The TCP monitor creation form showed a placeholder that instructed users to enter a URL with the tcp:// scheme prefix (e.g., tcp://192.168.1.1:8080). Following this guidance caused a silent HTTP 500 error because Go's net.SplitHostPort rejects any input containing a scheme prefix, expecting bare host:port format only.
- Corrected the urlPlaceholder translation key to remove the tcp:// prefix
- Added per-type dynamic placeholder (urlPlaceholderHttp / urlPlaceholderTcp) so the URL input shows the correct example format as soon as the user selects a monitor type
- Added per-type helper text below the URL input explaining the required format, updated in real time when the type selector changes
- Added client-side validation: typing a scheme prefix (://) in TCP mode shows an inline error and blocks form submission before the request reaches the backend
- Reordered the Create Monitor form so the type selector appears before the URL input, giving users the correct format context before they type
- Type selector onChange now clears any stale urlError to prevent incorrect error messages persisting after switching from TCP back to HTTP
- Added 5 new i18n keys across all 5 supported locales (en, de, fr, es, zh)
- Added 10 RTL unit tests covering all new validation paths including the type-change error-clear scenario
- Added 9 Playwright E2E tests covering placeholder variants, helper text, inline error lifecycle, submission blocking, and successful TCP creation
Closes #issue-5 (TCP monitor UI cannot add monitor when following placeholder)
When CrowdSec is first enabled, the 10-60 second startup window caused
the toggle to immediately flicker back to unchecked, the card badge to
show 'Disabled' throughout startup, CrowdSecKeyWarning to flash before
bouncer registration completed, and CrowdSecConfig to show alarming
LAPI-not-ready banners to the user.
Root cause: the toggle, badge, and warning conditions all read from
stale sources (crowdsecStatus local state and status.crowdsec.enabled
server data) which neither reflects user intent during a pending mutation.
- Derive crowdsecChecked from crowdsecPowerMutation.variables during
the pending window so the UI reflects intent immediately on click,
not the lagging server state
- Show a 'Starting...' badge in warning variant throughout the startup
window so the user knows the operation is in progress
- Suppress CrowdSecKeyWarning unconditionally while the mutation is
pending, preventing the bouncer key alert from flashing before
registration completes on the backend
- Broadcast the mutation's running state to the QueryClient cache via
a synthetic crowdsec-starting key so CrowdSecConfig.tsx can read it
without prop drilling
- In CrowdSecConfig, suppress the LAPI 'not running' (red) and
'initializing' (yellow) banners while the startup broadcast is active,
with a 90-second safety cap to prevent stale state from persisting
if the tab is closed mid-mutation
- Add security.crowdsec.starting translation key to all five locales
- Add two backend regression tests confirming that empty-string setting
values are accepted (not rejected by binding validation), preventing
silent re-introduction of the Issue 4 bug
- Add nine RTL tests covering toggle stabilization, badge text, warning
suppression, and LAPI banner suppression/expiry
- Add four Playwright E2E tests using route interception to simulate
the startup delay in a real browser context
Fixes Issues 3 and 4 from the fresh-install bug report.
HTTP/HTTPS uptime monitors targeting LAN addresses (192.168.x.x,
10.x.x.x, 172.16.x.x) permanently reported 'down' on fresh installs
because SSRF protection rejects RFC 1918 ranges at two independent
checkpoints: the URL validator (DNS-resolution layer) and the safe
dialer (TCP-connect layer). Fixing only one layer leaves the monitor
broken in practice.
- Add IsRFC1918() predicate to the network package covering only the
three RFC 1918 CIDRs; 169.254.x.x (link-local / cloud metadata)
and loopback are intentionally excluded
- Add WithAllowRFC1918() functional option to both SafeHTTPClient and
ValidationConfig; option defaults to false so existing behaviour is
unchanged for every call site except uptime monitors
- In uptime_service.go, pass WithAllowRFC1918() to both
ValidateExternalURL and NewSafeHTTPClient together; a coordinating
comment documents that both layers must be relaxed as a unit
- 169.254.169.254 and the full 169.254.0.0/16 link-local range remain
unconditionally blocked; the cloud-metadata error path is preserved
- 21 new tests across three packages, including an explicit regression
guard that confirms RFC 1918 blocks are still applied without the
option set (TestValidateExternalURL_RFC1918BlockedByDefault)
Fixes issues 6 and 7 from the fresh-install bug report.
- Added HTTP status checks for login and security config POST requests to ensure proper error handling.
- Implemented a readiness gate for the Caddy admin API before applying security configurations.
- Increased sleep duration before verifying rate limit handler to accommodate Caddy's configuration propagation.
- Changed verification failure from a warning to a hard exit to prevent misleading test results.
- Updated Caddy admin API URL to use the canonical trailing slash in multiple locations.
- Adjusted retry parameters for rate limit verification to reduce polling noise.
- Removed stale GeoIP checksum validation from the Dockerfile's non-CI path to simplify the build process.
- Updated the list of supported notification provider types to include 'pushover'.
- Enhanced the notifications API tests to validate Pushover integration.
- Modified the notifications form to include fields specific to Pushover, such as API Token and User Key.
- Implemented CRUD operations for Pushover providers in the settings.
- Added end-to-end tests for Pushover provider functionality, including form rendering, payload validation, and security checks.
- Updated translations to include Pushover-specific labels and placeholders.
