Every Session field is server-controlled (sessions are created by login,
not CRUD), so all exposed fields get readOnly:"true". The doc tags feed
Huma's reflected /api/v2 schema; they are inert for v1.
Label writes/deletes are owner-only (CanUpdate/CanDelete), but hasAccessToLabel
derived max_permission from the accessible task's permission with a read fallback
for the creator branch — so owners showed as read-only and a task-admin reading
a label via that task showed as a label admin. Derive it from ownership instead:
owner -> admin, otherwise read. Corrects the value CanRead returns for both v1's
x-max-permission header and the new v2 max_permission body field.
Cut narration a reader can infer from the code (envelope element type,
path-param binding, per-case test descriptions). Keep the non-obvious
rationale: IDOR scoping, RFC 9110 etag quoting, why the feature gate sits
in the registrar, and the author-only fixture crux.
TaskComment.Update used tc.Author as the TaskCommentUpdatedEvent doer, but
that field is bound from the request body. A client could omit it (nil doer,
breaking the event) or spoof another user. Resolve the doer from the session
auth via GetUserOrLinkShareUser instead, mirroring Create and Delete. CanUpdate
already guarantees the authenticated user is the comment's author, so this is
both correct and consistent. Affects v1 and v2, which share the model.
Add TaskComment CRUD on /api/v2 under /tasks/{task}/comments, mirroring
the project_views nested-resource shape. The resource is feature-gated by
config.ServiceEnableTaskComments, checked inside the registrar so it runs
after config has loaded. Self-registers via init()+AddRouteRegistrar; no
routes.go change. ReadAll exposes the order_by (asc/desc) query param.
Adds doc:/readOnly: tags to the shared TaskComment model fields and a
TestHumaTaskComment webtest covering list/read/create/update/delete plus
negatives (non-author forbidden, comment under the wrong task -> 404).
include_public is a list-time query flag, not a team field. With json:"include_public" it leaked into the v2 Team request/response body schema (POST/PUT). Mark it json:"-" so it only travels as a query parameter: v1 binds it via the query tag, and the v2 list handler takes it as a dedicated query field and sets it on the model internally.
Adds Team CRUD on /api/v2 mirroring the labels reference resource:
list, read, create, update, delete under /teams[/{id}].
- The list op exposes an include_public query param bound onto the
model so Team.ReadAll can surface public teams (gated by the instance
public-teams setting).
- Read ops emit an ETag and honor If-None-Match (304).
- Model fields gain doc: tags; server-controlled fields are marked
readOnly:true.
- Self-registers via init()/AddRouteRegistrar; no routes.go change.
- New webtest TestHumaTeam (named to avoid clashing with the v1 model
TestTeam) covers list/read/create/update/delete plus negatives
(non-member 403, nonexistent 403/404) and ETag/304.
Add PUT /api/v2/user/settings/avatar, the first multipart/form-data file
upload on the Huma-backed v2 API. Reuses v1's byte-level mime validation
(mimetype.DetectReader) and storage (upload.StoreAvatarFile), modeling the
request as a huma.MultipartFormFiles input so it renders as multipart/form-data
in the OpenAPI spec instead of being read off the raw echo context.
Flips the user's avatar provider to "upload" on success. Authenticated (JWT).
Add the admin + license gate for /api/v2 and ship the first gated
resource, GET /api/v2/admin/projects (AdminProjectList).
The gate reuses the existing v1 middleware functions unchanged —
RequireFeature(license.FeatureAdminPanel) and RequireInstanceAdmin(),
both of which serve 404 on failure. Rather than splitting the single
v2 Huma API into a separate gated sub-group (which would split the
OpenAPI spec and drop admin operations from /api/v2/openapi.json), the
gate is applied as a path-scoped Echo middleware on the shared /api/v2
group, firing only for /api/v2/admin/* and after the token middleware.
This preserves v1's 404-not-403 semantics and keeps admin routes in the
unified v2 spec and Scalar docs.
AdminProjectList lists every project on the instance (archived
included), behind the gate. Adds doc:/readOnly: tags to the shared
Project model so it documents correctly as a v2 schema.
Tests in pkg/webtests/huma_admin_test.go (TestHumaAdminProjects) cover
all three personas: non-admin -> 404, admin without feature -> 404,
admin with feature -> 200 list, plus unauthenticated -> 401.
Add ProjectView CRUD on /api/v2 under the nested path
/projects/{project}/views[/{view}], establishing the two-path-param
binding pattern for sub-resources. Mirrors the labels.go handler shape
and reuses handler.Do* so permission checks stay at the model layer.
Both {project} and {view} are bound on every operation; {project} is
threaded onto ProjectView.ProjectID (ReadOne resolves via
GetProjectViewByIDAndProject, which needs the parent id). List wraps the
[]*models.ProjectView slice in the shared Paginated envelope, read sends
an ETag for If-None-Match/304, and AutoPatch synthesises PATCH.
Also:
- Tag exposed ProjectView / ProjectViewBucketConfiguration / nested
TaskCollection fields with doc: descriptions; mark server-controlled
fields (id, project_id, created, updated) readOnly. Safe for v1.
- Give ProjectViewKind and BucketConfigurationModeKind a huma.SchemaProvider
so the string-serialised enums reflect as string schemas instead of
Huma's default integer schema (which rejected the string form with 422).
Routes registered in registerAPIRoutesV2 before EnableAutoPatch.
v2's OpenAPI spec is generated from struct tags and Operation fields at
runtime; unlike swaggo (v1) it can't read Go doc comments, so v2 shipped
without the field/operation descriptions v1 has. Add doc: tags to the
Label model (kept in sync with the existing comments swaggo reads for
v1) and Summary/Description to each label operation. Makes labels a
complete reference for the pattern.
