When storing files in S3, paperclip is configured with a Cache-Control header
indicating the file is immutable, however no such header was added when using
OpenStack storage.
Luckily Paperclip's fog integration makes this trivial, with a simple
`fog_file` `Cache-Control` default doing the trick.
Some "S3 Compatible" storage providers (Cloudflare R2 is one such example) don't support setting ACLs on individual uploads with the `x-amz-acl` header, and instead just have a visibility for the whole bucket. To support uploads to such providers without getting unsupported errors back, lets use a black `S3_PERMISSION` env var to indicate that these headers shouldn't be sent.
This is tested as working with Cloudflare R2.
* added OpenID Connect as an SSO option
* minor fixes
* added comments, removed an option that shouldn't be set
* fixed Gemfile.lock
* added newline to end of Gemfile.lock
* removed tab from Gemfile.lock
* remove chomp
* codeclimate changes and small name change to make function's purpose clearer
* codeclimate fix
* added SSO buttons to /about page
* minor refactor
* minor style change
* removed spurious change
* removed unecessary conditional from ensure_valid_username and added support for auth.info.name in user_params_from_auth
* minor changes
Fixes#15959
Introduced in #6540, OAUTH_REDIRECT_AT_SIGN_IN allowed skipping the log-in form
to instead redirect to the external OmniAuth login provider.
However, it did not prevent the log-in form on /about introduced by #10232 from
appearing, and completely broke with the introduction of #15228.
As I restoring that previous log-in flow without introducing a security
vulnerability may require extensive care and knowledge of how OmniAuth works,
this commit removes support for OAUTH_REDIRECT_AT_SIGN_IN instead for the time
being.
Up until now, we have used Devise's Rememberable mechanism to re-log users
after the end of their browser sessions. This mechanism relies on a signed
cookie containing a token. That token was stored on the user's record,
meaning it was shared across all logged in browsers, meaning truly revoking
a browser's ability to auto-log-in involves revoking the token itself, and
revoking access from *all* logged-in browsers.
We had a session mechanism that dynamically checks whether a user's session
has been disabled, and would log out the user if so. However, this would only
clear a session being actively used, and a new one could be respawned with
the `remember_user_token` cookie.
In practice, this caused two issues:
- sessions could be revived after being closed from /auth/edit (security issue)
- auto-log-in would be disabled for *all* browsers after logging out from one
of them
This PR removes the `remember_token` mechanism and treats the `_session_id`
cookie/token as a browser-specific `remember_token`, fixing both issues.
When using a CAS server, the users only have a temporary email
`change@me-foo-cas.com` which can't be changed but by an
administrator.
We need a new environment variable like for SAML to assume the email
from CAS is verified.
* config/initializers/omniauth.rb: define CAS option for assuming
email are always verified.
* .env.nanobox: add new variable as an example.
The auto-linking code basically rewrote the whole string escaping non-ascii
characters in an inefficient way, and building a full character offset map
between the unescaped and escaped texts before sending the contents to
TwitterText's extractor.
Instead of doing that, this commit changes the TwitterText regexps to include
valid IRI characters in addition to valid URI characters.