Require the user to re-enter their password before they can view,
create, update, or delete their API keys.
This works by tracking the timestamp of the user's last password
re-entry in a `last_authenticated_at` session cookie, and redirecting
the user to a password confirmation page if they haven't re-entered
their password in the last hour.
This is modeled after Github's Sudo mode.
6d867de20 caused an exception in the ApiKeysController, which calls
respond_with with two arguments: `respond_with(CurrentUser.user, @api_key)`.
`options[0]` referred to the second argument, which was incorrect.
The /emails endpoint was passing in the "Email" model because that's
how the emails controller classifies. This was to fix that, and to
allow any other such cases in the future.
This refactors Pundit policies to only rely on the current user, not on
the current user and the current HTTP request. In retrospect, it was a
bad idea to include the current request in the Pundit context. It bleeds
out everywhere and there are many contexts (in tests and models) where
we only have the current user, not the current request. The previous
commit got rid of the only two places where we used it.
Refactor page limits to a) be explicitly listed in the User class (not
hidden away in the Danbooru config) and b) explicitly depend on the
CurrentUser (not implicitly by way of Danbooru.config.max_numbered_pages).
* Fix a bug where non-GET 404 requests weren't handled.
* Fix a bug where non-HTML 404 requests weren't handled.
* Show a random image from a specified pool on the 404 page.
Add a debug mode option. This is useful when debugging failed tests.
Debug mode disables parallel testing so you can set breakpoints in tests
with binding.pry (normally parallel testing makes it hard to set
breakpoints).
Debug mode also disables global exception handling for controllers. This
lets exceptions bubble up to the console during controller tests
(normally exceptions are swallowed by the controller, which prevents you
from seeing backtraces in failed controller tests).
Fix session cookies being sent in publicly cached /autocomplete.json
responses. We can't set any cookies in a response that is being publicly
cached, otherwise they'll be visible to other users. If a user's session
cookies were to be cached, then it would allow their account to be stolen.
In reality, well-behaved caches like Cloudflare will simply refuse to
cache responses that contain cookies to avoid this scenario.
https://support.cloudflare.com/hc/en-us/articles/200172516-Understanding-Cloudflare-s-CDN:
BYPASS is returned when enabling Origin Cache-Control. Cloudflare also
sets BYPASS when your origin web server sends cookies in the response
header.
Bug: when a search timed out we got the generic failbooru page instead
of the search timeout error page.
Cause: when rendering the <link rel="next"> / <link rel="prev"> tags in
the header, we may need to evaluate the search to determine the next or
previous page, but if the searches times out then this fails, which
caused Rails to throw a ActionView::Template::Error because an exception
was thrown while rendering the template.
Likewise, rendering the attributes for the <body> tag could fail with an
ActionView::Template::Error because the call to `current_item.present?`
forced evaluation of the search.
Rename the `error` url param to `cause_error`. Using this param causes
Danbooru to return an error response for testing purposes. Calling this
param `error` caused problems when OAuth2 authorization failed and the
user was redirected back to Danbooru with the `error` param set.
* Make IP bans soft deletable.
* Add a hit counter to track how many times an IP ban has blocked someone.
* Add a last hit timestamp to track when the IP ban last blocked someone.
* Add a new type of IP ban, the signup ban. Signup bans restrict new
signups from editing anything until they've verified their email
address.
- "Current" is now most like the old format
-- It is therefore now the default for post versions
- Only show the actual edits in their own column
- Show the current state at that version in another column
- On the "previous" view, don't double-show full list of tags for
the first post versions, so leave edits blank
- The types are:
-- Previous: The default and the previously used type
-- Subsequent: Compares against the next version
-- Current: Compares against the current version
- Allow switching between comparison types in index and diff views
-- Have links vary depending upon current comparison type
Previously only actions that were marked member_only or above were
subject to IP ban restrictions. This meant that certain actions that
weren't marked member_only, like creating new accounts, could still be
done by IP banned users.
Now IP banned users can't do any non-GET actions, which means they're
not allowed to even login to their accounts.
- The only string works much the same as before with its comma separation
-- Nested includes are indicated with square brackets "[ ]"
-- The nested include is the value immediately preceding the square brackets
-- The only string is the comma separated string inside those brackets
- Default includes are split between format types when necessary
-- This prevents unnecessary includes from being added on page load
- Available includes are those items which are allowed to be accessible to the user
-- Some aren't because they are sensitive, such as the creator of a flag
-- Some aren't because the number of associated items is too large
- The amount of times the same model can be included to prevent recursions
-- One exception is the root model may include the same model once
--- e.g. the user model can include the inviter which is also the user model
-- Another exception is if the include is a has_many association
--- e.g. artist urls can include the artist, and then artist urls again
* Allow both xml and json authentication in sessions controller.
* Raise an exception if a login attempt fails so that a) we return a
proper error for json/xml requests and b) failed login attempts get
reported to NewRelic (for monitoring abuse).
Previously the page-based (numbered) paginator would always count the
total_pages, even in API calls when it wasn't needed. This could be very
slow in some cases. Refactor so that total_pages isn't calculated unless
it's called.
While we're at it, refactor to condense all the sequential vs. numbered
pagination logic into one module. This incidentally fixes a couple more
bugs:
* "page=b0" returned all pages rather than nothing.
* Bad parameters like "page=blaha123" and "page=a123blah" were accepted.
In xml responses, if the result is an empty array we want the response
to look like this:
<posts type="array"/>
not like this (the default):
<nil-classes type="array"/>
This refactors controllers so that this is done automatically instead of
having to manually call `@things.to_xml(root: "things")` everywhere. We
do this by overriding the behavior of `respond_with` in `ApplicationResponder`
to set the `root` option by default in xml responses.
Refactor to use `render_error_page` to handle User::PrivilegeError
exceptions. This way these exceptions are logged to New Relic.
Changes:
* Anonymous users aren't automatically redirected to the login page.
Instead they're taken to the access denied page, which links to the
login/signup pages.
* JSON/XML error responses return `message` instead of `reason`.
* Refactor api_check to use render_error_page so that api limit errors
get logged to New Relic for analysis.
* Also standardize json error responses to return the error message in
`message` instead of `reason`.
Fixes POST/PUT API requests failing with InvalidAuthenticityToken errors
due to missing CSRF tokens.
CSRF protection is only necessary for cookie-based authentication. For
non-cookie-based authentication we can safely disable it. That is, if
the user is already passing their login + api_key, then we don't need
to additionally verify the request with a CSRF token.
ref: 2e407fa476 (comments)