- Add a new setting `EMAIL_DOMAIN_BLOCK_DISPOSABLE` that will append a list of
domains that are known for being used by temporary or disposable email
services.
- Add a utility to automatically download and format the list of domains from
the disposable-email-domains project on github.
(https://github.com/disposable-email-domains/disposable-email-domains)
license: CC0 1.0 Universal (CC0 1.0) [Public Domain]
from README:
"""
This repo contains a list of disposable and temporary email address domains often used to register dummy users in order to spam or abuse some services.
We cannot guarantee all of these can still be considered disposable but we do basic checking so chances are they were disposable at one point in time.
"""
Goals:
- speedup
- less flakiness
- best practices and more use
- documentation
config:
- sync ports in Makefile and playwright config
(otherwise, some tests fail locally because they assert the full URL including the (wrong) port)
- even more generous timeouts
- limit workers to one again (because I finally understand how
Playwright works)
- allow nested functions to group them together with the related test
all:
- deprecate waitForLoadState('networkidle')
- it is discouraged as per https://playwright.dev/docs/api/class-page#page-wait-for-load-state
- I could not find a usage that seems to require it actually (see
added documentation in README)
- adding an exception should be made explicitly
- it does not do what you might expect anyway in most cases
- only log in when necessary
webauthn:
- verify that login is possible after disabling key
- otherwise, the cleanup was not necessary after the previous refactor to create a fresh user each
issue-sidebar / WIP toggle:
- split into smaller chunks
- restore original state first
- add missed assertion to fix race condition (not waiting
before state was reached)
- explicitly toggle the state to detect mismatch earlier
issue-sidebar / labels:
- restore original state first
- better waiting for background request
- Do not require minio for mariadb docker.
- Do not require elasticsearch for mysql.
- Fix postgress password parameter.
- Add the multistatement query for mysql (this is not optimal but adding
Makefile code doesn't seem to work really well either)
- Add a new script that proccess the localization files and verify that
they only contain HTML according to our strictly defined rules.
- This should make adding malicious HTML near-impossible.
Reviewed-on: https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo/pulls/5703
Reviewed-by: 0ko <0ko@noreply.codeberg.org>
Co-authored-by: Gusted <postmaster@gusted.xyz>
Co-committed-by: Gusted <postmaster@gusted.xyz>
Make the big move to Eslint flat config format. The outcome of Eslint
still should be the same, but some things has changed:
- `eslint-plugin-github` is dropped, flat configs have been out for a
while and most eslint plugins support it, but for no reason and no
activity in sight this plugin is likely not going to support flat config
for a while and to avoid other plugins not being able to update (as they
are requiring flat configs) drop the github rules.
- Nested configs don't work properly and are unified into the root
eslint config, this unification did cause some conflicts and thats why
the `import-x` is in a seperate 'group' to exclude targeting Vue files.
- The `eslint-plugin-i` is deprecated and `esplint-plugin-import-x` is
its succesor which has better support for flat configs, the same rules
are still applied.
The majority of the flat config was generated by
`@eslint/migrate-config` tool.
gotestsum [1] is a tool that brings sanity to human-powered
analysis of test results, supporting handy summaries of results
and more.
This implementation allows for the use of `USE_GOTESTSUM=yes`
to switch the implementation from raw `go test` to `gotestsum`.
It also gives general flexibility in choice of go tests runner.
The PREFIX-SUFFIX play is needed for compiled tests and may
be subject to modification depending on the outcome of #5248
[1] https://pkg.go.dev/gotest.tools/gotestsum
This is a step towards making Forgejo's binaries (the one listed in the
release tab) reproducible.
In order to make the actual binary reproducible, we have to ensure that
the release workflow has the correct configuration to produce such
reproducible binaries. The release workflow currently uses the
Dockerfile to produce binaries, as this is one of the easiest ways to do
cross-compiling for Go binaries with CGO enabled (due to SQLite). In the
Dockerfile, two new arguments are being given to the build command.
`-trimpath` ensures that the workpath directory doesn't get included in
the binary; this means that file names (such as for panics) are
relative (to the workpath) and not absolute, which shouldn't impact
debugging. `-buildid=` is added to the linker flag; it sets the BuildID
of the Go linker to be empty; the `-buildid` hashes the input actions
and output content; these vary from build to build for unknown reasons,
but likely because of the involvement of temporary file names, this
doesn't have any effect on the behavior of the resulting binary.
The Makefile receives a new command, `reproduce-build#$VERSION` which
can be used by people to produce a reproducible Forgejo binary of a
particular release; it roughly does what the release workflow also does.
Build the Dockerfile and extract the Forgejo binary from it. This
doesn't allow to produce a reproducible version for every release, only
for those that include this patch, as it needs to call the makefile of
that version in order to make a reproducible binary.
There's one thing left to do: the Dockerfile pins the Go version to a
minor level and not to a patch level. This means that if a new Go patch
version is released, that will be used instead and will result in a
different binary that isn't bit to bit the same as the one that Forgejo
has released.