- Currently the TOTP secrets are stored using the `secrets` module with
as key the MD5 hash of the Secretkey, the `secrets` module uses general
bad practices. This patch migrates the secrets to use the `keying`
module (#5041) which is easier to use and use better practices to store
secrets in databases.
- Migration test added.
- Remove the Forgejo migration databases, and let the gitea migration
databases also run forgejo migration databases. This is required as the
Forgejo migration is now also touching tables that the forgejo migration
didn't create itself.
Add the default value of the purpose field to both the table and the
migration. The table in v9 and v7 backport already have the default
value.
ALTER TABLE `forgejo_auth_token` ADD `purpose` TEXT NOT NULL [] - Cannot add a NOT NULL column with default value NULL
- Add a `purpose` column, this allows the `forgejo_auth_token` table to
be used by other parts of Forgejo, while still enjoying the
no-compromise architecture.
- Remove the 'roll your own crypto' time limited code functions and
migrate them to the `forgejo_auth_token` table. This migration ensures
generated codes can only be used for their purpose and ensure they are
invalidated after their usage by deleting it from the database, this
also should help making auditing of the security code easier, as we're
no longer trying to stuff a lot of data into a HMAC construction.
-Helper functions are rewritten to ensure a safe-by-design approach to
these tokens.
- Add the `forgejo_auth_token` to dbconsistency doctor and add it to the
`deleteUser` function.
- TODO: Add cron job to delete expired authorization tokens.
- Unit and integration tests added.
- For WebAuthn Credential level 3, the `backup_eligible` and
`backup_state` flags are checked if they are consistent with the values
given on login. Forgejo never stored this data, so add a database
migration that makes all webauthn credentials 'legacy' and on the next
first use capture the values of `backup_eligible` and `backup_state`.
As suggested in https://github.com/go-webauthn/webauthn/discussions/219#discussioncomment-10429662
- Adds unit tests.
- Add E2E test.
- Continuation of https://github.com/go-gitea/gitea/pull/18835 (by
@Gusted, so it's fine to change copyright holder to Forgejo).
- Add the option to use SSH for push mirrors, this would allow for the
deploy keys feature to be used and not require tokens to be used which
cannot be limited to a specific repository. The private key is stored
encrypted (via the `keying` module) on the database and NEVER given to
the user, to avoid accidental exposure and misuse.
- CAVEAT: This does require the `ssh` binary to be present, which may
not be available in containerized environments, this could be solved by
adding a SSH client into forgejo itself and use the forgejo binary as
SSH command, but should be done in another PR.
- CAVEAT: Mirroring of LFS content is not supported, this would require
the previous stated problem to be solved due to LFS authentication (an
attempt was made at forgejo/forgejo#2544).
- Integration test added.
- Resolves#4416
This is an implementation of a quota engine, and the API routes to
manage its settings. This does *not* contain any enforcement code: this
is just the bedrock, the engine itself.
The goal of the engine is to be flexible and future proof: to be nimble
enough to build on it further, without having to rewrite large parts of
it.
It might feel a little more complicated than necessary, because the goal
was to be able to support scenarios only very few Forgejo instances
need, scenarios the vast majority of mostly smaller instances simply do
not care about. The goal is to support both big and small, and for that,
we need a solid, flexible foundation.
There are thee big parts to the engine: counting quota use, setting
limits, and evaluating whether the usage is within the limits. Sounds
simple on paper, less so in practice!
Quota counting
==============
Quota is counted based on repo ownership, whenever possible, because
repo owners are in ultimate control over the resources they use: they
can delete repos, attachments, everything, even if they don't *own*
those themselves. They can clean up, and will always have the permission
and access required to do so. Would we count quota based on the owning
user, that could lead to situations where a user is unable to free up
space, because they uploaded a big attachment to a repo that has been
taken private since. It's both more fair, and much safer to count quota
against repo owners.
This means that if user A uploads an attachment to an issue opened
against organization O, that will count towards the quota of
organization O, rather than user A.
One's quota usage stats can be queried using the `/user/quota` API
endpoint. To figure out what's eating into it, the
`/user/repos?order_by=size`, `/user/quota/attachments`,
`/user/quota/artifacts`, and `/user/quota/packages` endpoints should be
consulted. There's also `/user/quota/check?subject=<...>` to check
whether the signed-in user is within a particular quota limit.
Quotas are counted based on sizes stored in the database.
Setting quota limits
====================
There are different "subjects" one can limit usage for. At this time,
only size-based limits are implemented, which are:
- `size:all`: As the name would imply, the total size of everything
Forgejo tracks.
- `size:repos:all`: The total size of all repositories (not including
LFS).
- `size:repos:public`: The total size of all public repositories (not
including LFS).
