# A dumb middleware that returns a Go HTML document if the go-get=1 query string # is used irrespective if the namespace/project exists module Gitlab module Middleware class Go include ActionView::Helpers::TagHelper PROJECT_PATH_REGEX = %r{\A(#{Gitlab::PathRegex.full_namespace_route_regex}/#{Gitlab::PathRegex.project_route_regex})/}.freeze def initialize(app) @app = app end def call(env) request = Rack::Request.new(env) render_go_doc(request) || @app.call(env) end private def render_go_doc(request) return unless go_request?(request) path = project_path(request) return unless path body = go_body(path) return unless body response = Rack::Response.new(body, 200, { 'Content-Type' => 'text/html' }) response.finish end def go_request?(request) request["go-get"].to_i == 1 && request.env["PATH_INFO"].present? end def go_body(path) config = Gitlab.config project_url = Gitlab::Utils.append_path(config.gitlab.url, path) import_prefix = strip_url(project_url.to_s) repository_url = if Gitlab::CurrentSettings.enabled_git_access_protocol == 'ssh' shell = config.gitlab_shell port = ":#{shell.ssh_port}" unless shell.ssh_port == 22 "ssh://#{shell.ssh_user}@#{shell.ssh_host}#{port}/#{path}.git" else "#{project_url}.git" end meta_tag = tag :meta, name: 'go-import', content: "#{import_prefix} git #{repository_url}" head_tag = content_tag :head, meta_tag content_tag :html, head_tag end def strip_url(url) url.gsub(%r{\Ahttps?://}, '') end def project_path(request) path_info = request.env["PATH_INFO"] path_info.sub!(%r{^/}, '') project_path_match = "#{path_info}/".match(PROJECT_PATH_REGEX) return unless project_path_match path = project_path_match[1] # Go subpackages may be in the form of `namespace/project/path1/path2/../pathN`. # In a traditional project with a single namespace, this would denote repo # `namespace/project` with subpath `path1/path2/../pathN`, but with nested # groups, this could also be `namespace/project/path1` with subpath # `path2/../pathN`, for example. # We find all potential project paths out of the path segments path_segments = path.split('/') simple_project_path = path_segments.first(2).join('/') # If the path is at most 2 segments long, it is a simple `namespace/project` path and we're done return simple_project_path if path_segments.length <= 2 project_paths = [] begin project_paths << path_segments.join('/') path_segments.pop end while path_segments.length >= 2 # We see if a project exists with any of these potential paths project = project_for_paths(project_paths, request) if project # If a project is found and the user has access, we return the full project path project.full_path else # If not, we return the first two components as if it were a simple `namespace/project` path, # so that we don't reveal the existence of a nested project the user doesn't have access to. # This means that for an unauthenticated request to `group/subgroup/project/subpackage` # for a private `group/subgroup/project` with subpackage path `subpackage`, GitLab will respond # as if the user is looking for project `group/subgroup`, with subpackage path `project/subpackage`. # Since `go get` doesn't authenticate by default, this means that # `go get gitlab.com/group/subgroup/project/subpackage` will not work for private projects. # `go get gitlab.com/group/subgroup/project.git/subpackage` will work, since Go is smart enough # to figure that out. `import 'gitlab.com/...'` behaves the same as `go get`. simple_project_path end end def project_for_paths(paths, request) project = Project.where_full_path_in(paths).first return unless Ability.allowed?(current_user(request), :read_project, project) project end def current_user(request) authenticator = Gitlab::Auth::RequestAuthenticator.new(request) user = authenticator.find_user_from_access_token || authenticator.find_user_from_warden return unless user&.can?(:access_api) # Right now, the `api` scope is the only one that should be able to determine private project existence. return unless authenticator.valid_access_token?(scopes: [:api]) user end end end end