This change causes rate limiting errors to be returned to the client
as JSON objects rather than plain text to prevent the satellite UI from
encountering issues when trying to parse them.
Resolvesstorj/customer-issues#88
Change-Id: I11abd19068927a22f1c28d18fc99e7dad8461834
Rate limits application of coupon codes by user ID to prevent
brute forcing. Refactors the rate limiter to allow limiting based
on arbitrary criteria and not just by IP.
Change-Id: I99d6749bd5b5e47d7e1aeb0314e363a8e7259dba
The user must complete a reCAPTCHA in order to register.
ReCAPTCHA verification failure results in rejection of the
registration attempt.
Change-Id: I34ba7db414d756fd1aaebdc3d19cccbfc7fc1ea3
Satellites set their configuration values to default values using
cfgstruct, however, it turns out our tests don't test these values
at all! Instead, they have a completely separate definition system
that is easy to forget about.
As is to be expected, these values have drifted, and it appears
in a few cases test planet is testing unreasonable values that we
won't see in production, or perhaps worse, features enabled in
production were missed and weren't enabled in testplanet.
This change makes it so all values are configured the same,
systematic way, so it's easy to see when test values are different
than dev values or release values, and it's less hard to forget
to enable features in testplanet.
In terms of reviewing, this change should be actually fairly
easy to review, considering private/testplanet/satellite.go keeps
the current config system and the new one and confirms that they
result in identical configurations, so you can be certain that
nothing was missed and the config is all correct.
You can also check the config lock to see what actual config
values changed.
Change-Id: I6715d0794887f577e21742afcf56fd2b9d12170e
Added a per IP rate limiter to the console web.
Cleaned up password check to leak less bcyrpt info.
Change-Id: I3c882978bd8de3ee9428cb6434a41ab2fc405fb2