- `size:repos:private`: The total size of all private repositories (not
including LFS).
- `sizeall`: The total size of all git data (including all
repositories, and LFS).
- `sizelfs`: The size of all git LFS data (either in private or
public repos).
- `size:assets:all`: The size of all assets tracked by Forgejo.
- `size:assets:attachments:all`: The size of all kinds of attachments
tracked by Forgejo.
- `size:assets:attachments:issues`: Size of all attachments attached to
issues, including issue comments.
- `size:assets:attachments:releases`: Size of all attachments attached
to releases. This does *not* include automatically generated archives.
- `size:assets:artifacts`: Size of all Action artifacts.
- `size:assets:packages:all`: Size of all Packages.
- `size:wiki`: Wiki size
Wiki size is currently not tracked, and the engine will always deem it
within quota.
These subjects are built into Rules, which set a limit on *all* subjects
within a rule. Thus, we can create a rule that says: "1Gb limit on all
release assets, all packages, and git LFS, combined". For a rule to
stand, the total sum of all subjects must be below the rule's limit.
Rules are in turn collected into groups. A group is just a name, and a
list of rules. For a group to stand, all of its rules must stand. Thus,
if we have a group with two rules, one that sets a combined 1Gb limit on
release assets, all packages, and git LFS, and another rule that sets a
256Mb limit on packages, if the user has 512Mb of packages, the group
will not stand, because the second rule deems it over quota. Similarly,
if the user has only 128Mb of packages, but 900Mb of release assets, the
group will not stand, because the combined size of packages and release
assets is over the 1Gb limit of the first rule.
Groups themselves are collected into Group Lists. A group list stands
when *any* of the groups within stand. This allows an administrator to
set conservative defaults, but then place select users into additional
groups that increase some aspect of their limits.
To top it off, it is possible to set the default quota groups a user
belongs to in `app.ini`. If there's no explicit assignment, the engine
will use the default groups. This makes it possible to avoid having to
assign each and every user a list of quota groups, and only those need
to be explicitly assigned who need a different set of groups than the
defaults.
If a user has any quota groups assigned to them, the default list will
not be considered for them.
The management APIs
===================
This commit contains the engine itself, its unit tests, and the quota
management APIs. It does not contain any enforcement.
The APIs are documented in-code, and in the swagger docs, and the
integration tests can serve as an example on how to use them.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
- Go's deadcode eliminator is quite simple, if you put a public function
in a package `aa/bb` that is used only by tests, it would still be built
if package `aa/bb` was imported. This means that if such functions use
libraries relevant only to tests that those libraries would still be
be built and increase the binary size of a Go binary.
- This is also the case with Forgejo, `models/migrations/base/tests.go`
contained functions exclusively used by tests which (skipping some steps
here) imports https://github.com/ClickHouse/clickhouse-go, which is
2MiB. The `code.gitea.io/gitea/models/migrations/base` package is
imported by `cmd/doctor` and thus the code of the clickhouse library is
also built and included in the Forgejo binary, although entirely unused
and not reachable.
- This patch moves the test-related functions to their own package, so
Go's deadcode eliminator knows not to build the test-related functions
and thus reduces the size of the Forgejo binary.
- It is not possible to move this to a `_test.go` file because Go does
not allow importing functions from such files, so any test helper
function must be in a non-test package and file.
- Reduction of size (built with `TAGS="sqlite sqlite_unlock_notify" make
build`):
- Before: 95912040 bytes (92M)
- After: 92306888 bytes (89M)
Gitea and Forgejo chose to implement wiki branch naming differently, but
Forgejo picked the Gitea migration anyway, resulting in an unused column
in the database, which wasn't part of the `Repository` struct either -
something warned about during startup, too.
Similarly, Forgejo chose not to implement User badges at all - but kept
the existing code for it -, and the `badge` table ended up with an
unused `slug` column due to a Gitea migration, and resulted in another
warning at startup.
To keep the database consistent with the code, and to get rid of these
warnings, lets introduce a new migration, which simply drops these
Gitea-specific columns from the database.
Fixes#3463.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
This adds a new options to releases to hide the links to the automatically generated archives. This is useful, when the automatically generated Archives are broken e.g. because of Submodules.
![grafik](/attachments/5686edf6-f318-4175-8459-89c33973b181)
![grafik](/attachments/74a8bf92-2abb-47a0-876d-d41024770d0b)
Note:
This juts hides the Archives from the UI. Users can still download 5the Archive if they know t correct URL.
