Commit Briefs
remove unused entrypoint field
ventige of the cgi support (and lack of url rewriting)
drop cgi vestiges from the struct host
The `env' list is no longer used since CGI scripts were removed
change the flags to be consistent with other OpenBSD daemons
-d is `debug' (run in the foreground) -f to load the configuration file adjust regress and contrib accordingly
get rid of the CGI support
I really want to get rid of the `executor' process hack for CGI scripts and its escalation to allow fastcgi and proxying to work on non-OpenBSD. This drops the CGI support and the `executor' process entirely and is the first step towards gmid 2.0. It also allows to have more secure defaults. On non-OpenBSD systems this means that the sandbox will be deactivated as soon as fastcgi or proxying are used: you can't open sockets under FreeBSD' capsicum(4) and I don't want to go thru the pain of making it work under linux' seccomp/landlock. Patches are always welcome however. For folks using CGI scripts (hey, I'm one of you!) not all hope is lost: fcgiwrap or OpenBSD' slowcgi(8) are ways to run CGI scripts as they were FastCGI applications. fixes for the documentation and to the non-OpenBSD sandboxes will follow.
allow add_mime to fail
add_mime nows allocate dinamically copies of the passed strings, so that we can actually free what we parse from the config file. This matters a lot especially with lengthy `types' block: strings that reach the internal mapping are never free'd, so every manual addition is leaked.
const-ify some tables
matches found with % grep -R '=[ ]*{' . | fgrep -v const
allow using a custom hostname for SNI during proxying
add a `sni' option for the `proxy' block: the given name is used instead of the one extracted by the `relay-to' rule.
proxy: allow multiple proxy blocks, matching options and validations
as a side effect the order of the content of a server block is relaxed: options, location or proxy blocks can be put in any order.
simplify the proxying code
it doesn't make any sense to keep the proxying info per-location: proxying only one per-vhost. It can't work differently, it doesn't make sense anyway.