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Author SHA1 Message Date
epriestley
1b24b486f5 Manage object mailKeys automatically in Mail instead of storing them on objects
Summary:
Ref T13065. `mailKey`s are a private secret for each object. In some mail configurations, they help us ensure that inbound mail is authentic: when we send you mail, the "Reply-To" is "T123+456+abcdef".

  - The `T123` is the object you're actually replying to.
  - The `456` is your user ID.
  - The `abcdef` is a hash of your user account with the `mailKey`.

Knowing this hash effectively proves that Phabricator has sent you mail about the object before, i.e. that you legitimately control the account you're sending from. Without this, anyone could send mail to any object "From" someone else, and have comments post under their username.

To generate this hash, we need a stable secret per object. (We can't use properties like the PHID because the secret has to be legitimately secret.)

Today, we store these in `mailKey` properties on the actual objects, and manually generate them. This results in tons and tons and tons of copies of this same ~10 lines of code.

Instead, just store them in the Mail application and generate them on demand. This change also anticipates possibly adding flags like "must encrypt" and "original subject", which are other "durable metadata about mail transmission" properties we may have use cases for eventually.

Test Plan:
  - See next change for additional testing and context.
  - Sent mail about Herald rules (next change); saw mail keys generate cleanly.
  - Destroyed a Herald rule with a mail key, saw the mail properties get nuked.
  - Grepped for `getMailKey()` and converted all callsites I could which aren't the copy/pasted boilerplate present in 50 places.
  - Used `bin/mail receive-test --to T123` to test normal mail receipt of older-style objects and make sure that wasn't broken.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13065

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19399
2018-04-25 06:46:58 -07:00
Austin McKinley
4dc8e2de56 Add unique constraint to AlmanacInterfaces
Summary: See discussion in D19379. The 4-tuple of (device, network, address, port) should be unique.

Test Plan: Created lots of duplicate interfaces, bound those interfaces to various services, observed migration script clean things up correctly.

Reviewers: epriestley

Reviewed By: epriestley

Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19388
2018-04-19 19:16:50 -07:00
Austin McKinley
e81b2173ad Add edge tables for Phlux
Summary: Fixes T13129. This at least makes the existing UI work again before we banish Phlux to the shadow realm.

Test Plan: Edited the visibility for a Phlux variable, didn't get an error. Nothing showed up in the edge tables when I made those changes, but at least it doesn't error out anymore.

Reviewers: epriestley

Reviewed By: epriestley

Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13129

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19387
2018-04-19 15:49:08 -07:00
Austin McKinley
0a83f253ed Add unique constraint for Almanac network names
Summary:
The name of networks should be unique.

Also adds support for exact-name queries for AlamanacNetworks.

Test Plan: Applied migration with existing duplicates, saw networks renamed, attempted to add duplicates, got a nice error message.

Reviewers: epriestley

Reviewed By: epriestley

Subscribers: Korvin, PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19379
2018-04-19 13:41:15 -07:00
epriestley
f9c6a69d9c Add skeleton code for Almanac Interfaces to have real transactions
Summary:
Depends on D19322. Ref T13120. Ref T12414.

Currently, `AlmanacDevice` has a bit of a beast of a `TYPE_INTERFACE` transaction that fully creates a complex Interface object. This isn't very flexible or consistent, and Interfaces are complex enough to reasonably have their own object behaviors (for example, they have their own PHIDs).

The complexity of this transaction makes modularizing `AlmanacDevice` transactions tricky. To simplify this, move Interface toward having its own set of normal transactions.

This change just adds some reasonable-looking transactions; it doesn't actually hook them up in the UI or make them reachable. I'll test that they actually work as I swap the UI over.

We may also have some code using the `TYPE_INTERFACE` transaction in Phacility support stuff, so that may need to wait a week to actually phase out.

Test Plan: Ran `bin/storage upgrade` and `arc liberate`. This code isn't reachable yet.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13120, T12414

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19323
2018-04-11 10:29:26 -07:00
epriestley
615d27c8e9 Show an additional "Draft" tag on non-broadcasting revisions in a non-draft state
Summary:
Depends on D19284. Ref T13110. It's now possible to get a revision into a "Abandoned + But, Never Promoted From Draft" state. Show this in the header and provide the draft hint above the comment area.

