With previous configuration format rules were not ordered between groups and
thus not predictable. Also in some cases `any` must have been a higher
precedence than `groups`. Flattening the rules let the user apply whatever
policy he can think of.
When several rules match the (subject, domain, resource), the first one is
applied.
NOTE: This commit changed the format for declaring ACLs. Be sure to update
your configuration file before upgrading.
From this commit on, api endpoints reply with a 401 error code and non api
endpoints redirect to /error/40X.
This commit also fixes missing restrictions on /loggedin (the "already logged
in page). This was not a security issue, though.
The change also makes error pages automatically redirect the user after few
seconds based on the referrer or the default_redirection_url if provided in the
configuration.
Warning: The old /verify endpoint of the REST API has moved to /api/verify.
You will need to update your nginx configuration to take this change into
account.
Now, /verify can return 401 or 403 depending on the user authentication.
Every public API endpoints and pages return 200 with error message in
JSON body or 401 if the user is not authorized.
This policy makes it complicated for an attacker to know what is the source of
the failure and hide server-side bugs (not returning 500), bugs being potential
threats.
Before this fix, the application was simply crashing during execution
when connection to redis was failing.
Now, it is correctly handled with failing promises and logs have been
enabled to clearly see the problem