checkContextForValues was effectively running sub-tests, but disguided
as a helper (to DRY). While it helped some duplication, rewriting it to
run subtests within a helper also was a bit confusing, so just inline
what it does.
While updating, also run tests with t.Parallel()
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
When configuring bugsnag, bugsnag will fork the process, resulting the port 5001 listened twice. The PR fix this error by moving the initialization of prometheus server after the configuration of bugsnag
Signed-off-by: Honglin Feng <tifayuki@gmail.com>
(cherry picked from commit 5a6a2d6ae06453136f5e1cfb5e9efa20c27085d9)
Signed-off-by: Derek McGowan <derek@mcgstyle.net>
Signed-off-by: David van der Spek <vanderspek.david@gmail.com>
Dot-imports were only used in a couple of places, and replacing them
makes it more explicit what's imported.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
Microsoft has updated the golang Azure SDK significantly. Update the
azure storage driver to use the new SDK. Add support for client
secret and MSI authentication schemes in addition to shared key
authentication.
Implement rootDirectory support for the azure storage driver to mirror
the S3 driver.
Signed-off-by: Kirat Singh <kirat.singh@beacon.io>
Co-authored-by: Cory Snider <corhere@gmail.com>
This is an edge case when we are trying to upload an empty chunk of data using
a MultiPart upload. As a result we are trying to complete the MultipartUpload
with an empty slice of `completedUploadedParts` which will always lead to 400
being returned from S3 See: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/sdk-for-go/api/service/s3/#CompletedMultipartUpload
Solution: we upload an empty i.e. 0 byte part as a single part and then append it
to the completedUploadedParts slice used to complete the Multipart upload.
Signed-off-by: Milos Gajdos <milosthegajdos@gmail.com>
The loop that iterates over paginated lists of S3 multipart upload parts
appears to be using the wrong variable in its loop condition. Nothing
inside the loop affects the value of `resp.IsTruncated`, so this loop
will either be wrongly skipped or loop forever.
It looks like this is a regression caused by commit
7736319f2e. The return value of
`ListMultipartUploads` used to be assigned to a variable named `resp`,
but it was renamed to `partsList` without updating the for loop
condition.
I believe this is causing an error we're seeing with large layer uploads
at commit time:
upload resumed at wrong offset: 5242880000 != 5815706782
Missing parts of the multipart S3 upload would cause an incorrect size
calculation in `newWriter`.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <alehmann@netflix.com>
Previously we used a custom Transport in order to modify the user agent header.
This prevented the AWS SDK from being able to customize SSL and other client TLS
parameters since it could not understand the Transport type.
Instead we can simply use the SDK function MakeAddToUserAgentFreeFormHandler to
customize the UserAgent if necessary and leave all the TLS configuration to the
AWS SDK.
The only exception being SkipVerify which we have to handle, but we can set it
onto the standard http.Transport which does not interfere with the SDKs ability
to set other options.
Signed-off-by: Kirat Singh <kirat.singh@gmail.com>
Currently, "response completed with error" log lines include an
`auth.user.name` key, but successful "response completed" lines do not
include this, because they are logged a few stack frames up where
`auth.user.name` is not present on the `Context`. Move the successful
request logging inside the `dispatcher` closure, where the logger on the
context automatically includes this key.
Signed-off-by: Aaron Lehmann <alehmann@netflix.com>
golang.org/x/net contains a fix for CVE-2022-41717, which was addressed
in stdlib in go1.19.4 and go1.18.9;
> net/http: limit canonical header cache by bytes, not entries
>
> An attacker can cause excessive memory growth in a Go server accepting
> HTTP/2 requests.
>
> HTTP/2 server connections contain a cache of HTTP header keys sent by
> the client. While the total number of entries in this cache is capped,
> an attacker sending very large keys can cause the server to allocate
> approximately 64 MiB per open connection.
>
> This issue is also fixed in golang.org/x/net/http2 v0.4.0,
> for users manually configuring HTTP/2.
full diff: https://github.com/golang/net/compare/v0.2.0...v0.4.0
other dependency updates (due to (circular) dependencies):
- golang.org/x/sys v0.3.0: https://github.com/golang/sys/compare/3c1f35247d10...v0.3.0
- golang.org/x/text v0.5.0: https://github.com/golang/text/compare/v0.3.7...v0.5.0
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>
commit 9337b8df66 rewrote the fuzzers to
native go fuzzers, so the script was no longer needed. With this, the
script directory is no longer used, so we can remove it.
Signed-off-by: Sebastiaan van Stijn <github@gone.nl>