Summary:
Some editors do some async work before saving the value (Ref column can add new
records). Those actions were send without bundling, so it wasn't possible to undo those
actions with togheter.
Test Plan: Added new test
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D4285
Summary:
- Adding confirmation dialog when user doesn't want to cancel site
- Changing `Cancel subscription` to `Cancel plan`
- Removing `Pro` from upgrade header on pricing modal
- Better handling situation when there is no default price
- Removing mentions about sprouts program
- Removing cache for stripe plans
Test Plan: Updated tests
Reviewers: georgegevoian
Reviewed By: georgegevoian
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D4273
While the intent was to run tests with it, we don't need it. Instead,
this caused problems because the stubs overrode the intended `ext`
directory and therefore disabled the ext features.
De-escalates to a normal user when the docker image is run as root.
Allows GRIST_DOCKER_USER and GRIST_DOCKER_GROUP to be passed to override the default de-escalation behaviour.
Backwards compatible with previous root installations.
--------
This change adds a new docker_entrypoint.sh, which when run as root de-escalates to the provided user, defaulting to grist:grist. This is similar to the approach used by the official postgres docker image.
To achieve backwards compatibility, it changes ownership of any files in `/persist` to the user it's given at runtime. Since the docker container is typically run as root, this should always work.
If the container is run as a standard user from the very start:
* It's the admin's responsibility to ensure `/persist` is writable by that user.
* `/grist` remains owned by root and is read-only.
Summary:
Version API endpoint wasn't logging telemetry from POST requests. The issue was in registration
order, this endpoint was registered before `expressJson` and it couldn't read json body in the handler.
Test Plan: Added new test
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Subscribers: paulfitz
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D4277
This modifies the workflow to build grist-ee images as well as grist,
which is the same image as grist-ee but merely renamed. The original
image built by these workflows is now called grist-oss.
Since we won't be tracking ext/-directory providers via git (e.g. no
submodules), instead we'll do little version-tracking files like this,
to be used by the recent ext-checkout script.
Follow-up of #994. This PR revises the session ID generation logic to improve security in the absence of a secure session secret. It also adds a section in the admin panel "security" section to nag system admins when GRIST_SESSION_SECRET is not set.
Following is an excerpt from internal conversation.
TL;DR: Grist's current implementation generates semi-secure session IDs and uses a publicly known default signing key to sign them when the environment variable GRIST_SESSION_SECRET is not set. This PR generates cryptographically secure session IDs to dismiss security concerns around an insecure signing key, and encourages system admins to configure their own signing key anyway.
> The session secret is required by expressjs/session to sign its session IDs. It's designed as an extra protection against session hijacking by randomly guessing session IDs and hitting a valid one. While it is easy to encourage users to set a distinct session secret, this is unnecessary if session IDs are generated in a cryptographically secure way. As of now Grist uses version 4 UUIDs as session IDs (see app/server/lib/gristSessions.ts - it uses shortUUID.generate which invokes uuid.v4 under the hood). These contain 122 bits of entropy, technically insufficient to be considered cryptographically secure. In practice, this is never considered a real vulnerability. To compare, RSA2048 is still very commonly used in web servers, yet it only has 112 bits of security (>=128 bits = "secure", rule of thumb in cryptography). But for peace of mind I propose using crypto.getRandomValues to generate real 128-bit random values. This should render session ID signing unnecessary and hence dismiss security concerns around an insecure signing key.
Summary:
- Fixing port allocation in TestServer
- Extending logging in the Billing test
- Fixing negative rowIds support for add/remove actions
- Making FormulaEditor and CardView tests less flacky
Test Plan: Existing
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Subscribers: paulfitz, dsagal
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D4280
Start documenting the databases including:
* document ACL and other tables
* Permissions
* Groups, secrets, and other tables
---------
Co-authored-by: jordigh <jordigh@octave.org>
When rewriting 1a64910be3, I
accidentally left a stray reference to docker-runner.mjs in there.
Since this file doesn't exist anymore, this prevents Docker builds
from happening.
This adds an endpoint for the admin user to be able to signal to a
controlling process to restart the server. This is intended for
`docker-runner.mjs`.
This is a new entrypoint, mostly intended for Docker, so we have one
simple process controlling the main Grist process. The purpose of this
is to be able to make Grist easily restartable with a new environment.
Summary:
fixSiteProducts was always called with a dry option.
This option was just added for debuging test failure, it should
have been removed.
Test Plan:
Manual.
- on grist core, prepare site with `teamFree` product
- then to recreate run the previous version as
`GRIST_SINGLE_ORG=cool-beans GRIST_DEFAULT_PRODUCT=Free npm start`
- then to confirm it is fixed, run the same command as above
Site should be changed from `teamFree` to `Free`.
Reviewers: paulfitz
Reviewed By: paulfitz
Subscribers: paulfitz
Differential Revision: https://phab.getgrist.com/D4276