Also, remove `shouldBroadcast()`. The method `getShouldBroadcast()` now has the same meaning.

Finally, migrate existing drafts to `shouldBroadcast = false` and default `shouldBroadcast` to `true`. If we don't do this, every older revision becomes a non-broadcasting revision because this flag was not explicitly set on revision creation before, only on promotion out of draft.

Test Plan: Ran migration; abandoned draft revisions and ended up in a draft + abandoned state.

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13110

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19285
2018-04-03 11:09:49 -07:00
epriestley
f583406ba9 Drop uniqueness constraint on PushEvent request ID
Summary: See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/pushing-to-mercurial-repository-fails/1275/1>. Mercurial may invoke hooks multiple times per push.

Test Plan: Pushed to Mercurial, saw key constraint failure.

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19257
2018-03-26 07:02:15 -07:00
epriestley
df3c937dab Record lock timing information on PushEvents
Summary:
Depends on D19249. Ref T13109. Add timing information to the `PushEvent`:

  - `writeWait`: Time spent waiting for a write lock.
  - `readWait`: Time spent waiting for a read lock.
  - `hostWait`: Roughly, total time spent on the leaf node.

The primary goal here is to see if `readWait` is meaningful in the wild. If it is, that motivates smarter routing, and the value of smarter routing can be demonstrated by looking for a reduction in read wait times.

Test Plan: Pushed some stuff, saw reasonable timing values in the table. Saw timing information in "Export Data".

Maniphest Tasks: T13109

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19250
2018-03-22 13:46:01 -07:00
epriestley
69bff489d4 Generate a random unique "Request ID" for SSH requests so processes can coordinate better
Summary:
Depends on D19247. Ref T13109. When we receive an SSH request, generate a random unique ID for the request. Then thread it down through the process tree.

The immediate goal is to let the `ssh-exec` process coordinate with `commit-hook` process and log information about read and write lock wait times. Today, there's no way for `ssh-exec` to interact with the `PushEvent`, but this is the most helpful place to store this data for users.

Test Plan: Made pushes, saw the `PushEvent` table populate with a random request ID. Exported data and saw the ID preserved in the export.

Maniphest Tasks: T13109

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19249
2018-03-22 13:44:30 -07:00
epriestley
1e93b49b1b Allow custom actions in Differential to explicitly override "accept" stickiness
Summary:
See PHI431. Ref T13102. An install is interested in a custom "non-sticky" accept action, roughly.

On the one hand, this is a pretty hacky patch. However, I suspect it inches us closer to T731, and I'm generally comfortable with exploring the realms of "Accept Next Update", "Unblock Without Accepting", etc., as long as most of it doesn't end up enabled by default in the upstream.

Test Plan:
  - Accepted and updated revisions normally, saw accepts respect global stickiness.
  - Modified the "Accept" action to explicitly be unsticky, saw nonsticky accept behavior after update.

Maniphest Tasks: T13102

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19211
2018-03-12 17:10:43 -07:00
epriestley
3e992c6713 Add audit, review, and dominion information to "owners.search" API method
Summary:
See PHI439. This fills in additional information about Owners packages.

Also removes dead `primaryOwnerPHID`.

Test Plan: Called `owners.search` and reviewed the results. Grepped for `primaryOwnerPHID`.

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19207
2018-03-09 12:11:13 -08:00
epriestley
adde4089b4 Allow owners paths to be arbitrarily long and add storage for display paths
Summary:
Depends on D19182. Ref T11015. This changes `path` from `text255` to `longtext` because paths may be arbitrarily long.

It adds `pathDisplay` to prepare for display paths and storage paths having different values. For now, `pathDisplay` is copied from `path` and always has the same value.

Test Plan:
  - Ran migration, checked database for sanity (all `pathDisplay` and `path` values identical).
  - Added new paths, saw `pathDisplay` and `path` get the same values.
  - Added an unreasonably enormous path with far more than 255 characters.

