Template
1
0
Fork 0
mirror of https://codeberg.org/forgejo/forgejo synced 2024-11-22 09:54:24 +01:00

Update for new implementation

This commit is contained in:
Michael Jerger 2024-01-13 17:16:43 +01:00
parent c4eb763f4a
commit f25eab35fc

View file

@ -13,12 +13,17 @@ sequenceDiagram
fs ->> os: post /api/activitypub/repository-id/1/inbox {Like-Activity}
activate os
os ->> repository: load "1"
activate os
os ->> os: validate actor id inputs
activate os
os ->> FederationInfo: get by Host
os ->> os: if FederatonInfo not found
activate os
os ->> fs: get .well-known/nodeinfo
os ->> NodeInfoWellKnown: create & validate
os ->> fs: get api/v1/nodeinfo
os ->> NodeInfo: create & validate
os ->> FederationInfo: create
deactivate os
os ->> ForgeLike: validate
deactivate os
@ -30,6 +35,7 @@ sequenceDiagram
os ->> user: create user from ForgePerson
deactivate os
os ->> repository: execute star
os ->> FederationInfo: update latest activity
os -->> fs: 200 ok
deactivate os
```
@ -99,7 +105,8 @@ flowchart TD
3. OpenSource Promoter sends Star Activities containing non authorized Person Actors. The Actors listed as stargazer might get angry about this. The project may loose project reputation.
4. **DOS by Rate**: Experienced Hacker records activities sent and replays some of them. Without order of activities (i.e. timestamp) we can not decide wether we should execute the activity again. If the replayed activities are UnLike Activity we might loose stars.
5. **Reply**: Experienced Hacker records activities sends a massive amount of activities which leads to new user creation & storage loss. Our instance might fall out of service.
6. **DOS by Slowlories**: Experienced Hacker may craft their malicious server to keep connections open. Then they send a Like Activity with the actor URL pointing to that malicious server, and your background job keeps waiting for data. Then they send more such requests, until you exhaust your limit of file descriptors openable for your system and cause a DoS (by causing cascading failures all over the system, given file descriptors are used for about everything, from files, to sockets, to pipes). See also [Slowloris@wikipedia][2].
6. **Reply out of Order**: Experienced Hacker records activities sends again Unlike Activities happend but was succeded by an Like. Our instance accept the Unlike and removes a star. Our repositore gets rated unintended bad.
7. **DOS by Slowlories**: Experienced Hacker may craft their malicious server to keep connections open. Then they send a Like Activity with the actor URL pointing to that malicious server, and your background job keeps waiting for data. Then they send more such requests, until you exhaust your limit of file descriptors openable for your system and cause a DoS (by causing cascading failures all over the system, given file descriptors are used for about everything, from files, to sockets, to pipes). See also [Slowloris@wikipedia][2].
### Mitigations