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/3139
Reviewed-by: Otto <otto@codeberg.org>
Reviewed-by: 0ko <0ko@noreply.codeberg.org>
Co-authored-by: JakobDev <jakobdev@gmx.de>
Co-committed-by: JakobDev <jakobdev@gmx.de>
* Split TestPullRequest out of AddTestPullRequestTask
* A Created field is added to the Issue table
* The Created field is set to the time (with nano resolution) on creation
* Record the nano time repo_module.PushUpdateOptions is created by the hook
* The decision to update a pull request created before a commit was
pushed is based on the time (with nano resolution) the git hook
was run and the Created field
It ensures the following happens:
* commit C is pushed
* the git hook queues AddTestPullRequestTask for processing and returns with success
* TestPullRequest is not called yet
* a pull request P with commit C as the head is created
* TestPullRequest runs and ignores P because it was created after the commit was received
When the "created" column is NULL, no verification is done, pull
requests that were created before the column was created in the
database cannot be newer than the latest call to a git hook.
Fixes: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/issues/2009
- Currently protected branch rules do not apply to admins, however in
some cases (like in the case of Forgejo project) you might also want to
apply these rules to admins to avoid accidental merges.
- Add new option to configure this on a per-rule basis.
- Adds integration tests.
- Resolves#65
Because the `git` module did not recognize SSH signed tags, those
signatures ended up in the `notes` column of the `release` table. While
future signatures will not end up there, Forgejo should clean up the old
ones.
This migration does just that: finds all releases that have an SSH
signature, and removes those signatures, preserving the rest of the
note (if any).
While this may seem like an expensive operation, it's only done once,
and even on the largest known Forgejo instance as of this
writing (Codeberg), the number of affected rows are just over a hundred,
a tiny amount all things considered.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
Repositories displaying an "Add more..." tab on the header is a neat way
to let people discover they can enable more units. However, displaying
it all the time for repository owners, even when they deliberately do
not want to enable more units gets noisy very fast.
As such, this patch introduces a new setting which lets people disable
this hint under the appearance settings.
Fixes#2378.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
Previously, the repo wiki was hardcoded to use `master` as its branch,
this change makes it possible to use `main` (or something else, governed
by `[repository].DEFAULT_BRANCH`, a setting that already exists and
defaults to `main`).
The way it is done is that a new column is added to the `repository`
table: `wiki_branch`. The migration will make existing repositories
default to `master`, for compatibility's sake, even if they don't have a
Wiki (because it's easier to do that). Newly created repositories will
default to `[repository].DEFAULT_BRANCH` instead.
The Wiki service was updated to use the branch name stored in the
database, and fall back to the default if it is empty.
Old repositories with Wikis using the older `master` branch will have
the option to do a one-time transition to `main`, available via the
repository settings in the "Danger Zone". This option will only be
available for repositories that have the internal wiki enabled, it is
not empty, and the wiki branch is not `[repository].DEFAULT_BRANCH`.
When migrating a repository with a Wiki, Forgejo will use the same
branch name for the wiki as the source repository did. If that's not the
same as the default, the option to normalize it will be available after
the migration's done.
Additionally, the `/api/v1/{owner}/{repo}` endpoint was updated: it will
now include the wiki branch name in `GET` requests, and allow changing
the wiki branch via `PATCH`.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit d87c526d2a)
This implements "repository flags", a way for instance administrators to
assign custom flags to repositories. The idea is that custom templates
can look at these flags, and display banners based on them, Forgejo does
not provide anything built on top of it, just the foundation. The
feature is optional, and disabled by default. To enable it, set
`[repository].ENABLE_FLAGS = true`.
On the UI side, instance administrators will see a new "Manage flags"
tab on repositories, and a list of enabled tags (if any) on the
repository home page. The "Manage flags" page allows them to remove
existing flags, or add any new ones that are listed in
`[repository].SETTABLE_FLAGS`.
The model does not enforce that only the `SETTABLE_FLAGS` are present.
If the setting is changed, old flags may remain present in the database,
and anything that uses them, will still work. The repository flag
management page will allow an instance administrator to remove them, but
not set them, once removed.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit ba735ce222)
(cherry picked from commit f09f6e029b)
(cherry picked from commit 2f8b041489)
(cherry picked from commit d3186ee5f4)
This is largely based on gitea#6312 by @ashimokawa, with updates and
fixes by myself, and incorporates the review feedback given in that pull
request, and more.
What this patch does is add a new "default_permissions" column to the
`repo_units` table (defaulting to read permission), adjusts the
permission checking code to take this into consideration, and then
exposes a setting that lets a repo administrator enable any user on a
Forgejo instance to edit the repo's wiki (effectively giving the wiki
unit of the repo "write" permissions by default).
By default, wikis will remain restricted to collaborators, but with the
new setting exposed, they can be turned into globally editable wikis.
FixesCodeberg/Community#28.
