go-gitea/vendor/github.com/dgrijalva/jwt-go/token.go
Fabian Zaremba 2e7ccecfe6 Git LFS support v2 (#122)
* Import github.com/git-lfs/lfs-test-server as lfs module base

Imported commit is 3968aac269a77b73924649b9412ae03f7ccd3198

Removed:

Dockerfile CONTRIBUTING.md mgmt* script/ vendor/ kvlogger.go
.dockerignore .gitignore README.md

* Remove config, add JWT support from github.com/mgit-at/lfs-test-server

Imported commit f0cdcc5a01599c5a955dc1bbf683bb4acecdba83

* Add LFS settings

* Add LFS meta object model

* Add LFS routes and initialization

* Import github.com/dgrijalva/jwt-go into vendor/

* Adapt LFS module: handlers, routing, meta store

* Move LFS routes to /user/repo/info/lfs/*

* Add request header checks to LFS BatchHandler / PostHandler

* Implement LFS basic authentication

* Rework JWT secret generation / load

* Implement LFS SSH token authentication with JWT

Specification: https://github.com/github/git-lfs/tree/master/docs/api

* Integrate LFS settings into install process

* Remove LFS objects when repository is deleted

Only removes objects from content store when deleted repo is the only
referencing repository

* Make LFS module stateless

Fixes bug where LFS would not work after installation without
restarting Gitea

* Change 500 'Internal Server Error' to 400 'Bad Request'

* Change sql query to xorm call

* Remove unneeded type from LFS module

* Change internal imports to code.gitea.io/gitea/

* Add Gitea authors copyright

* Change basic auth realm to "gitea-lfs"

* Add unique indexes to LFS model

* Use xorm count function in LFS check on repository delete

* Return io.ReadCloser from content store and close after usage

* Add LFS info to runWeb()

* Export LFS content store base path

* LFS file download from UI

* Work around git-lfs client issue with unauthenticated requests

Returning a dummy Authorization header for unauthenticated requests
lets git-lfs client skip asking for auth credentials
See: https://github.com/github/git-lfs/issues/1088

* Fix unauthenticated UI downloads from public repositories

* Authentication check order, Finish LFS file view logic

* Ignore LFS hooks if installed for current OS user

Fixes Gitea UI actions for repositories tracking LFS files.
Checks for minimum needed git version by parsing the semantic version
string.

* Hide LFS metafile diff from commit view, marking as binary

* Show LFS notice if file in commit view is tracked

* Add notbefore/nbf JWT claim

* Correct lint suggestions - comments for structs and functions

- Add comments to LFS model
- Function comment for GetRandomBytesAsBase64
- LFS server function comments and lint variable suggestion

* Move secret generation code out of conditional

Ensures no LFS code may run with an empty secret

* Do not hand out JWT tokens if LFS server support is disabled
2016-12-26 09:16:37 +08:00

109 lines
3.3 KiB
Go

package jwt
import (
"encoding/base64"
"encoding/json"
"strings"
"time"
)
// TimeFunc provides the current time when parsing token to validate "exp" claim (expiration time).
// You can override it to use another time value. This is useful for testing or if your
// server uses a different time zone than your tokens.
var TimeFunc = time.Now
// Parse methods use this callback function to supply
// the key for verification. The function receives the parsed,
// but unverified Token. This allows you to use properties in the
// Header of the token (such as `kid`) to identify which key to use.
type Keyfunc func(*Token) (interface{}, error)
// A JWT Token. Different fields will be used depending on whether you're
// creating or parsing/verifying a token.
type Token struct {
Raw string // The raw token. Populated when you Parse a token
Method SigningMethod // The signing method used or to be used
Header map[string]interface{} // The first segment of the token
Claims Claims // The second segment of the token
Signature string // The third segment of the token. Populated when you Parse a token
Valid bool // Is the token valid? Populated when you Parse/Verify a token
}
// Create a new Token. Takes a signing method
func New(method SigningMethod) *Token {
return NewWithClaims(method, MapClaims{})
}
func NewWithClaims(method SigningMethod, claims Claims) *Token {
return &Token{
Header: map[string]interface{}{
"typ": "JWT",
"alg": method.Alg(),
},
Claims: claims,
Method: method,
}
}
// Get the complete, signed token
func (t *Token) SignedString(key interface{}) (string, error) {
var sig, sstr string
var err error
if sstr, err = t.SigningString(); err != nil {
return "", err
}
if sig, err = t.Method.Sign(sstr, key); err != nil {
return "", err
}
return strings.Join([]string{sstr, sig}, "."), nil
}
// Generate the signing string. This is the
// most expensive part of the whole deal. Unless you
// need this for something special, just go straight for
// the SignedString.
func (t *Token) SigningString() (string, error) {
var err error
parts := make([]string, 2)
for i, _ := range parts {
var jsonValue []byte
if i == 0 {
if jsonValue, err = json.Marshal(t.Header); err != nil {
return "", err
}
} else {
if jsonValue, err = json.Marshal(t.Claims); err != nil {
return "", err
}
}
parts[i] = EncodeSegment(jsonValue)
}
return strings.Join(parts, "."), nil
}
// Parse, validate, and return a token.
// keyFunc will receive the parsed token and should return the key for validating.
// If everything is kosher, err will be nil
func Parse(tokenString string, keyFunc Keyfunc) (*Token, error) {
return new(Parser).Parse(tokenString, keyFunc)
}
func ParseWithClaims(tokenString string, claims Claims, keyFunc Keyfunc) (*Token, error) {
return new(Parser).ParseWithClaims(tokenString, claims, keyFunc)
}
// Encode JWT specific base64url encoding with padding stripped
func EncodeSegment(seg []byte) string {
return strings.TrimRight(base64.URLEncoding.EncodeToString(seg), "=")
}
// Decode JWT specific base64url encoding with padding stripped
func DecodeSegment(seg string) ([]byte, error) {
if l := len(seg) % 4; l > 0 {
seg += strings.Repeat("=", 4-l)
}
return base64.URLEncoding.DecodeString(seg)
}