The registry client's TLS configuration used the
default cipher list, including RC4. This change
copies the default cipher list from Golang 1.4 and
removes RC4 from that list. RC4 ciphers are considered
weak and vulnerable to a number of attacks.
Uses the tlsconfig package to define allowed ciphers.
Signed-off-by: Eric Windisch <eric@windisch.us>
Today, endpoints implementing v2 cannot properly fallback to v1 because the underlying transport that deals with authentication (Basic / Token) doesn't get annotated.
This doesn't affect DockerHub because the DockerHub endpoint appears as 'https://index.docker.io/v1/' (in .dockercfg), and the 'v1' tricks this logic just long enough that the transport is always annotated for DockerHub accesses.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moore <mattmoor@google.com>
See: d796729b6b/registry/handlers/app.go (L498)
Per the comment on line 498, this moves the logic of setting the http
status code into the serveJSON func, leaving the auth.Challenge.ServeHTTP()
func to just set the auth challenge header.
Signed-off-by: Doug Davis <dug@us.ibm.com>
This ensures that rados is not required when building the registry. This was
slightly tricky in that when the flags were applied, the rados package was
completely missing. This led to a problem where rados was basically unlistable
and untestable as a package. This was fixed by simply adding a doc.go file that
is included whether rados is built or not.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
This change refreshes the updated version of Azure SDK
for Go that has the latest changes.
I manually vendored the new SDK (github.com/Azure/azure-sdk-for-go)
and I removed `management/` `core/` packages manually simply because
they're not used here and they have a fork of `net/http` and `crypto/tls`
for a particular reason. It was introducing a 44k SLOC change otherwise...
This also undoes the `include_azure` flag (actually Steven removed the
driver from imports but forgot to add the build flag apparently, so the
flag wasn't really including azure. 😄 ). This also must be obsolete
now.
Fixes#620, #175.
Signed-off-by: Ahmet Alp Balkan <ahmetalpbalkan@gmail.com>
After consideration, the basic authentication implementation has been
simplified to only support bcrypt entries in an htpasswd file. This greatly
increases the security of the implementation by reducing the possibility of
timing attacks and other problems trying to detect the password hash type.
Also, the htpasswd file is only parsed at startup, ensuring that the file can
be edited and not effect ongoing requests. Newly added passwords take effect on
restart. Subsequently, password hash entries are now stored in a map.
Test cases have been modified accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
This change refactors the basic authentication implementation to better follow
Go coding standards. Many types are no longer exported. The parser is now a
separate function from the authentication code. The standard functions
(*http.Request).BasicAuth/SetBasicAuth are now used where appropriate.
Signed-off-by: Stephen J Day <stephen.day@docker.com>
This patch ensures no auth headers are set for v1 registries if there
was a 302 redirect.
This also ensures v2 does not use authTransport.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>
In the request parameters lists `tag` was used instead of
`reference` present in the HTTP requests paths
Signed-off-by: Vincent Giersch <vincent.giersch@ovh.net>
Refactoring in Docker 1.7 changed the behavior to add this header where as Docker <= 1.6 wouldn't emit this Header on a HTTP 302 redirect.
This closes#13649
Signed-off-by: Jeffrey van Gogh <jvg@google.com>
It should not print to STDOUT so that it only prints the debugTransport
output if there was an error in one of the registry tests.
Signed-off-by: Tibor Vass <tibor@docker.com>