Maniphest Tasks: T11015

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19183
2018-03-06 20:31:22 -08:00
epriestley
8cb273a053 Add a unique key to OwnersPath on "<packageID, repositoryPHID, pathIndex>"
Summary:
Depends on D19181. Ref T11015. This nukes duplicates from the table if they exist, then adds a unique key.

(Duplicates should not exist and can not be added with any recent version of the web UI.)

Test Plan:
  - Tried to add duplicates with web UI, didn't have any luck.
  - Explicitly added duplicates with manual `INSERT`s.
  - Viewed packages in web UI and saw duplicates.
  - Ran migrations, got a clean purge and a nice unique key.
  - There's still no way to actually hit a duplicate key error in the UI (unless you can collide hashes, I suppose), this is purely a correctness/robustness change.

Maniphest Tasks: T11015

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19182
2018-03-06 20:30:59 -08:00
epriestley
1bf4422c74 Add and populate a pathIndex column for OwnersPath
Summary: Ref T11015. This supports making path names arbitrarily long and putting a proper unique key on the table.

Test Plan:
  - Migrated, checked database, saw nice digested indexes.
  - Edited a package, saw new rows update with digested indexes.

Maniphest Tasks: T11015

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19181
2018-03-06 20:30:33 -08:00
epriestley
743d1ac426 Mostly modularize the Differential "update" transaction
Summary: Ref T13099. Move most of the "Update" logic to modular transactions

Test Plan: Created and updated revisions. Flushed the task queue. Grepped for `TYPE_UPDATE`. Reviewed update transactions in the timeline and feed.

Maniphest Tasks: T13099

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19175
2018-03-06 09:10:32 -08:00
epriestley
44f0664d2c Add a "lock log" for debugging where locks are being held
Summary: Depends on D19173. Ref T13096. Adds an optional, disabled-by-default lock log to make it easier to figure out what is acquiring and holding locks.

Test Plan: Ran `bin/lock log --enable`, `--disable`, `--name`, etc. Saw sensible-looking output with log enabled and daemons restarted. Saw no additional output with log disabled and daemons restarted.

Maniphest Tasks: T13096

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19174
2018-03-05 17:55:34 -08:00
epriestley
143033dc1f When showing a small piece of a Harbormaster build log, load a small piece of data instead of the entire log
Summary: Depends on D19148. Ref T13088. The new rendering always executes range requests for data it needs, and we can satisfy these requests by loading the smallest number of chunks which span that range.

Test Plan: Piped 50,000 lines of Apache log into Harbormaster, viewed it in the new UI, got sensible rendering times and a reasonable amount of data actually going over the wire.

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13088

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19149
2018-02-28 12:32:26 -08:00
epriestley
6dc341be87 As Harbormaster logs are processed, build a sparse map of byte offsets to line numbers
Summary:
Depends on D19138. Ref T13088. When we want to read the last part of a logfile //and show accurate line numbers//, we need to be able to get from byte offsets to line numbers somehow.

Our fundamental unit must remain byte offsets, because a test can emit an arbitrarily long line, and we should accommodate it cleanly if a test emits 2GB of the letter "A".

To support going from byte offsets to line numbers, compute a map with periodic line markers throughout the offsets of the file. From here, we can figure out the line numbers for arbitrary positions in the file with only a constant amount of work.

Test Plan: Added unit tests; ran unit tests.

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13088

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19139
2018-02-26 17:56:52 -08:00
epriestley
d6311044bb Store the Harbormaster log chunk format on the log record
Summary: Depends on D19137. Ref T13088. This allows `rebuild-log` to skip work if the chunks are already compressed. It also prepares for a future GC which is looking for "text" or "gzip" chunks to throw away in favor of archival into Files; such a GC can use this column to find collectable logs and then write "file" to it, meaning "chunks are gone, this data is only available in Files".

Test Plan: Ran migration, saw logs populate as "text". Ran `rebuild-log`, saw logs rebuild as "gzip".

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13088

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19138
2018-02-26 17:56:14 -08:00
epriestley
57e3d607f5 In Harbormaster, record byte length on the build logs
Summary: Depends on D19135. Ref T13088. Denormalize the total log size onto the log itself. This makes reasoning about the log at display time easier, and we don't need to fish around in the database as much to figure out what we're dealing with.

