| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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The example was slightly incorrect. This commit also adds a test case
for this example to cookies middleware unit tests.
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Use CBC encryption is this configuration value is set to false
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[ Michael Coyne & Kasper Timm Hansen ]
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Using the action_dispatch.cookies_rotations interface, key rotation is
now possible with cookies. Thus the secret_key_base as well as salts,
ciphers, and digests, can be rotated without expiring sessions.
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This reverts commit 3420a14590c0e6915d8b6c242887f74adb4120f9, reversing
changes made to afb66a5a598ce4ac74ad84b125a5abf046dcf5aa.
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This commit changes encrypted cookies from AES in CBC HMAC mode to
Authenticated Encryption using AES-GCM. It also provides a cookie jar
to transparently upgrade encrypted cookies to this new scheme. Some
other notable changes include:
- There is a new application configuration value:
+use_authenticated_cookie_encryption+. When enabled, AEAD encrypted
cookies will be used.
- +cookies.signed+ does not raise a +TypeError+ now if the name of an
encrypted cookie is used. Encrypted cookies using the same key as
signed cookies would be verified and serialization would then fail
due the message still be encrypted.
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This reverts commit 5eff7a9ca7bb2ee7f16db1ab4d11cebe28757ba5, reversing
changes made to 5f03172f54a58a57a48a3121562beb2cef866cbe.
Reason: It caused a regression. The test case is on the PR.
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Regression introduced by ae29142142324545a328948e059e8b8118fd7a33 / 8363b879fe759f0645179f4521cc64795efbee6e.
Previously, cookies were only updated on `GET` requests. Now we will
update the helper for all requests, as part of `process`. Added
regression tests for all available HTTP method helpers in
`ActionController::TestCase`.
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assert [1, 3].includes?(2) fails with unhelpful "Asserting failed" message
assert_includes [1, 3], 2 fails with "Expected [1, 3] to include 2" which makes it easier to debug and more obvious what went wrong
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key length
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Since keys are truncated, ruby 2.4 doesn't accept keys greater than their lenghts.
keys of same value but different lenght and greater than key size of cipher, produce the same results
as reproduced at https://gist.github.com/rhenium/b81355fe816dcfae459cc5eadfc4f6f9
Since our default cipher is 'aes-256-cbc', key length for which is 32 bytes, limit the length of key being passed to Encryptor to 32 bytes.
This continues to support backwards compat with any existing signed data, already encrupted and signed with 32+ byte keys.
Also fixes the passing of this value in multiple tests.
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Style/SpaceBeforeBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideBlockBraces
Style/SpaceInsideHashLiteralBraces
Fix all violations in the repository.
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The current code base is not uniform. After some discussion,
we have chosen to go with double quotes by default.
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We want to get rid of the `Live::Response` so we are consolidating methods
from `Live::Response` and `Response` by merging them together.
This adds an `#empty` method to the request so we don't need to
hard-code the empty array each time we call an empty
`ActionDispatch::Request`.
The work here is a continuation on combining controller and integration
test code bases into one.
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header.
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With changes made in 8363b8 and ae29142 cookies that are mutated on the
request like `cookies.signed = x` were not retained in subsequent tests,
breaking cookie authentiation in controller tests.
The test added demonstrates the issue.
The reason we need to select from non-deleted cookies is because without
checking the `@delete_cookies` the `cookie_jar` `@cookies` will send the
wrong cookies to be updated. The code must check for `@deleted_cookies`
before sending an `#update` with the requests cookie_jar cookies.
This follows how the cookie_jar cookies from the request were updated
before these changes.
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Using `assert_predicate` and `assert_match` instead of just `assert` is
preferrable because better error messages are output.
In the case of `assert response.cookies.empty?` the error message was
`Failed assertion, no message given.` but now with `assert_predicate` it
will be `Expected {"user_name"=>"david"} to be empty?.`
For `assert_match(/user_name=david/,
response.headers["Set-Cookie"])` as well, the message returned was
unhelpful - `Failed assertion, no message given.` but now will tell what
was expected and what was returned with `Expected /user_name=david/ to
match "user_name=nope; path=/".`
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Assert that 2 letter tlds with 3 letter domain names work when option specified.
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option specified
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allow 'all' for :domain option in addition to :all
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Some `require 'openssl'` statements were surrounded by `rescue` blocks to deal with Ruby versions that did not support `OpenSSL::Digest::SHA1` or `OpenSSL::PKCS5`.
[As @jeremy explains](https://github.com/rails/rails/commit/a6a0904fcb12b876469c48b1c885aadafe9188cf#commitcomment-8826666) in the original commit:
> If jruby didn't have jruby-openssl gem, the require wouldn't work. Not sure whether either of these are still relevant today.
According to the [release notes for JRuby 1.7.13](http://www.jruby.org/2014/06/24/jruby-1-7-13.html):
> jruby-openssl 0.9.5 bundled
which means the above `rescue` block is not needed anymore.
All the Ruby versions supported by the current version of Rails provide those OpenSSL libraries, so Travis CI should also be happy by removing the `rescue` blocks.
---
Just to confirm, with JRuby:
$ ruby --version #=> jruby 1.7.16.1 (1.9.3p392) 2014-10-28 4e93f31 on Java HotSpot(TM) 64-Bit Server VM 1.8.0_20-b26 +jit [darwin-x86_64]
$ irb
irb(main):001:0> require 'openssl' #=> true
irb(main):002:0> OpenSSL::Digest::SHA1 #=> OpenSSL::Digest::SHA1
irb(main):003:0> OpenSSL::PKCS5 # => OpenSSL::PKCS5
And with Ruby 2.1:
$ ruby --version #=> ruby 2.1.2p95 (2014-05-08 revision 45877) [x86_64-darwin13.0]
$ irb
irb(main):001:0> require 'openssl' #=> true
irb(main):002:0> OpenSSL::Digest::SHA1 #=> OpenSSL::Digest::SHA1
irb(main):003:0> OpenSSL::PKCS5 #=> OpenSSL::PKCS5
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This commit improves performance of cookie tests:
Ruby | After | Before
----- | --------:| --------:
MRI | 5.03s | 9.28s
JRuby | 25.45s | 1648.23s
Please note the improvement for JRuby.
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Use the Active Support JSON encoder for cookie jars using the `:json` or
`:hybrid` serializer. This allows you to serialize custom Ruby objects into
cookies by defining the `#as_json` hook on such objects.
Fixes #16520.
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You can now configure custom digest for cookies in the same way as `serializer`:
config.action_dispatch.cookies_digest = 'SHA256'
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Previously, the `VerifyAndUpgradeLegacySignedMessage` assumes all incoming
cookies are marshal-encoded. This is not the case when `secret_token` is
used in conjunction with the `:json` or `:hybrid` serializer.
In those case, when upgrading to use `secret_key_base`, this would cause a
`TypeError: incompatible marshal file format` and a 500 error for the user.
Fixes #14774.
*Godfrey Chan*
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(currently failing)
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Rename allowed options to :marshal and :json, for custom serializers
only allow the use of custom classes.
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MessageEncryptor has :serializer option, where any serializer object can
be passed. This commit make it possible to set this serializer from configuration
level.
There are predefined serializers (:marshal_serializer, :json_serialzier)
and custom serializer can be passed as String, Symbol (camelized and
constantized in ActionDispatch::Session namepspace) or serializer object.
Default :json_serializer was also added to generators to provide secure
defalt.
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