* fix: migrate to Go module v2 for proper semantic versioning
This change updates the module path from 'zotregistry.dev/zot' to
'zotregistry.dev/zot/v2' to comply with Go's semantic versioning rules.
According to Go's module versioning requirements, major version v2+
must include the major version in the module path. The current
module path 'zotregistry.dev/zot' only supports v0.x.x and v1.x.x
versions, making existing v2.x.x tags (like v2.1.8) unusable.
Changes:
- Updated go.mod module path to zotregistry.dev/zot/v2
- Updated all internal import paths across 280+ Go source files
- Updated configuration files (golangcilint.yaml, gqlgen.yml)
- Updated README.md Go reference badge
This fix enables proper use of existing v2.x.x Git tags and allows
external packages to import zot v2+ versions without compatibility
errors.
Resolves: Go module import compatibility for v2+ versions
Fixes: #3071
Signed-off-by: Luca Muscariello <muscariello@ieee.org>
* fix: regenerate GraphQL files with updated v2 import paths
The gqlgen tool needs to regenerate the GraphQL schema files after
the module path change to use the new v2 imports.
Signed-off-by: Luca Muscariello <muscariello@ieee.org>
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Signed-off-by: Luca Muscariello <muscariello@ieee.org>
Description
====================
zot currently stores session cookies in memory or in a local directory.
For cases where the session cookies should be independent of the
instance where they were created such as multiple instances of zot, or a
fully stateless zot instance, there is a need to support a remote
session storage.
This change adds support for using Redis and Redis-compatible services as a
remote session driver as well as introduces a new configuration option
for it.
What has changed
=======================
- New config added under Auth config to specify configuration for
the session driver.
- Examples README updated with details of the new Auth config.
- The config supports only 2 drivers in this change - local and redis
- Using the local driver is backwards compatible and behaves the same
way that zot currently works for local session storage.
- Omitting this config does not result in an error. In this case, zot
behaves as it normally does for local session storage.
- When configured, zot can use redis for persisting cookie
information for zot UI.
- The cookie in the store is deleted on logout or after the max
expiry time for the cookie.
- Configuration for the redis session driver accepts the same configuration
values as that of the remote meta cache.
- A separate connection is established for the session driver. An
existing connection for meta cache will not be re-used for the
session driver.
- A key prefix is configurable for the redis session driver. The value will be
converted into a string for use. If no value is provided, a default
prefix of "zotsession" will be used.
- Redis sessions does not support hash key or encryption in this change.
- New BATS test added to verify zot behavior with Redis session store.
- Github workflow updated to install valkey-tools dependency for BATS.
Signed-off-by: Vishwas Rajashekar <dev@vrajashkr.com>
fix(authn): configurable hashing/encryption keys used to secure cookies
If they are not configured zot will generate a random hashing key at startup,
invalidating all cookies if zot is restarted. closes: #2526
Signed-off-by: Petu Eusebiu <peusebiu@cisco.com>
This causes the "fair" scheduler to run it too often in the detriment of other generators.
The intention was to run it every 2 hours but the measurement unit for 7200 was not specified.
Add more logs, including showing a generator name, in order to troubleshoot this kind of issues easier in the future.
Signed-off-by: Andrei Aaron <aaaron@luxoft.com>
We use chartmuseum lib for handling bearer requests, which is not
implementing the token spec, mainly it expects "scope" parameter
to be given on every request, even for /v2/ route which doesn't represent
a resource.
Handle this /v2/ route inside our code.
Signed-off-by: Petu Eusebiu <peusebiu@cisco.com>
* fix(scheduler): data race when pushing new tasks
the problem here is that scheduler can be closed in two ways:
- canceling the context given as argument to scheduler.RunScheduler()
- running scheduler.Shutdown()
because of this shutdown can trigger a data race between calling scheduler.inShutdown()
and actually pushing tasks into the pool workers
solved that by keeping a quit channel and listening on both quit channel and ctx.Done()
and closing the worker chan and scheduler afterwards.
Signed-off-by: Petu Eusebiu <peusebiu@cisco.com>
* refactor(scheduler): refactor into a single shutdown
before this we could stop scheduler either by closing the context
provided to RunScheduler(ctx) or by running Shutdown().
simplify things by getting rid of the external context in RunScheduler().
keep an internal context in the scheduler itself and pass it down to all tasks.
Signed-off-by: Petu Eusebiu <peusebiu@cisco.com>
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Signed-off-by: Petu Eusebiu <peusebiu@cisco.com>