Issue report:
> Hum, well I upgraded the package then visited the web interface to
trigger the update and it failed; the UI would say there was a
possible CSRF attack and after that it'd be stuck in maintenance mode.
Tried a few times (by editing maintenance to false in owncloud.conf)
and same result each time.
That smells partially like an issue caused by our EventSource implementation, due to legacy concerns the CSRF verification happens within the EventSource handling and not when the actual endpoint is called, what happens here then is:
1. User has somehow an invalid CSRF token in session (or none at all)
2. User clicks the update button
3. Invalid CSRF token is sent to update.php - no CSRF check there => Instance gets set in maintenance mode
4. Invalid CSRF token is processed by the EventSource code => Code Execution is stopped and ownCloud is stuck in maintenance mode
I have a work-around for this problem, basically it verifies the CSRF token already in step 3 and cancels execution then. The same error will be shown to the user however he can work around it by refreshing the page – as stated by the error. I think that’s an acceptable behaviour for now: INSERT LINK
To verify this test:
1. Delete your ownCloud cookies
2. Increment the version in version.php
3. Try to upgrade
=> Before the patch: Instance shows an error, is set to upgrade mode and a refresh does not help
=> After the patch: Instance shows an error, a refresh helps though.
This is not really the best fix as a better solution would be to catch such situations when bootstrapping ownCloud, however, I don’t dare to touch base.php for this sake only, you never know what breaks then…
That said: There might be other bugs as well, especially the stacktrace is somewhat confusing but then again it installing ownCloud under /usr/share/owncloud/ and I bet that is part of the whole issue ;-)
This enforces proper types on POST and GET arguments where I considered it sensible. I didn't update some as I don't know what kind of values they would support 🙈
Fixes https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/14196 for core
`$this->info` can very well contain an empty array or possibly other values. This means that when this code path is called a PHP Fatal error might get thrown which is not what we want.
Beside some small improvements and bug fixes this will probably the final state for OC8.
To test this you need to set up two ownCloud instances. Let's say:
URL: myPC/firstOwnCloud user: user1
URL: myPC/secondOwnCloud user: user2
Now user1 can share a file with user2 by entering the username and the URL to the second ownCloud to the share-drop-down, in this case "user2@myPC/secondOwnCloud".
The next time user2 login he will get a notification that he received a server-to-server share with the option to accept/decline it. If he accept it the share will be mounted. In both cases a event will be send back to user1 and add a notification to the activity stream that the share was accepted/declined.
If user1 decides to unshare the file again from user2 the share will automatically be removed from the second ownCloud server and user2 will see a notification in his activity stream that user1@myPC/firstOwnCloud has unshared the file/folder from him.
Fix issue where the currently logged user was causing side-effects when
upgrading.
Now setting incognito mode (no user) on update to make sure the whole
apps list is taken into account with getEnabledApps() or isEnabled().
Without this fix it logs this error:
Undefined index: itemSourceName at /opt/local/apache2/htdocs/oc7/core/ajax/share.php#44
I think the itemSourceName is only used with sharing files!
- adding keep aspect to core/ajax/preview.php
- remove duplicate method Preview::show()
- no more hard coded mimetype of preview
- remove .png from the preview urls
- keep old route preview.png for backwards compatibility
- aspect preserving previews are now cached
It seems that array brackets are only supported starting with PHP 5.4.
Fixed the array brackets to be compatible and not cause a syntax error
in PHP 5.3.