I added the parentheses to the `db.session.rollback` line to call the method, which will now properly roll back any changes made to the database if an error occurs.
This should fix the error you were experiencing, as it will now only attempt to process the `data` argument if it is a tuple containing two elements. If the `data` argument is not in the expected format, the function will simply return an empty string instead of raising an exception.
PDNS checks that when a `CNAME` rrset is created that no other rrset of
the same name but a different rtype exists. When changing a record type
to `CNAME`, PDA will send two operations in one api call to PDNS: A
deletion of the old rrset, and the addition of the new rrset. For the
check in PDNS to pass, the deletion needs to happen before the addition.
Before PR #1201 that was the case, the first api call did deletions and
the second handled additions and changes. Currently the api payload
contains additions first and deletions last. PDNS applies these in the
order they are passed in the payload to the api, so to restore the
original/correct/working behaviour the order of operations in the api
payload has to be reversed.
fixes#1251
PyOTP's totp.verify defaults to the valid_window of zero, which means
it will reject valid codes, if submitted just past the 30 sec window.
It also means, users will run into authentication issues very quickly
if their phones time-sync isn't perfect.
Therefore valid_window should at the very least be 1 or more, settting
it higher trades security for robustness, especially with regard to
time desync issues.
Resolves the following issue, which occurs with force_otp enabled
and OAuth authentication sources:
File "/srv/powerdnsadmin/powerdnsadmin/models/user.py", line 481, in update_profile
"utf-8") if self.plain_text_password else user.password
AttributeError: 'User' object has no attribute 'plain_text_password'
Allow the new domain name to be input absolute (with a dot at the end).
To keep the rest of the logic working as-is, remove it fairly early in
the function.
Would have loved to use `str.removesuffix()` but that's python v3.9+.
When clicking the changelog button for a record with the name
`foo-bar.example.org`, the url you get redirected to is
`/domain/example.org/changelog/foo-bar.example.org.-A`. Because of the
non-greedy behaviour of the path converter, the last part gets split at
the *first* hyphen, so the example above gets wrongly dissected into
`record_name=foo` and `record_type=bar.example.org.-A`. This results
for obvious reasons in an empty changelog.
As described in rfc5395 [0], types have to be alphanumerical, so its
converter is changed from path to string.
The hyphen is one of the few characters recommended by rfc1035 [1],
so it is a bad choice as separator. The separator is instead changed to
a slash.
Granted, this does not entirely solve the issue but at least makes it a
lot less likely to happen. Plus, a lot more and other things break in
pda with slashes in names.
[0] https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc5395#section-3.1
[1] https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/html/rfc1035#section-2.3.1
Starting with the very first commit, the update was always done with
two api calls: one for DELETE and one for REPLACE. It is however
perfectly valid and save to do both at once, which makes it atomic, so
no need for the rollback. Plus it only updates the serial once.
There is no point in sending the full RRset data when deleting it, the
key attributes to identify it are enough. This also make the behaviour
consistent with the api docs [0] where it says "MUST NOT be included
when changetype is set to DELETE."
[0] https://doc.powerdns.com/authoritative/http-api/zone.html#rrset
Setting this attribute on a cookie marks it as non-cross-site, so it
is only send in requests to our own server. It is reasonable that no
one else should need our session or csrf data. Setting it explicitly
also prevents any issues from the ongoing change in browser behaviour [0]
when it is unset.
Seasurf supports the SameSite attribute starting with v0.3. As nothing
obviously broke, I used the opportunity and updated all the way to the
most recent version.
The SeaSurf default for SameSite is already `Lax`, so it only needs to
be set for the session cookie.
[0] https://developers.google.com/search/blog/2020/01/get-ready-for-new-samesitenone-secure
CSRF has been initialized *before* the app config was fully read. That
made it impossible to configure CSRF properly. Moved the CSRF init into
the routes module, and switched from programmatic to decorated
exemptions. GET routes don't need to be exempted because they are by
default.
When enabled, forbids the creation of a domain if it exists as a record in one of its parent domains (administrators and operators are not limited though).