How to disable SSL for custom subdomain - ruby-on-rails

I've got a non wildcard SSL certificate for my root domain (example.com), and I'm using the heroku ssl endpoint add on. I'm using routing constraints so subdomain.example.com matches various controller actions, and I reroute the subdomain with CNAME records to the root domain. This all works fine in development, and it works fine in Tor browser if I disable https, but I can't get it to work in any ordinary browser.
I've tried using gem SSL-enforcer to enforce SSL except on host with subdomain as such:
config.middleware.use Rack::SslEnforcer, :except_hosts => 'subdomain.mydomain.com', :strict => true
Can I disable the https protocol for subdomain of my rails app? I feel like this might be impossible as I've read that SSL negotiations are made before the server knows the URL.

I would have recommended SSL-enforcer.....
Are you using config.force_ssl and generating a strict transport security header? I would suspect that might be the issue if it works with Tor but not a normal browser. Check the headers; if the HSTS exists, then that's probably the reason. Should be straight forward to change that (changing the max-age attribute to 0)
If not, check the Heroku docs again and make sure your settings and DNS/CNAME are correct....
https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/ssl-endpoint#subdomain
Hope this helps.

Related

Rails forms leading to Mixed Content warning

In my Rails app I use both Rails' native form_tag method and the simple_form_for method provided by the simple_form rubygem.
Both of them are leading to the following warning in the chrome console:
Mixed Content: The page at 'https://example.com' was loaded over a secure connection, but contains a form which targets an insecure endpoint 'http://example.com'. This endpoint should be made available over a secure connection.
And indeed, the rendered HTML forms use the http protocol for their action attribute.
What is the reason for that? All my other URL's use the https protocol.
You have not correct protocol set up for your environment.
Your server is running on HTTPS and form creates HTTP URL.
You need to tell your URL helpers to build the URLs with the same protocol as your server is running for your environment.
Development should run on HTTP, staging should be HTTPS and production as well HTTPS.
There are different ways how to do it. The best is to set protocol in your environment config file. So place this line:
Rails.application.routes.default_url_options[:protocol] = 'https'
into your environment config file like production.rb and staging.rb.
Another approach is to set the default protocol per controller action. Check this one for more info.
In case you are using the mailer, also check your mailer protocol settings. As described here.

http instead of https for heroku hosted app

I have a ruby on rails 4 app on Heroku (my_app.herokuapp.com). I registered a domain my_domain.com and created a CNAME (alias) to point to my_app.herokuapp.com. So now when I type www.my_domain.com it serves the app on my_app.herokuapp.com. But it tries to serve it using https and not http and before displaying anything complains "The connection is untrusted". How can temporarily fix this by changing it to http? I mean when I type www.my_domain.com in the browser I want it to serve http://my_app.herokuapp.com and not https://my_app.herokuapp.com.
Thanks a lot.
Comment out config.force_ssl = true in config/environments/production.rb

No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested resource

I am using omniauth-facebook with AngularJS and CORS is not working correctly .
My omniauth.rb is
Rails.application.config.middleware.use OmniAuth::Builder do
provider :facebook,"xxxxx", "xxxxx",
:scope => 'email,user_birthday,read_stream', :display => 'popup'
end
Everything works if i use it as rails app and request. But when i try to call 'http:\localhost:3000\users\auth\facebook" via Angular JS
$http.get('/users/auth/facebook').success(function(data, status, headers, config) {
console.log("back in success");
}).
error(function(data, status, headers, config) {
});
}
i see following error in JS console
XMLHttpRequest cannot load
https://www.facebook.com/dialog/oauth?client_id=xxxx&display=popup…thday%2Cread_stream&state=3352c1924bdbc9277f7b1070c38d67acf79b529f198323cb.
No 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' header is present on the requested
resource. Origin 'http://localhost:3000' is therefore not allowed
access.
(The url is not displayed completely in console)
I added following line
config.middleware.insert_before Warden::Manager, Rack::Cors
but also this didn't work .
What is the best way or how can i override headers for OmniAuth ?
I am using Angularjs and gem devise ,omniauth-facebook
Since you are on your development environment you may want to try a workaround, by allowing you browser to run in a non-secure mode.
For Chrome on Windows, from CMD try:
> cd C:\Program Files (x86)\Google\Chrome\Application
> chrome.exe --user-data-dir="C:/Chrome dev session" --disable-web-security
The --disable-web-security flag will allow you to make cross domain requests. The --user-data-dir flag will allow you to open a new session only for development.
This is just a workaround for you development work! Don't use this in production or navigate to other sites in this session!
The issue is Javascript cannot make cross-domain requests. This is done for security reasons so that a script cannot call a remote server and expose sensitive data.
Below is a link to a very good and simple explanation with a few options on how to get around it:
http://developer.yahoo.com/javascript/howto-proxy.html
And here is a previous answer which has some good information as well:
Why am I seeing an "origin is not allowed by Access-Control-Allow-Origin" error here?
If they don't have the header set then you can't force them to have the headers. Perhaps you should look at using JSONP. However, mirroring through the server wouldn't be all that bad since you'll only have to deal with it at most once per visit, and more than likely once per user since so few people ever delete cookies.
Set 'Access-Control-Allow-Origin' in server will make the track.
Like:
ruby
headers['Access-Control-Allow-Origin'] = '*'
In rails.
The problem is you are getting the data from the https secure site that is facebook to your site which is http so the latest browsers are not supporting cross allow origin.
The only solution is make your site support https.
In your ApplicationController.rb add
def set_access_control_headers
headers['Access-Control-Allow-Origin'] = 'http://localhost:3000'
end
For CORS you have to whitelist the domain you want to access from cross origin request on the server side
headers['Access-Control-Allow-Origin'] = '*'
//star will allow all the domain you can specify also which url u want to access
on the client side,you have to set the header in config() as
$httpProvider.defaults.xsrfHeaderName = 'X-CSRFToken';
$httpProvider.defaults.headers.common['X-Requested-With'] = 'XMLHttpRequest';
some times that problem occurs because of browser.IE by default allow cross origin request. In chrome you will required to add one plugin that is "Allow-Control-Allow-Origin: *"and enabled it.

