This can lead to nicer, smaller JSON output for Caddyfiles like this:
a {
tls internal
}
b {
tls foo@bar.com
}
i.e. where the tls directive only configures automation policies, and
is merely meant to enable TLS on a server block (if it wasn't implied).
This helps keeps implicit config implicit.
Needs a little more testing to ensure it doesn't break anything
important.
* httpcaddyfile: Exclude access logs written to files from default log
Even though any logs can just be ignored, most users don't seem to like
configuring an access log to go to a file only to have it doubly appear
in the default log.
Related to:
- #3294
- https://caddy.community/t/v2-logging-format/7642/4?u=matt
- https://caddy.community/t/caddyfile-questions/7651/3?u=matt
* caddyhttp: General improvements to access log controls (fixes#3310)
* caddyhttp: Move log config nil check higher
* Rename LoggerName -> DefaultLoggerName
Panic would happen if an automation policy was specified in a singular
server block that had no hostnames in its address. Definitely an edge
case.
Fixed a bug related to checking for server blocks with a host-less key
that tried to make an automation policy. Previously if you had only two
server blocks like ":443" and another one at ":80", the one at ":443"
could not create a TLS automation policy because it thought it would
interfere with TLS automation for the block at ":80", but obviously that
key doesn't enable TLS because it is on the HTTP port. So now we are a
little smarter and count only non-HTTP-empty-hostname keys.
Also fixed a bug so that a key like "https://:1234" is sure to have TLS
enabled by giving it a TLS connection policy. (Relaxed conditions
slightly; the previous conditions were too strict, requiring there to be
a TLS conn policy already or a default SNI to be non-empty.)
Also clarified a comment thanks to feedback from @Mohammed90
These functions are called at init-time, and their inputs are hard-coded
so there are no environmental or user factors that could make it fail
or succeed; the error return values are often ignored, and when they're
not, they are usually a fatal error anyway. To ensure that a programmer
mistake is not missed, we now panic instead.
Last breaking change 🤞
- Create two default automation policies; if the TLS app is used in
isolation with the 'automate' certificate loader, it will now use
an internal issuer for internal-only names, and an ACME issuer for
all other names by default.
- If the HTTP Caddyfile adds an 'automate' loader, it now also adds an
automation policy for any names in that loader that do not qualify
for public certificates so that they will be issued internally. (It
might be nice if this wasn't necessary, but the alternative is to
either make auto-HTTPS logic way more complex by scanning the names in
the 'automate' loader, or to have an automation policy without an
issuer switch between default issuer based on the name being issued
a certificate - I think I like the latter option better, right now we
do something kind of like that but at a level above each individual
automation policies, we do that switch only when no automation
policies match, rather than when a policy without an issuer does
match.)
- Set the default LoggerName rather than a LoggerNames with an empty
host value, which is now taken literally rather than as a catch-all.
- hostsFromKeys, the function that gets a list of hosts from server
block keys, no longer returns an empty string in its resulting slice,
ever.
We now store the parsed site/server block keys with the server block,
rather than parsing the addresses every time we read them.
Also detect conflicting schemes, i.e. TLS and non-TLS cannot be served
from the same server (natively -- modules could be built for it).
Also do not add site subroutes (subroutes generated specifically from
site blocks in the Caddyfile) that are empty.
Thus far the fuzzers have found a few crashers in the Caddyfile parser. However, the fuzzer have been stuck at import glob expansion after import glob expansion, which aren't reproducible.
Certificate selection used to be a module, but this seems unnecessary,
especially since the built-in CustomSelectionPolicy allows quite complex
selection logic on a number of fields in certs. If we need to extend
that logic, we can, but I don't think there are SO many possibilities
that we need modules.
This update also allows certificate selection to choose between multiple
matching certs based on client compatibility and makes a number of other
improvements in the default cert selection logic, both here and in the
latest CertMagic.
The hardest part of this was the conn policy consolidation logic
(Caddyfile only, of course). We have to merge connection policies that
we can easily combine, because if two certs are manually loaded in a
Caddyfile site block, that produces two connection policies, and each
cert is tagged with a different tag, meaning only the first would ever
be selected. So given the same matchers, we can merge the two, but this
required improving the Tag selection logic to support multiple tags to
choose from, hence "tags" changed to "any_tag" or "all_tags" (but we
use any_tag in our Caddyfile logic).
Combining conn policies with conflicting settings is impossible, so
that should return an error if two policies with the exact same matchers
have non-empty settings that are not the same (the one exception being
any_tag which we can merge because the logic for them is to OR them).
It was a bit complicated. It seems to work in numerous tests I've
conducted, but we'll see how it pans out in the release candidates.
If a site block has a key like "http://localhost:2016", then the log for
that site must be mapped to "localhost:2016" and not just "localhost"
because "localhost:2016" will be the value of the Host header of requests.
But a key like "localhost:80" does not include the port since the Host
header will not include ":80" because it is a standard port.
Fixes https://caddy.community/t/v2-common-log-format-not-working/7352?u=matt
See https://caddy.community/t/v2-match-any-path-but-files/7326/8?u=matt
If rewrites (or redirects, for that matter) match on file existence,
the file matcher would need to know the root of the site.
Making this change implies that root directives that depend on rewritten
URIs will not work as expected. However, I think this is very uncommon,
and am not sure I have ever seen that. Usually, dynamic roots are based
on host, not paths or query strings.
I suspect that rewrites based on file existence will be more common than
roots based on rewritten URIs, so I am moving root to be the first in
the list.
Users can always override this ordering with the 'order' global option.
* 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>
* rewrite: strip_prefix, strip_suffix, uri_replace -> uri (closes#3140)
* Add period, to satisfy @whitestrake :) and my own OCD
* Restore implied / prefix
It's hard to say whether this was actually a bug, but the linked issue
shows why the old behavior was confusing. Basically, we infer that a
rewrite handler is supposed to act as an internal redirect, which likely
means it will no longer match the matcher(s) it did before the rewrite.
So if the rewrite directive shares a matcher with any adjacent route or
directive, it can be confusing/misleading if we consolidate the rewrite
into the same route as the next handler, which shouldn't (probably) match
after the rewrite is complete.
This is kiiiind of a hacky workaround to a quirky problem.
For edge cases like these, it is probably "cleaner" to just use handle
blocks instead, to group handlers under the same matcher, nginx-style.