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.
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.
* Refactor shouldUpdateScroll passing
So far, shouldUpdateScroll has been manually passed down from the very top of
the React component hierarchy even though it is a static function common to
all ScrollContainer instances, so replaced that with a custom class extending
ScrollContainer.
* Generalize “press back to close modal” to any modal and to public pages
* Fix boost confirmation modal closing media modal
* Change references to tootsuite/mastodon to mastodon/mastodon
* Remove obsolete test fixture
* Replace occurrences of tootsuite/mastodon with mastodon/mastodon in CHANGELOG
And a few other places
* Fix anonymous access to outbox not being cached by the reverse proxy
Up until now, anonymous access to outbox was marked as public, but with a
0 duration for caching, which means remote proxies would only serve from cache
when the server was completely overwhelmed.
Changed that cache duration to one minute, so that repeated anonymous access
to one account's outbox can be appropriately cached.
Also added `Signature` to the `Vary` header in case a page is requested, so
that authenticated fetches are never served from cache (which only contains
public toots).
* Remove Vary: Accept header from webfinger controller
Indeed, we have stopped returning xrd, and only ever return jrd, so the
Accept request header does not matter anymore.
* Cache negative webfinger hits for 3 minutes
* Add tests
* Fix serialization of followers/following counts when user hides their network
Fixes#16382
Signed-off-by: Claire <claire.github-309c@sitedethib.com>
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.
Fixes#16509
Microsoft Edge with translation enabled rewrites the DOM in ways that confuse
react and prevent it from working properly. Wrapping the offending parts in
a span avoids this issue.
* Add tests
* Fix some link previews being incorrectly generated from different prior links
PR #12403 added a cache to avoid redundant queries when the OEmbed endpoint can
be guessed from the URL. This caching mechanism is not perfectly correct as
there is no guarantee that all pages from a given domain share the same
OEmbed provider endpoint.
This PR prevents the FetchOEmbedService from caching OEmbed endpoint that
cannot be generalized by replacing a fully-qualified URL from the endpoint's
parameters, greatly reducing the number of incorrect cached generalizations.
* Add tests
* Add security-related tests
My first (unpublished) attempt at fixing the issues introduced (extremely
hard-to-exploit) security vulnerabilities, addressing them in a test.
* Fix authentication failures after going halfway through a sign-in attempt
* Refactor `authenticate_with_sign_in_token` and `authenticate_with_two_factor` to make the two authentication steps more obvious
On notifications page, in settings, "Show" for quick filter bar and
unread notifications markers use the same string, while being placed in
the separate contexts - under different settings categories.
This commit splits the contexts, creating new strings:
- "Show filter bar" in place of "Show" for filter bar;
- "Highlight unread notifications" in place of "Show" for unread
notification markers, which are now simply called "Highlighting";
- There's also "Unread notifications" in place of "Unread notification
markers" string to accompany the changes to "Show" string under that
category.
All new strings have new IDs, which will cause previous strings to
invalidate on the next translation update and new strings to be created.
This will help Mastodon translators to know that there are changes and
improve translation in accordance to the source string update.