lvh.me:3000 no longer resolving to localhost:3000 for testing subdomains in development

I followed Railscast 121 to set up subdomains for my site, www.blog.com, and got everything working in development. I could use lvh.me:3000 to access my application at both the root url www.blog.com and at the specific subdomains I set up e.g. john-doe.blog.com
After pushing to Heroku, I can no longer connect to the root url at lvh.me:3000. What could be causing this?
Symptoms in development environment:
I can access www.blog.com through localhost:3000.
I cannot access www.blog.com at lvh.me:3000. but CAN still access john-doe.blog.com.
I opened a DIFFERENT application www.secondapp.com, and the root path for this also works at localhost:3000 but not at lvh.me:3000. I have not set up any subdomains for secondapp, but tried the url john-doe.secondapp.com just in case, and for some reason, this works. Very strange...
I must have inadvertently adjusted some files, but I don't know where/how. It's completely beyond me why a completely different app would work with a subdomain for an unrelated app. Any feedback would be much appreciated.
This is because of the current godaddy outage. Once their DNS is back up, it should resolve correctly.
In the meantime, you can try editing your hosts file.

Rails: activating SSL support gets Chrome confused

There is a nice option to config for the Rails app:
config.force_ssl = true
However it seems that just putting that to true doesn't get the HTTPS connections working. Even more - after trying (and failing) to connect to https://localhost:3000 with Chrome, I've set this option to false, and Chrome still tries to open https, even if I write http.
So, couple of questions:
--How to force Chrome not to try https anymore?
--What is the proper way of enabling SSL on my Rails app?
Update: The app is run on Heroku, and it seems that https is supported there automagically. Can I test SSL also locally? Like when running rails server?
First, I should say that I haven't tried this, but there are mainly two possibly reasons for Chrome still using HTTPS:
Using HTTP Strict Transport Security headers: if the server sets them, the client (supporting HSTS, like Chrome) is meant to stick to HTTPS for all subsequent requests to that host.
Permanent redirects. If the initial redirect you got was using "301 Moved Permanently" (and not 302 for example) to make the redirection,(*) the browser is meant to remember it ("The requested resource has been assigned a new permanent URI and any future references to this resource SHOULD use one of the returned URIs").
A likely solution to this would be to clear the cache in your browser.
(*) This question seems to indicate this is the case for Ruby on Rails with this config).
I had the same issue. What I did is using an ssl enforcer gem which adds a middleware that handles ssl and redirects. It has a strict option which enforces the configured protocols.
in your Gemfile add:
gem 'rack-ssl-enforcer'
in production.rb add:
config.middleware.use Rack::SslEnforcer, only: %r{your_regex_condition}, strict: true
This will force the requested pages to be secured and the rest to be non secured. It disables the HSTS header which is problematic in chrome (redirect caching issue).
You can also expire the cache for all cleints (if it already exist) to make sure you'll not get infinite redirect:
config.middleware.use Rack::SslEnforcer, only: %r{your_regex_condition}, :hsts => { :expires => 1, :subdomains => false }
also remove the ssl enforcement in production.rb (otherwise it might conflict with this middleware):
config.force_ssl = false
Let's see what happened once you updated your config file with:
config.force_ssl = true
This has caused Rack SSL Middleware to be loaded as the first middleware. As you can see in the code, Rack SSL sets an HSTS header by adding this line to the headers :
Strict-Transport-Security
It tells supported browsers such as Chrome to use HTTPS only to access your website.
So once you set back :
config.force_ssl = false
Chrome will still uses HTTPS to access your website and causes an error.
To solve this problem, you need to empty the HSTS cache. You can to that by going to the following url in your chrome browser :
chrome://net-internals/#hsts
Open your Chrome Developer Tools when you're at localhost: Then you can right click the refresh button ↻ and select "Empty cache and hard reload".
This error might also happens to you, if you start your server in the production environment, where HSTS is enabled.
Chrome redirects you to https://localhost:3000/ and says "SSL connection error".

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