PermissionsAreValid only consulted apiTokenRoutes, so a v2-only resource
(no v1 counterpart) could never be granted as a token scope even though
CanDoAPIRoute already authorises against both tables. Validate against
the union so the v1+v2 authorization and validation paths agree.
Huma's AutoPatch synthesises a PATCH counterpart for every PUT, and both
verbs collapse to the same "update" permission. PATCH is still skipped
during collection (it would clobber PUT under the shared key), but the
matcher now accepts it as an alias for the stored PUT route on the same
path, so token holders aren't forced to use PUT exclusively.
Sub-phase G validation caught that a token scoped to e.g.
`labels.read_one` was rejected on /api/v2/labels because the route
collector only stripped /api/v1/ from paths and did not know about
v2's REST-style verbs (POST create, PUT/PATCH update, inverted
from v1 where PUT creates and POST updates).
Introduce a shadow apiTokenRoutesV2 map keyed under the same
(group, permission) names as the v1 entries. Route collection now
routes v2 paths into this shadow map and CanDoAPIRoute consults
both tables, so the same permission bit authorizes the v1 and v2
endpoints for the same resource without changing the data shape
served at /api/v1/routes (which the frontend token UI depends on).
Also teach getRouteDetail about PATCH so Huma's AutoPatch-synthesized
PATCH routes collapse to the `update` permission instead of being
dropped.
A comment whose body contains <blockquote data-comment-id="…"> nodes
now triggers the same task-comment mention notification for the
quoted comments' authors, respecting CanRead, subscription, and
existing dedup. Self-quotes, wrong-task quotes, and malformed ids
are silently skipped.
TaskAttachment.ReadOne now swallows ErrAccountDisabled/ErrAccountLocked
from the creator lookup, matching the existing ErrUserDoesNotExist
swallow. Without this, deleting a disabled user that owned a project
with task attachments would fail when the cascade re-loaded the
attachment to delete it.
User search previously filtered bots only when they happened to match the
search string. That produced two bad behaviours:
1. Bots owned by other users could surface on an exact-username match,
leaking them into assignee pickers and similar UI.
2. A user could not reliably find their own bots by typing a partial
name, so bots became awkward to assign to tasks.
Change ListUsers to treat bot ownership explicitly: the existing match
branch excludes rows owned by someone else, and a second branch always
returns bots owned by the calling user. The own-bots branch also
respects any AdditionalCond passed in so project-scoped listings don't
start leaking bots from outside the project.
The call to i18n.T for notifications.task.overdue.overdue was missing
its first positional argument, so the translation key was being passed
as the language code. This surfaced as a "dead key" once the
translation check learned to look for unused entries. Fix the call so
the reminder line is properly localised.
MySQL 8 rejects CAST(... AS int) (only SIGNED/UNSIGNED/CHAR/... are
accepted as target types), causing /api/v1/projects, /api/v1/tasks,
and /api/v1/labels to return HTTP 500 for every authenticated user on
MySQL 8. SQLite, Postgres, and MariaDB lax mode silently accepted the
expression, which is why the regression (introduced in e3045dfd0,
shipped in v2.3.0) passed CI — the mysql CI matrix leg uses
mariadb:12, not real MySQL 8.
Replace the two CAST(all_projects.is_archived AS int) expressions in
the recursive project CTE with MAX(CASE WHEN ... THEN 1 ELSE 0 END),
which is dialect-agnostic and needs no cast on any supported backend.
Fixes#2589
Regression test for #2589. Locks the contract that getAllProjectsForUser
exposes inherited is_archived for child projects of archived parents and
filters them out when getArchived=false, exercising both the MAX(...)
column expression and the HAVING MAX(...) = 0 filter.
The TestProject_ReadAll/search case on the ParadeDB path was still
expecting 6 results, but adding fixture project 43 (child of project
10) means the recursive CTE now pulls it in as a descendant whenever
the fuzzy search matches project 10. The non-ParadeDB branch was
already updated to account for this (+1, asserting project 43 is in
the result); the ParadeDB branch was missed.
CI was failing with "should have 6 item(s), but has 7" on the
test-api (paradedb, feature) job. Bump the expected length to 7 and
add the matching Contains assertion for project 43.
No fixture or production-code changes.
GHSA-2vq4-854f-5c72 / CVE-2026-35595: the recursive permission CTE
cascades Admin from any owned ancestor, so a user with Write on a
shared project could reparent it under an attacker-owned root and
resolve as Admin on the moved project via the new parent.
Require Admin on both the moved project and the new parent whenever
parent_project_id is set to a non-zero value that differs from the
stored value. The gate lives in UpdateProject rather than CanUpdate
because CanUpdate is reused by permission-check-only callers
(buckets, webhooks, task ops) that pass stub &Project{ID:...} values
with ParentProjectID=0 and never commit a reparent — gating there
would spuriously trip the check for every such call.
Only non-zero ParentProjectID is gated: the generic update handler
binds a fresh struct, so an omitted parent_project_id is
indistinguishable from an explicit 0. Detach-to-root via the generic
endpoint is therefore out of scope for this fix and is tracked as a
follow-up (needs a pointer field to disambiguate).
Covers GHSA-2vq4-854f-5c72 / CVE-2026-35595: attackers with direct or
inherited Write on a project must not be able to reparent it under their
own tree nor detach it to root. Also pins the legitimate rename-with-Write
and owner-detach flows so the upcoming fix does not regress them.
Adds project 43 as a child of project 10 so tests can exercise the
"inherited Write via parent" path exploited by GHSA-2vq4-854f-5c72.
User 1 has Write on project 10 via users_projects id=4 and therefore
inherits Write on this child via the permission CTE.