Test Plan: Ran `bin/harbormaster rebuild-log`, saw an existing log populate. Ran `bin/harbormaster write-log`, saw new log write with proper length information.

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13088

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19136
2018-02-26 17:54:47 -08:00
epriestley
8a2604cf06 Add a "filePHID" to HarbormasterBuildLog and copy logs into Files during finalization
Summary: Depends on D19131. Ref T13088. During log finalization, stream the log into Files to support "Download Log", archive to Files, and API access.

Test Plan: Ran `write-log` and `rebuild-log`, saw Files objects generate with log content and appropriate permissions.

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13088

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19132
2018-02-26 17:52:39 -08:00
epriestley
0dee34b3fa Make Facts more modern, DRY, and dimensional
Summary:
Ref T13083. Facts has a fair amount of weird hardcoding and duplication of responsibilities. Reduce this somewhat: no more hard-coded fact aggregates, no more database-driven list of available facts, etc. Generally, derive all objective truth from FactEngines. This is more similar to how most other modern applications work.

For clarity, hopefully: rename "FactSpec" to "Fact". Rename "RawFact" to "Datapoint".

Split the fairly optimistic "RawFact" table into an "IntDatapoint" table with less stuff in it, then dimension tables for the object PHIDs and key names. This is primarily aimed at reducing the row size of each datapoint. At the time I originally wrote this code we hadn't experimented much with storing similar data in multiple tables, but this is now more common and has worked well elsewhere (CustomFields, Edges, Ferret) so I don't anticipate this causing issues. If we need more complex or multidimension/multivalue tables later we can accommodate them. The queries a single table supports (like "all facts of all kinds in some time window") don't make any sense as far as I can tell and could likely be UNION ALL'd anyway.

Remove all the aggregation stuff for now, it's not really clear to me what this should look like.

Test Plan: Ran `bin/fact analyze` and viewed web UI. Nothing exploded too violently.

Subscribers: yelirekim

Maniphest Tasks: T13083

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19119
2018-02-19 12:05:19 -08:00
epriestley
eb3fd2b7f5 Fix an issue with marking aborted buildables failed when more than one build is aborted
Summary: See <https://discourse.phabricator-community.org/t/upgrade-issue-2018-week-7-mid-february/1139>.

Test Plan: Used `bin/storage upgrade -f --apply ...` to re-apply the migration.

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19116
2018-02-17 04:36:25 -08:00
epriestley
143350fdba Give Phriction documents modern string status constants instead of numeric constants
Summary:
Depends on D19099. Ref T13077. Updates Phriction documents to string constants to make API interactions cleaner and statuses more practical to extend.

This does not seem to require any transaction migrations because none of the Phriction transactions actually store status values: status is always a side effect of other edits.

Test Plan: Created, edited, deleted, moved documents. Saw appropriate UI cues. Browsed and filtered documents by status in the index.

Maniphest Tasks: T13077

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19100
2018-02-15 18:23:41 -08:00
epriestley
a965d8d6ae Make PhrictionContent "description" non-nullable
Summary:
Depends on D19095. Ref T6203. Ref T13077. This column is nullable in an inconsistent way. Make it non-nullable.

Also clean up one more content query on the history view.

Test Plan: Ran migration, then created and edited documents without providing a descriptino or hitting `NULL` exceptions.

Maniphest Tasks: T13077, T6203

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19096
2018-02-15 17:55:11 -08:00
epriestley
e492c717c6 Give PhrictionContent objects (older versions of wiki pages) legitimate PHIDs
Summary: Ref T13077. Prepares for modern API access to document history using standard "v3" APIs.

Test Plan: Ran migration, verified PHIDs appeared in the database. Created/edited a document, got even more PHIDs in the database.

Maniphest Tasks: T13077

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19092
2018-02-15 17:39:07 -08:00
epriestley
2b0f98900b Fail outstanding buildables with aborted builds
Summary:
Ref T13072. See PHI361. The bug in T10746 where aborting builds didn't propagate properly to the buildable was fixed, but existing builds are still stuck "Building".

Since it doesn't look like anything will moot this before these changes promote to `stable`, just migrate these builds into "failed".