Signed-off-by: Gergely Nagy <forgejo@gergo.csillger.hu>
(cherry picked from commit 4b74439922)
(cherry picked from commit 337cf62c10)
(cherry picked from commit b6786fdb32)
(cherry picked from commit a5d2829a10)
[GITEA] Optionally allow anyone to edit Wikis (squash) AddTokenAuth
(cherry picked from commit fed50cf72e)
(cherry picked from commit 42c55e494e)
(cherry picked from commit e3463bda47)
- This is a 'front-port' of the already existing patch on v1.21 and
v1.20, but applied on top of what Gitea has done to rework the LTA
mechanism. Forgejo will stick with the reworked mechanism by the Forgejo
Security team for the time being. The removal of legacy code (AES-GCM) has been
left out.
- The current architecture is inherently insecure, because you can
construct the 'secret' cookie value with values that are available in
the database. Thus provides zero protection when a database is
dumped/leaked.
- This patch implements a new architecture that's inspired from: [Paragonie Initiative](https://paragonie.com/blog/2015/04/secure-authentication-php-with-long-term-persistence#secure-remember-me-cookies).
- Integration testing is added to ensure the new mechanism works.
- Removes a setting, because it's not used anymore.
(cherry picked from commit e3d6622a63)
(cherry picked from commit fef1a6dac5)
(cherry picked from commit b0c5165145)
(cherry picked from commit 7ad51b9f8d)
(cherry picked from commit 64f053f383)
(cherry picked from commit f5e78e4c20)
Conflicts:
services/auth/auth_token_test.go
https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/2069
(cherry picked from commit f69fc23d4b)
(cherry picked from commit d955ab3ab0)
(cherry picked from commit 9220088f90)
(cherry picked from commit c73ac63696)
(cherry picked from commit 747a176048)
Conflicts:
models/user/user.go
routers/web/user/setting/account.go
https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/2295
- Implements https://codeberg.org/forgejo/discussions/issues/32#issuecomment-918737
- Allows to add Forgejo-specific migrations that don't interfere with Gitea's migration logic. Please do note that we cannot liberally add migrations for Gitea tables, as they might do their own migrations in a future version on that table, and that could undo our migrations. Luckily, we don't have a scenario where that's needed and thus not taken into account.
Co-authored-by: Gusted <postmaster@gusted.xyz>
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/795
(cherry picked from commit 8ee32978c0)
(cherry picked from commit c240b34f59)
(cherry picked from commit 03936c6492)
(cherry picked from commit a20ed852f8)
(cherry picked from commit 1dfa82676f)
(cherry picked from commit c39ae0bf8a)
(cherry picked from commit cfaff08996)
(cherry picked from commit 94a458835a)
(cherry picked from commit 61a3cf77df)
(cherry picked from commit abb350fde8)
(cherry picked from commit 5194829d6b)
(cherry picked from commit 89239a60f2)
(cherry picked from commit 683cfd86ef)
(cherry picked from commit f4546cfed9)
(cherry picked from commit 86614d5826)
(cherry picked from commit e4b9c32187)
(cherry picked from commit 8c253719af)
(cherry picked from commit 857365d6c1)
(cherry picked from commit a488b3952f)
(cherry picked from commit 98313c4910)
(cherry picked from commit 430d95e824)
(cherry picked from commit 08bf9d918f)
(cherry picked from commit f8a170e2d0)
(cherry picked from commit d20e325378)
(cherry picked from commit 6c0aa7dd4f)
(cherry picked from commit 46c08c26c7)
(cherry picked from commit 9ee22153c4)
[DB] Ensure forgejo migration up to date (squash)
- Hook Forgejo's `EnsureUpToDate` to Gitea's `EnsureUpToDate`, such that
the Forgejo migrations are also being checked to be up to date.
- I'm not sure how I missed this and if this has caused any problems,
but due to the lack of any open issue about it it seems to not be a big
problem.
(cherry picked from commit 6c65b6dcf6)
(cherry picked from commit 6d45c37d84)
[DB] Add test for TestEnsureUpToDate (squash)
- Add a test for the behavior of `EnsureUpToDate`, to ensure it will
error when needed and succeed when the forgejo version is up to date.
- Add forgejo_migrations package to GO_TEST_PACKAGES, to avoid running
it with `test-unit` and instead test it with `test-*-migration`.
(cherry picked from commit b172a50691)
(cherry picked from commit d8af308820)
(cherry picked from commit e69e64a32c)
(cherry picked from commit 4e8363fad4)
(cherry picked from commit fc9ecd6c53)
(cherry picked from commit e5c446e3dc)
(cherry picked from commit 7066a15655)
(cherry picked from commit 9183cdc835)
(cherry picked from commit 5f93039e0d)
Conflicts:
Makefile
https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/2245
(cherry picked from commit a039b3b0c9)