? I don't see any tests using "+" for space?
// If the collection is named "My Collection" and located in a project
// called "My Project" which is in the home project of a user with
// username is "bob", the following read-only URL is also available
// when authenticating as bob:
//
// http://collections.example.com/users/bob/My+Project/My+Collection/foo/bar.txt
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
I got failures running tests in arvbox. Running tests on jenkins here: https://ci.curoverse.com/job/developer-run-tests/690/
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
In arvbox I get a bunch of test failures like this:
cadaver_test.go:271: c.Check(stdout, check.Matches, `(?ms).*collection is empty.*`) ... value string = "" + ... "Authentication required for collections on server `127.0.0.1':\n" + ... "Username: ls\n" + ... "Authentication aborted!\n" + ... "Could not open collection:\n" + ... "Could not authenticate to server: rejected Basic challenge\n" + ... "dav:/by_id/? \n" ... regex string = "(?ms).*collection is empty.*"
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
Peter Amstutz wrote:
- "by_id" works for collections. I guess we decided not to make it work for projects?
Sort of. More like by_id is out of scope. Having anything at all there was an accidental bonus. Seems like we might as well leave it in, even if arv-mount gained projects while this was being reviewed and that makes them temporarily asymmetric?
// http://collections.example.com/users/bob/My+Project/My+Collection/foo/bar.txt
Oops, + only works in form-encoding, not paths. Changed to MyProject etc.
In arvbox I get a bunch of test failures like this:
Sounds like cadaver is not reading the $HOME/.netrc
file set up by the test, but I don't know why it wouldn't.
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Tom Clegg wrote:
Peter Amstutz wrote:
- "by_id" works for collections. I guess we decided not to make it work for projects?
Sort of. More like by_id is out of scope. Having anything at all there was an accidental bonus. Seems like we might as well leave it in, even if arv-mount gained projects while this was being reviewed and that makes them temporarily asymmetric?
That's fine.
// http://collections.example.com/users/bob/My+Project/My+Collection/foo/bar.txt
Oops, + only works in form-encoding, not paths. Changed to MyProject etc.
Aha, good.
In arvbox I get a bunch of test failures like this:
Sounds like cadaver is not reading the
$HOME/.netrc
file set up by the test, but I don't know why it wouldn't.
Thanks, that gives me something to investigate.
Looks good to me!
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
13111-projects-by-id @ a93f2efa516c72475dd6f13872c0698c4c499aa9
...adds /by_id/$project_uuid/$subproject_name/$collection_name/...
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
The tests pass in arvbox if I replace this:
cmd.Env = append(os.Environ(), "HOME="+tempdir)
with this:
for _, r := range os.Environ() { if r[0:5] == "HOME=" { cmd.Env = append(cmd.Env, "HOME="+tempdir) } else { cmd.Env = append(cmd.Env, r) } }
The reasoning being that the 1st case results in $HOME being declared twice and it is ambiguous which one should be used.
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
LGTM if you add testing fix to runCadaver():
for _, r := range os.Environ() { if r[0:5] != "HOME=" { cmd.Env = append(cmd.Env, r) } } cmd.Env = append(cmd.Env, "HOME="+tempdir)
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
Peter Amstutz wrote:
LGTM if you add testing fix to runCadaver():
Aha. Updated arvbox (and package-build) to go1.9.5 instead.
"The os/exec package now prevents child processes from being created with any duplicate environment variables. If Cmd.Env contains duplicate environment keys, only the last value in the slice for each duplicate key is used." -- https://golang.org/doc/go1.9
13111-projects-by-id @ 7f61e7cf4ae4661038092c6072bbeb437dc74146
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Tom Clegg wrote:
Peter Amstutz wrote:
LGTM if you add testing fix to runCadaver():
Aha. Updated arvbox (and package-build) to go1.9.5 instead.
"The os/exec package now prevents child processes from being created with any duplicate environment variables. If Cmd.Env contains duplicate environment keys, only the last value in the slice for each duplicate key is used." -- https://golang.org/doc/go1.9
13111-projects-by-id @ 7f61e7cf4ae4661038092c6072bbeb437dc74146
I'm glad that Go 1.9 is smarter about handing environment variables, but I don't think "require upgrade of Go" is an adequate solution. keep-web tests are currently failing on master due to the same bug, and it requires engaging ops to upgrade Go. https://ci.curoverse.com/job/run-tests-remainder/1883/consoleFull
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
- Target version changed from 2018-04-25 Sprint to 2018-05-09 Sprint
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
It seems that gvfs-dav (like cadaver), while it supports http authentication, declines to send the configured credentials unless it gets a 401 response to its first request. However, if keep-web is configured with an anonymous token, it serves a root directory with "by_id" and "users" dirs (rather than a 401) to unauthenticated clients. The result is that gvfs-dav can't open an authenticated session with a keep-web that also serves anonymous clients.
Possible fix: at "sitefs" paths (where "*" is a non-empty name with no slashes, and "**" is a non-empty path with zero or more slashes):- Respond 401 to /, /*, /users/, and /by_id/ if no token is supplied in the request
- Respond 401 instead of 404 to /users/** and /by_id/** if no token is supplied in the request and the first two path components of the requested path correspond to a missing directory. Examples: If no token is supplied in the request...
- GET "/by_id/zzzzz-4zz18-abcdeabcdeabcde/foo" => 404 if "/by_id/zzzzz-4zz18-abcdeabcdeabcde" exists but .../foo does not
- GET "/by_id/zzzzz-4zz18-abcdeabcdeabcde/foo" => 401 if "/by_id/zzzzz-4zz18-abcdeabcdeabcde" does not exist
- GET "/users/foo/bar" => 404 if "/users/foo" exists but "/users/foo/bar" does not exist
- GET "/users/foo/bar" => 401 if "/users/foo" does not exist
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Brainstorming here:
- Respond 401 to "/" with instructions to the user to either provide their token or provide the username "anonymous" and any password
- Any other path: if no credentials provided, try the anonymous token
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
Peter Amstutz wrote:
- Any other path: if no credentials provided, try the anonymous token
I think with this it would still be impossible to mount "//download.example.com/users/foo", for example.
Accepting a special user/pass that means "just use anonymous, don't ask me to authenticate" could help avoid 401 cycles. But I wonder if this should just be a separate URL (another configurable special vhost?) so it can be copy-pasted.
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
But I wonder if this should just be a separate URL (another configurable special vhost?) so it can be copy-pasted.
Yes, along those lines, how about a mount point called /public (maybe containing /public/by_id and /public/shared) which only exposes the stuff shared with anonymous, and everything else returns a 401 challenge if there are no credentials.
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
I think the most reasonable short-term fix is to completely disable anonymous access to the sitefs routes: just respond 401 if no token is provided.
Before trying to support anonymous browsing from the root dir, we should probably think through stuff like robots.txt, what happens when an anonymous client reads a publicly-readable collection and then tries to write to it, etc.
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
13111-no-anonymous-sitefs @ 3167926a35521efb58550ef0e26fb8c9e3a8450b
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 6 years ago
Updated by Tom Clegg over 6 years ago
- Status changed from In Progress to Resolved