Test Plan: Ran migration, saw it affect only relevant builds and correctly fail them.

Maniphest Tasks: T13072

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19091
2018-02-15 03:56:58 -08:00
epriestley
c42bbd6f5c Rename HarbormasterBuildMessage "buildTargetPHID" to "receiverPHID"
Summary: Ref T13054. Companion storage change for D19062.

Test Plan: Applied migration and adjustments. Viewed messages in Harbormaster; created them with `harbormaster.sendmessage`; processed them with `bin/phd debug task`.

Subscribers: PHID-OPKG-gm6ozazyms6q6i22gyam

Maniphest Tasks: T13054

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19063
2018-02-12 12:17:44 -08:00
epriestley
f43d08c2bb Completely remove the legacy hunk table
Summary: Depends on D19056. Fixes T8475. Ref T13054. Merges "ModernHunk" back into "Hunk".

Test Plan: Grepped for `modernhunk`. Reviewed revisions. Created a new revision. Used `bin/differential migrate-hunk` to migrate hunks between storage formats and back.

Maniphest Tasks: T13054, T8475

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19057
2018-02-10 16:12:50 -08:00
epriestley
b0d1d46a73 Drop the legacy hunk table
Summary: Ref T13054. Ref T8475. This table has had no readers or writers for more than a year after it was migrated to the modern table.

Test Plan: Ran migration, verified that all the data was still around.

Maniphest Tasks: T13054, T8475

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19056
2018-02-10 16:09:31 -08:00
epriestley
ffc5c95c2f Correct flipped transaction constants in "Closed Date" migration
Summary: These transaction constants are flipped, which can produce the wrong result in some cases.

Test Plan: `./bin/storage upgrade -f --apply phabricator:20180208.maniphest.02.populate.php`

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19054
2018-02-10 06:10:55 -08:00
epriestley
0470125d9e Add skeleton code for webhooks
Summary: Ref T11330. Adds general support for webhooks. This is still rough and missing a lot of pieces -- and not yet useful for anything -- but can make HTTP requests.

Test Plan: Used `bin/webhook call ...` to complete requests to a test endpoint.

Maniphest Tasks: T11330

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19045
2018-02-09 13:55:04 -08:00
epriestley
f028aa6f60 Track closed date and closing user for tasks explicitly
Summary:
Ref T4434. Although some of the use cases for this data are better fits for Facts, this data is reasonable to track separately.

I have an approximate view of it already ("closed, ordered by date modified") that's useful to review things that were fixed recently. This lets us make that view more effective.

This just adds (and populates) the storage. Followups will add Conduit, Export, Search, and UI support.

This is slightly tricky because merges work oddly (see T13020).

Test Plan:
  - Ran migration, checked database for sensible results.
  - Created a task in open/closed status, got the right database values.
  - Modified a task to close/open it, got the right values.
  - Merged an open task, got updates.

Maniphest Tasks: T4434

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19037
2018-02-08 15:40:49 -08:00
epriestley
aa74af1983 Remove all "originalTitle"/"originalName" fields from objects
Summary:
Depends on D19012. Ref T13053. In D19012, I've changed "Thread-Topic" to always use PHIDs.

This change drops the selective on-object storage we have to track the original, human-readable title for objects.

Even if we end up backing out the "Thread-Topic" change, we'd be better off storing this in a table in the Mail app which just has `<objectPHID, first subject we used when sending mail for that object>`, since then we get the right behavior without needing every object to have this separate field.

Test Plan: Grepped for `original`, `originalName`, `originalTitle`, etc.

Reviewers: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13053

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D19013
2018-02-08 06:22:03 -08:00
epriestley
fd49acd033 Fix Herald repetition policy migration for NULL
When we change a nullable column to a non-nullable column, we can get a
data truncation error if any value was "NULL".

This is exceptionally unusual, but our two very oldest Herald rules have
a "NULL" policy on `secure`.
2018-01-26 13:17:15 -08:00
epriestley
204d1de683 Convert storage for Herald repetition policy to "text32"
Summary:
Depends on D18926. Ref T6203. Ref T13048. Herald rule repetition policies are stored as integers but treated as strings in most contexts.

