| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Suggested by bentley@.
Delete the HTTP_HOST configuration variable that is now obsolete.
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Outdated information reported by an Anonymous Coward on undeadly.org.
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independent of each other, as in:
http://man.openbsd.org[/manpath][/mansec][/arch]/name[.sec]
The restrictions in the past kept confusing people.
Triggered by a question from RafaelNeves at gmail dot com.
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"mandoc" that was used for man.cgi(8) documentation and by assuming
that the apropos(1) and man.cgi(8) manuals are simply installed in
the default manpath. Even though man.cgi(8) is not installed by
default when installing OpenBSD, it is easy to copy it into the
default manpath used for man.cgi(8).
Idea found when considering a question asked by wrant dot com.
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one table, minus twenty lines of code, no loss of functionality.
No idea why i didn't do this earlier...
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in part based on ideas by bentley@.
While here, improve the documentation.
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compiled-in string. This is not a security risk, we read the file
manpath.conf from the same directory, anyway. No error handling
is needed; even if the files are absent, that's not an error.
This is more flexible without causing complication of the code or
the user interface. It helps the upcoming revamp of the online
manual pages on man.NetBSD.org.
Based on an idea by Jean-Yves Migeon <jeanyves dot migeon at free dot fr>,
but implemented in a much simpler way.
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Many thanks to bentley@ for doing this work.
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to be more similar to apropos(1) called from the shell.
Missing feature reported by Marcus MERIGHI <mcmer dash openbsd at
tor dot at> on misc@.
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Restrict the character set of strings passed into html_alloc(),
in particular architecture names that come from the QUERY_STRING,
but also SCRIPT_NAME and manpath.conf content for additional safety,
and bail out safely on violations.
Issue reported by Sebastien Marie <semarie-openbsd at latrappe dot fr>.
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2616) requires the Location: response-header field to be an absolute
URI (14.30), and only the most recent proposed standard (RFC 7231),
which is barely a month old, allows a relative Location: (7.1.2).
While most modern browsers appear to support relative Location:
headers, some may not, and it's maybe a bit early to rely on relative
Location: headers.
I'm not going back to the HTTP_HOST or SERVER_NAME CGI variables,
though. While some CGI programs certainly require those, in which
case both the CGI programmer and the web server admin have to be
very careful to keep the system secure and reliable, man.cgi(8)
does not really need them. We always know at compile time which
domain we are running for, and for man.cgi(8), security and reliability
are definitely much more important than flexibility. So make HTTP_HOST
a compile-time definition for now.
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just make the HTTP redirect Location: relative.
Less user input is good, it reduces the attack surface.
Besides, this removes one global variable and 4 lines of code.
Patch from Sebastien Marie <semarie-openbsd at latrappe dot fr>.
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unfortunate, more than 400 links needing this are scattered all around
the www.openbsd.org website, and CVSweb needs this as well.
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as manpath.conf, such that we do not need to mix our own documentation
into the documentation we are serving, which may not even be possible
if the latter is updated automatically.
Based on an idea by beck@.
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in particular introduce a section dropdown and an architecture dropdown.
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Almost everything in the old man.cgi(7) was outdated in one way
or another - catman, catman.conf, CACHE_DIR, /cache, manroots,
replacing '/' with spaces, /tmp...
Instead, document the HTML and URI interfaces, the output and the setup,
and complete the listings of ENVIRONMENT variables and FILES.
Using section 8 instead of section 7 because that's the usual place
for CGI programs, see for example bgplg(8) and slowcgi(8).
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