The slack sub-tests in TestDiscordOnly_CreateRejectsNonDiscord and
TestBlocker3_CreateProviderRejectsNonDiscordWithSecurityEvents were
omitting the required token field from their request payloads.
CreateProvider enforces that Slack providers must have a non-empty
token (the webhook URL) at creation time. Without it the service
returns "slack webhook URL is required", which the handler does not
classify as a 400 validation error, so it falls through to 500.
Add a token field to each test struct, populate it for the slack
case with a valid-format Slack webhook URL, and use
WithSlackURLValidator to bypass the real format check in unit tests —
matching the pattern used in all existing service-level Slack tests.
- Expanded fetchSessionUser to include Bearer token from localStorage as a fallback for authentication when Secure cookies fail.
- Updated headers to conditionally include Authorization if a token is present.
- Ensured compatibility with the recent fix for the Secure cookie flag on private network connections.
- Updated the notification provider types to include 'slack'.
- Modified API tests to handle 'slack' as a valid provider type.
- Enhanced frontend forms to display Slack-specific fields (webhook URL and channel name).
- Implemented CRUD operations for Slack providers, ensuring proper payload structure.
- Added E2E tests for Slack notification provider, covering form rendering, validation, and security checks.
- Updated translations to include Slack-related text.
- Ensured that sensitive information (like tokens) is not exposed in API responses.
- Bump versions of @vitejs/plugin-react, @vitest/coverage-istanbul, @vitest/coverage-v8, and @vitest/ui to their beta releases.
- Upgrade Vite and Vitest to their respective beta versions.
- Adjust Vite configuration to disable code splitting for improved React initialization stability.
- Updated @eslint/js and eslint to version 10.0.0 in package.json.
- Adjusted overrides for eslint-plugin-react-hooks, eslint-plugin-jsx-a11y, and eslint-plugin-promise to ensure compatibility with ESLint v10.
- Modified lefthook.yml to reflect the upgrade and noted the need for plugin support for ESLint v10.
- Removed duplicate @typescript-eslint/utils dependency in frontend/package.json
- Updated TypeScript version from 5.9.3 to 6.0.1-rc in frontend/package.json and package.json
- Adjusted ResizeObserver mock to use globalThis in tests
- Modified tsconfig.json and tsconfig.node.json to include empty types array
- Cleaned up package-lock.json to reflect TypeScript version change and updated dev dependencies
- Added aria-label attributes to buttons in Notifications component for better accessibility.
- Updated Notifications tests to use new button interactions and ensure proper functionality.
- Refactored notifications payload tests to mock API responses and validate payload transformations.
- Improved error handling and feedback in notification provider tests.
- Adjusted Telegram notification provider tests to streamline edit interactions.
- Implement tests for classifyProviderTestFailure function to cover various error scenarios.
- Enhance notification provider handler tests for token validation, type change rejection, and missing provider ID.
- Add tests for permission helper functions to ensure proper admin authentication checks.
- Expand coverage for utility functions in user handler and docker service tests, including error extraction and socket path handling.
- Introduce a QA report for PR #754 highlighting coverage metrics and security findings related to Gotify and webhook notifications.
- Added guidance for Docker socket group access in docker-compose files.
- Introduced docker-compose.override.example.yml for supplemental group configuration.
- Improved entrypoint diagnostics to include socket GID and group guidance.
- Updated README with instructions for setting up Docker socket access.
- Enhanced backend error handling to provide actionable messages for permission issues.
- Updated frontend components to display troubleshooting information regarding Docker socket access.
- Added tests to ensure proper error messages and guidance are rendered in UI.
- Revised code coverage settings to include Docker service files for better regression tracking.
- Enhanced Notifications component tests to include support for Discord, Gotify, and Webhook provider types.
- Updated test cases to validate the correct handling of provider type options and ensure proper payload structure during creation, preview, and testing.
- Introduced new tests for Gotify token handling and ensured sensitive information is not exposed in the UI.
- Refactored existing tests for clarity and maintainability, including improved assertions and error handling.
- Added comprehensive coverage for payload validation scenarios, including malformed requests and security checks against SSRF and oversized payloads.
- Introduced optional keepalive settings: `keepalive_idle` and `keepalive_count` in the Server struct.
- Implemented UI controls for keepalive settings in System Settings, including validation and persistence.
- Added localization support for new keepalive fields in multiple languages.
- Created a manual test tracking plan for verifying keepalive controls and their behavior.
- Updated existing tests to cover new functionality and ensure proper validation of keepalive inputs.
- Ensured safe defaults and fallback behavior for missing or invalid keepalive values.
- Added a new documentation file outlining the manual test plan to validate the SMTP mock server flakiness fix, ensuring improved mail test reliability without affecting production behavior.
- Updated the current specification document to reflect the focus on stabilizing flaky SMTP STARTTLS+AUTH unit tests, including detailed research findings and requirements for the implementation.
- Created a QA/Security validation report for the SMTP flaky test fix, confirming that changes are test-only, stable under repeated runs, and do not introduce new security risks.
This change hardens certificate handler test execution so repeated CI runs are deterministic and no longer fail intermittently under concurrent scheduling and race-mode pressure.
It was necessary because initialization timing and test setup ordering created nondeterministic behavior that produced sporadic failures in the backend test suite.
The result is a stable certificate list test path with explicit validation gates and reproducible test artifacts for auditing.
Known container vulnerability findings remain documented and are treated as an accepted exception for this hotfix scope, with remediation deferred to the dedicated security track.