After D18926, the integer stuff is almost totally hidden inside `HeraldRule` and getting rid of it completely isn't too tricky.

Do so now.

Test Plan:
  - Created "only the first time" and "every time" rules. Did a SELECT on their rows in the database.
  - Ran migrations, got a clean bill of health from `storage adjust`.
  - Did another SELECT on the rows, saw a faithful conversion to strings "every" and "first".
  - Edited and reviewed rules, swapping them between "every" and "first".

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13048, T6203

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18927
2018-01-26 11:05:37 -08:00
epriestley
042c43d6d8 Remove a very old Herald garbage collection migration
Summary:
Ref T13048. This migration is from January 2012 and probably only impacted Facebook.

It references `HeraldRepetitionPolicyConfig`, which I'd like to change significantly. I initially just replaced the constant with a literal `0`, but I don't think there's any actual value in retaining this migration nowadays.

The cost of removing this migration is: if you installed Phabricator before January 2012 and haven't upgraded since then, you'll have a few more rows in the `APPLIED` table than necessary. Herald will still work correctly.

Test Plan: Reading.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13048

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18924
2018-01-26 10:54:37 -08:00
epriestley
21e415299f Mark all existing password hashes as "legacy" and start upgrading digest formats
Summary:
Depends on D18907. Ref T13043. Ref T12509. We have some weird old password digest behavior that isn't terribly concerning, but also isn't great.

Specifically, old passwords were digested in weird ways before being hashed. Notably, account passwords were digested with usernames, so your password stops working if your username is chagned. Not the end of the world, but silly.

Mark all existing hashes as "v1", and automatically upgrade then when they're used or changed. Some day, far in the future, we could stop supporting these legacy digests and delete the code and passwords and just issue upgrade advice ("Passwords which haven't been used in more than two years no longer work."). But at least get things on a path toward sane, modern behavior.

Test Plan: Ran migration. Spot-checked that everthing in the database got marked as "v1". Used an existing password to login successfully. Verified that it was upgraded to a `null` (modern) digest. Logged in with it again.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13043, T12509

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18908
2018-01-23 14:01:09 -08:00
epriestley
cab2bba6f2 Remove "passwordHash" and "passwordSalt" from User objects
Summary:
Ref T13043. After D18903, this data has migrated to shared infrastructure and has no remaining readers or writers.

Just delete it now, since the cost of a mistake here is very small (users need to "Forgot Password?" and pick a new password).

Test Plan: Grepped for `passwordHash`, `passwordSalt`, and variations.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13043

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18904
2018-01-23 13:44:26 -08:00
epriestley
abc030fa00 Move account passwords to shared infrastructure
Summary:
Ref T13043. This moves user account passwords to the new shared infrastructure.

There's a lot of code changes here, but essentially all of it is the same as the VCS password logic in D18898.

Test Plan:
- Ran migration.
- Spot checked table for general sanity.
- Logged in with an existing password.
- Hit all error conditions on "change password", "set password", "register new account" flows.
- Verified that changing password logs out other sessions.
- Verified that revoked passwords of a different type can't be selected.
- Changed passwords a bunch.
- Verified that salt regenerates properly after password change.
- Tried to login with the wrong password, which didn't work.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13043

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18903
2018-01-23 13:43:07 -08:00
epriestley
5a8a56f414 Prepare the new AuthPassword infrastructure for storing account passwords
Summary:
Ref T13043. In D18898 I moved VCS passwords to the new shared infrastructure.

Before account passwords can move, we need to make two changes:

  - For legacy reasons, VCS passwords and Account passwords have different "digest" algorithms. Both are more complicated than they should be, but we can't easily fix it without breaking existing passwords. Add a `PasswordHashInterface` so that objects which can have passwords hashes can implement custom digest logic for each password type.
  - Account passwords have a dedicated external salt (`PhabricatorUser->passwordSalt`). This is a generally reasonable thing to support (since not all hashers are self-salting) and we need to keep it around so existing passwords still work. Add salt support to `AuthPassword` and make it generate/regenerate when passwords are updated.

Then add a nice story about password digestion.

