Introduced a Catalog entry in the configuration struct. With it,
it's possible to control the maximum amount of entries returned
by /v2/catalog (`GetCatalog` in registry/handlers/catalog.go).
It's set to a default value of 1000.
`GetCatalog` returns 100 entries by default if no `n` is
provided. When provided it will be validated to be between `0`
and `MaxEntries` defined in Configuration. When `n` is outside
the aforementioned boundary, an error response is returned.
`GetCatalog` now handles `n=0` gracefully with an empty response
as well.
Signed-off-by: José D. Gómez R. <1josegomezr@gmail.com>
Go 1.18 and up now provides a strings.Cut() which is better suited for
splitting key/value pairs (and similar constructs), and performs better:
```go
func BenchmarkSplit(b *testing.B) {
b.ReportAllocs()
data := []string{"12hello=world", "12hello=", "12=hello", "12hello"}
for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
for _, s := range data {
_ = strings.SplitN(s, "=", 2)[0]
}
}
}
func BenchmarkCut(b *testing.B) {
b.ReportAllocs()
data := []string{"12hello=world", "12hello=", "12=hello", "12hello"}
for i := 0; i < b.N; i++ {
for _, s := range data {
_, _, _ = strings.Cut(s, "=")
}
}
}
```
BenchmarkSplit
BenchmarkSplit-10 8244206 128.0 ns/op 128 B/op 4 allocs/op
BenchmarkCut
BenchmarkCut-10 54411998 21.80 ns/op 0 B/op 0 allocs/op
While looking at occurrences of `strings.Split()`, I also updated some for alternatives,
or added some constraints;
- for cases where an specific number of items is expected, I used `strings.SplitN()`
with a suitable limit. This prevents (theoretical) unlimited splits.
- in some cases it we were using `strings.Split()`, but _actually_ were trying to match
a prefix; for those I replaced the code to just match (and/or strip) the prefix.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
gofumpt (https://github.com/mvdan/gofumpt) provides a supserset of `gofmt` / `go fmt`,
and addresses various formatting issues that linters may be checking for.
We can consider enabling the `gofumpt` linter to verify the formatting in CI, although
not every developer may have it installed, so for now this runs it once to get formatting
in shape.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
(*App).context, called in the HTTP handler on each request, creates a
URLBuilder, which involves calling Router(). This shows up in profiles a
hot spot because it involves compiling the regexps which define all the
routes. For efficiency, cache the router and return the same object each
time.
It appears to be safe to reuse the router because GetRoute is the only
method ever called on the returned router object.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <alehmann@netflix.com>
Fixes#3141
1, return 416 for Out-of-order blob upload
2, return 400 for content length and content size mismatch
Signed-off-by: wang yan <wangyan@vmware.com>
Go 1.13 and up enforce import paths to be versioned if a project
contains a go.mod and has released v2 or up.
The current v2.x branches (and releases) do not yet have a go.mod,
and therefore are still allowed to be imported with a non-versioned
import path (go modules add a `+incompatible` annotation in that case).
However, now that this project has a `go.mod` file, incompatible
import paths will not be accepted by go modules, and attempting
to use code from this repository will fail.
This patch uses `v3` for the import-paths (not `v2`), because changing
import paths itself is a breaking change, which means that the
next release should increment the "major" version to comply with
SemVer (as go modules dictate).
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
This fixes registry endpoints to return the proper `application/json`
content-type for JSON content, also updating spec examples for that.
As per IETF specification and IANA registry [0], the `application/json`
type is a binary media, so the content-type label does not need any
text-charset selector. Additionally, the media type definition
explicitly states that it has no required nor optional parameters,
which makes the current registry headers non-compliant.
[0]: https://www.iana.org/assignments/media-types/application/json
Signed-off-by: Luca Bruno <lucab@debian.org>
Partially reverts change adding support for X-Forwarded-Port.
Changes the logic to prefer the standard Forwarded header over
X-Forwarded headers. Prefer forwarded "host" over "for" since
"for" represents the client and not the client's request.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)
Since there's no default case, if there's not a tag or digest you get
back a confusing error from the router about it not matching the
expected pattern.
Also redoing the tests for URLs a bit so that they can handle checking
for failures.
Signed-off-by: Christy Perez <christy@linux.vnet.ibm.com>
The registry uses partial Named values which the named parsers
no longer support. To allow the registry service to continue
to operate without canonicalization, switch to use WithName.
In the future, the registry should start using fully canonical
values on the backend and WithName should no longer support
creating partial values.
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net> (github: dmcgowan)
Prefer non-standard headers like X-Forwarded-Proto, X-Forwarded-Host and
X-Forwarded-Port over the standard Forwarded header to maintain
backwards compatibility.
If a port is not specified neither in Host nor in forwarded headers but
it is specified just with X-Forwarded-Port, use its value in base urls
for redirects.
Forwarded header is defined in rfc7239.
X-Forwarded-Port is a non-standard header. Here's a description copied
from "HTTP Headers and Elastic Load Balancing" of AWS ELB docs:
> The X-Forwarded-Port request header helps you identify the port that
> an HTTP or HTTPS load balancer uses to connect to the client.
Signed-off-by: Michal Minář <miminar@redhat.com>
go1.5 doesn't export http.StatusTooManyRequests while
go1.6 does. Fix this by hardcoding the status code for now.
Signed-off-by: Antonio Murdaca <runcom@redhat.com>