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Posted to dev@couchdb.apache.org by "Jan Lehnardt (JIRA)" <ji...@apache.org> on 2010/07/26 13:25:50 UTC

[jira] Closed: (COUCHDB-835) Whitelisting which config variables may be changed via HTTP

     [ https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/COUCHDB-835?page=com.atlassian.jira.plugin.system.issuetabpanels:all-tabpanel ]

Jan Lehnardt closed COUCHDB-835.
--------------------------------

    Fix Version/s: 1.1
       Resolution: Fixed

> Whitelisting which config variables may be changed via HTTP
> -----------------------------------------------------------
>
>                 Key: COUCHDB-835
>                 URL: https://issues.apache.org/jira/browse/COUCHDB-835
>             Project: CouchDB
>          Issue Type: New Feature
>          Components: HTTP Interface
>    Affects Versions: 1.0
>         Environment: Linux, Erlang R13B03
>            Reporter: Jason Smith
>            Priority: Minor
>             Fix For: 1.1
>
>         Attachments: 0001-Refactor-read-only-config-handlers-to-be-near-each-o.patch, 0002-Refactor-PUT-and-DELETE-config-handlers-to-a-wrapper.patch, 0003-Support-a-whitelist-for-modifying-the-config-via-HTT.patch, 0004-Document-the-whitelist-process.patch
>
>
> A database rite of passage is partitioning responsibility into system administrators and DBAs. CouchDB has reached this point. Congratulations!
> The _config API allows changing the .ini file completely over authenticated HTTP, without requiring the CouchDB admin to log in to the server OS. Unfortunately, some configuration settings are OS-oriented (http.port, couchdb.view_index_dir); others are strictly database settings (uuids.algorithm); and still others must be decided case-by-case (log.level, couchdb.max_document_size).
> In short, CouchDB should support a whitelist, with which the system administrator can specify which _config values are may be modified by the DBA, and which are read-only.
> I propose that this whitelist is itself a config option, httpd.config_whitelist. If it is undefined, there is no whitelist and no change of behavior. If specified, the whitelist is an Erlang list of 2-tuples of the format:
>     [{section1, key1}, {section2, key2}, {section_with_wildcard, "*"}, ...]
> When processing a PUT or DELETE, CouchDB confirms inclusion of the section/key in the whitelist.
> I foresee two modes of operation:
> * DBA is top dog: The whitelist includes {httpd,config_whitelist} itself. Thus the DBA may modified the list later over HTTP. The whitelist is just a safeguard against accidental changes.
> * Sysadmin is top dog: The whitelist does not include {httpd,config_whitelist}. The DBA is unable to change the list and may only ask politely for updates to the policy.
> (In any case, you can always edit the .ini file and _restart from the server OS.)

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