Test Plan: Ran migrations. Used an existing VCS password; changed VCS password. Tried to use a revoked password. Unit tests still pass. Grepped for callers to legacy `PhabricatorHash::digestPassword()`, found none.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13043

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18900
2018-01-23 10:57:40 -08:00
epriestley
753c4c5ff1 Remove the "PhabricatorRepositoryVCSPassword" class and table
Summary:
Ref T13043. After D18898, this has been migrated to new, more modern storage and no longer has any readers or writers.

One migration from long ago (early 2014) is affected. Since this is ancient and the cost of dropping this is small (see inline), I just dropped it.

I'll note this in the changelog.

Test Plan: Ran migrations, got a clean bill of health from `storage status`. Grepped for removed symbol.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13043

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18899
2018-01-23 10:56:37 -08:00
epriestley
dd8f588ac5 Migrate VCS passwords to new shared password infrastructure
Summary:
Ref T13043. Migrate VCS passwords away from their dedicated table to new the new shared infrastructure.

Future changes will migrate account passwords and remove the old table.

Test Plan:
- Ran migrations.
  - Cloned with the same password that was configured before the migrations (worked).
  - Cloned with a different, invalid password (failed).
- Changed password.
  - Cloned with old password (failed).
  - Cloned with new password (worked).
- Deleted password in web UI.
  - Cloned with old password (failed).
- Set password to the same password as it currently is set to (worked, no "unique" collision).
- Set password to account password. !!This (incorrectly) works for now until account passwords migrate, since the uniqueness check can't see them yet.!!
- Set password to a new unique password.
  - Cloned (worked).
  - Revoked the password with `bin/auth revoke`.
  - Verified web UI shows "no password set".
  - Verified that pull no longer works.
  - Verified that I can no longer select the revoked password.
- Verified that accounts do not interact:
  - Tried to set account B to account A's password (worked).
  - Tried to set account B to a password revoked on account A (worked).
- Spot checked the `password` and `passwordtransaction` tables for saniity.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13043

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18898
2018-01-23 10:56:13 -08:00
epriestley
9c00a43784 Add a more modern object for storing password hashes
Summary:
Ref T13043. Currently:

  - Passwords are stored separately in the "VCS Passwords" and "User" tables and don't share as much code as they could.
  - Because User objects are all over the place in the code, password hashes are all over the place too (i.e., often somewhere in process memory). This is a very low-severity, theoretical sort of issue, but it could make leaving a stray `var_dump()` in the code somewhere a lot more dangerous than it otherwise is. Even if we never do this, third-party developers might. So it "feels nice" to imagine separating this data into a different table that we rarely load.
  - Passwords can not be //revoked//. They can be //deleted//, but users can set the same password again. If you believe or suspect that a password may have been compromised, you might reasonably prefer to revoke it and force the user to select a //different// password.

This change prepares to remedy these issues by adding a new, more modern dedicated password storage table which supports storing multiple password types (account vs VCS), gives passwords real PHIDs and transactions, supports DestructionEngine, supports revocation, and supports `bin/auth revoke`.

It doesn't actually make anything use this new table yet. Future changes will migrate VCS passwords and account passwords to this table.

(This also gives third party applications a reasonable place to store password hashes in a consistent way if they have some need for it.)

Test Plan: Added some basic unit tests to cover general behavior. This is just skeleton code for now and will get more thorough testing when applications move.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13043

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18894
2018-01-22 15:35:28 -08:00
epriestley
3038d564a6 Allow bulk edits to be made silently if you have CLI access
Summary:
Fixes T13042. This hooks up the new "silent" mode from D18882 and makes it actually work.

The UI (where we tell you to go run some command and then reload the page) is pretty clumsy, but should solve some problems for now and can be cleaned up eventually. The actual mechanics (timeline aggregation, Herald interaction,  etc.) are on firmer ground.

Test Plan:
  - Made a normal bulk edit, got mail and feed stories.
  - Made a silent bulk edit, no mail and no feed.
  - Saw "Silent Edit" marker in timeline for silent edits:

{F5386245}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13042

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18883
2018-01-19 13:24:54 -08:00
epriestley
6d36eb9113 Denormalize Diff PHIDs onto Revisions
Summary:
Ref T12539. See PHI190. Currently, each Diff has a `revisionID`, but Revisions do not point at the current active diff. To find the active diff for a given revision, we need to issue a separate query.

