This will prevent detecting remote changes done in the data folder /
root storage by default. In the rare cases where the data folder is
shared with other apps/users outside ownCloud and change detection is
needed, the admin will have to set the option explicitly from now on.
Note that this doesn't affect external storages which have their own
setting in the mount options.
* Log condition for log level increase based on conditions. Once one of these
conditions is met, the required log level is set to debug. This allows to
debug specific requests, users or apps
* Supported conditions (setting `log_condition` in `config.php`):
- `shared_secret`: if a request parameter with the name `log_secret` is set to
this value the condition is met
- `users`: if the current request is done by one of the specified users,
this condition is met
- `apps`: if the log message is invoked by one of the specified apps,
this condition is met
* fix unit test and add app log condition test
This Pull Request introduces a SabreDAV plugin that will block all older clients than 1.6.1 to connect and sync with the ownCloud instance.
This has multiple reasons:
1. Old ownCloud client versions before 1.6.0 are not properly working with sticky cookies for load balancers and thus generating sessions en masse
2. Old ownCloud client versions tend to be horrible buggy
In some cases we had in 80minutes about 10'000 sessions created by a single user. While this change set does not really "fix" the problem as 3rdparty legacy clients are affected as well, it is a good work-around and hopefully should force users to update their client
The first time we're asked to generate a preview we'll generate one of the maximum dimension indicated in the configuration and all future resizing requests will be done on that preview in order to not waste time converting the same file over and over.
One of the fixes required for #12465
Caches divided up into two groups: distributed and local. 'Low latency' is an
alias for local caches, while the standard `create()` call tries to get
distributed caches first, then local caches.
Memcache backend is set in `config.php`, with the keys `memcache.local` and
`memcache.distributed`. If not set, `memcache.distributed` defaults to the value
of `memcache.local`.
Doing this in the PHP code is not the right approach for multiple reasons:
1. A bug in the PHP code prevents them from being added to the response.
2. They are only added when something is served via PHP and not in other cases (that makes for example the newest IE UXSS which is not yet patched by Microsoft exploitable on ownCloud)
3. Some headers such as the Strict-Transport-Security might require custom modifications by administrators. This was not possible before and lead to buggy situations.
This pull request moves those headers out of the PHP code and adds a security check to the admin settings performed via JS.
This change allows AppFramework applications to specify a custom CSP header for example when the default policy is too strict. Furthermore this allows us to partially migrate away from CSS and allowed eval() in our JavaScript components.
Legacy ownCloud components will still use the previous policy. Application developers can use this as following in their controllers:
```php
$response = new TemplateResponse('activity', 'list', []);
$cspHelper = new ContentSecurityPolicyHelper();
$cspHelper->addAllowedScriptDomain('www.owncloud.org');
$response->addHeader('Content-Security-Policy', $cspHelper->getPolicy());
return $response;
```
Fixes https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/11857 which is a pre-requisite for https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/13458 and https://github.com/owncloud/core/issues/11925
This allows the directory where CSS/JS asset collections are
written to be changed, in case SERVERROOT is not writeable. Note
it does *not* allow the expected URL to be changed: whatever
directory is used, the server must be configured to serve it
at WEBROOT/assets. It may be possible to add another config
parameter to allow the admin to specify a custom asset URL,
but I thought I'd keep the first implementation simple.