Furthermore, this query is inefficient for bulk loads: if we have a lot of revisions, we end up querying for all diff IDs for all those revisions first, then selecting the largest ones and querying again to get the actual diff objects. This strategy could likely be optimized but the query is a mess in any case.

In several cases, it's useful to have the active diff PHID without needing to do a second query -- sometimes for convenience, and sometimes for performance.

T12539 is an example of such a case: it would be nice to refine the bucketing logic (which only depends on active diff PHIDs), but it feels bad to make the page heavier to do it.

For now, this is unused. I'll start using it to fix the bucketing issue, and then we can expand it gradually to address other performance/convenience issues.

Test Plan:
  - Ran migrations, inspected database, saw sensible values.
  - Created a new revision, saw a sensible database value.
  - Updated an existing revision, saw database update properly.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T12539

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18756
2017-11-01 17:19:38 -07:00
epriestley
f1204c8c45 Convert Ponder Questions to Ferret engine
Summary: See PHI177. Ref T12974. PonderQuestion was overlooked during the Ferret engine conversions.

Test Plan:
Ran migrations, searched for questions, got results:

{F5241185}

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T12974

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18736
2017-10-26 18:18:04 -07:00
epriestley
1de130c9f5 Allow the Ferret engine to remove "common" ngrams from the index
Summary:
Ref T13000. This adds support for tracking "common" ngrams, which occur in too many documents to be useful as part of the ngram index.

If an ngram is listed in the "common" table, it won't be written when indexing documents, or queried for when searching for them.

In this change, nothing actually writes to the "common" table. I'll start writing to the table in a followup change.

Specifically, I plan to do this:

  - A new GC process updates the "common" table periodically, by writing ngrams which appear in more than X% of documents to it, for some value of X, if there are at least a minimum number of documents (maybe like 4,000).
  - A new GC process deletes ngrams that have been added to the common table from the existing indexes.

Hopefully, this will pare down the ngrams index to something reasonable over time without requiring any manual tuning.

Test Plan:
  - Ran some queries and indexes.
  - Manually inserted ngrams `xxx` and `yyy` into the ngrams table, searched and indexed, saw them ignored as viable ngrams for search/index.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T13000

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18672
2017-10-03 13:27:42 -07:00
epriestley
3ad727ba78 Guarantee the key_position key is created properly
Summary:
Ref T12987. I was focused on the RefCursor table and overlooked that we need some care on this key.

It's currently possible to run `bin/storage upgrade --no-adjust`, then start Phabricator, and end up with duplicate records in this table. If you try to run `bin/storage adjust` later, it will try to add the unique key but fail. This is unusual for normal installs (they usually do not use `--no-adjust`) but we do it in the cluster and I did this exact thing on `secure`.

Normally, to avoid this, when a new table with a unique key is introduced, we also add a migration to explicitly add that key.

This is mostly harmless in this case. Fix this mistake (force the table to contain only unique rows; add the key) and try using `LOCK TABLES` to make this atomic. If this doesn't cause problems we can use this in similar situations in the future.

The "alter table may unlock things" warning comes from here:

https://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.7/en/lock-tables.html

It seems like it's fine to issue `UNLOCK TABLES` even if you don't have any locks, so I think this script should always do the right thing now, regardless of ALTER TABLE unlocking or not unlocking tables.

Test Plan: Ran `bin/storage upgrade -f`, saw table end up in the right state. I'll also check this on `secure`, where the starting state is a little messier.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T12987

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18623
2017-09-18 14:00:22 -07:00
epriestley
5cf62f86d7 Remove obsolete columns from RefCursor table
Summary:
Ref T11823. This change isn't standalone, but prepares for the more involved code change by dropping obsolete columns from the RefCursor table and adding the unique key we need to prevent the ambiguous/duplicate refs issue.

This data was moved to the RefPosition table in D18612.

Test Plan: Ran storage upgrade. See next revision for more substantial testing of this change series.

Reviewers: amckinley

Reviewed By: amckinley

Maniphest Tasks: T11823

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D18613
2017-09-15 10:21:12 -07:00