Data4Democracy / nyc-accessibility

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Bump scrapy from 1.3.3 to 1.8.2 in /elevator-pipeline #79

Closed dependabot[bot] closed 2 years ago

dependabot[bot] commented 2 years ago

Bumps scrapy from 1.3.3 to 1.8.2.

Release notes

Sourced from scrapy's releases.

1.8.2

Security bug fixes

  • When a Request object with cookies defined gets a redirect response causing a new Request object to be scheduled, the cookies defined in the original Request object are no longer copied into the new Request object.

    If you manually set the Cookie header on a Request object and the domain name of the redirect URL is not an exact match for the domain of the URL of the original Request object, your Cookie header is now dropped from the new Request object.

    The old behavior could be exploited by an attacker to gain access to your cookies. Please, see the cjvr-mfj7-j4j8 security advisory for more information.

    Note: It is still possible to enable the sharing of cookies between different domains with a shared domain suffix (e.g. example.com and any subdomain) by defining the shared domain suffix (e.g. example.com) as the cookie domain when defining your cookies. See the documentation of the Request class for more information.

  • When the domain of a cookie, either received in the Set-Cookie header of a response or defined in a Request object, is set to a public suffix <https://publicsuffix.org/>_, the cookie is now ignored unless the cookie domain is the same as the request domain.

    The old behavior could be exploited by an attacker to inject cookies from a controlled domain into your cookiejar that could be sent to other domains not controlled by the attacker. Please, see the mfjm-vh54-3f96 security advisory for more information.

1.8.1

Security bug fix:

If you use HttpAuthMiddleware (i.e. the http_user and http_pass spider attributes) for HTTP authentication, any request exposes your credentials to the request target.

To prevent unintended exposure of authentication credentials to unintended domains, you must now additionally set a new, additional spider attribute, http_auth_domain, and point it to the specific domain to which the authentication credentials must be sent.

If the http_auth_domain spider attribute is not set, the domain of the first request will be considered the HTTP authentication target, and authentication credentials will only be sent in requests targeting that domain.

If you need to send the same HTTP authentication credentials to multiple domains, you can use w3lib.http.basic_auth_header instead to set the value of the Authorization header of your requests.

If you really want your spider to send the same HTTP authentication credentials to any domain, set the http_auth_domain spider attribute to None.

Finally, if you are a user of scrapy-splash, know that this version of Scrapy breaks compatibility with scrapy-splash 0.7.2 and earlier. You will need to upgrade scrapy-splash to a greater version for it to continue to work.

1.7.4

Revert the fix for #3804 (#3819), which has a few undesired side effects (#3897, #3976).

1.7.3

Enforce lxml 4.3.5 or lower for Python 3.4 (#3912, #3918)

1.7.2

Fix Python 2 support (#3889, #3893, #3896)

1.7.0

Highlights:

  • Improvements for crawls targeting multiple domains
  • A cleaner way to pass arguments to callbacks
  • A new class for JSON requests
  • Improvements for rule-based spiders
  • New features for feed exports

See the full change log

... (truncated)

Changelog

Sourced from scrapy's changelog.

Scrapy 1.8.2 (2022-03-01)

Security bug fixes:

  • When a :class:~scrapy.http.Request object with cookies defined gets a redirect response causing a new :class:~scrapy.http.Request object to be scheduled, the cookies defined in the original :class:~scrapy.http.Request object are no longer copied into the new :class:~scrapy.http.Request object.

    If you manually set the Cookie header on a :class:~scrapy.http.Request object and the domain name of the redirect URL is not an exact match for the domain of the URL of the original :class:~scrapy.http.Request object, your Cookie header is now dropped from the new :class:~scrapy.http.Request object.

    The old behavior could be exploited by an attacker to gain access to your cookies. Please, see the cjvr-mfj7-j4j8 security advisory_ for more information.

    .. _cjvr-mfj7-j4j8 security advisory: https://github.com/scrapy/scrapy/security/advisories/GHSA-cjvr-mfj7-j4j8

    .. note:: It is still possible to enable the sharing of cookies between different domains with a shared domain suffix (e.g. example.com and any subdomain) by defining the shared domain suffix (e.g. example.com) as the cookie domain when defining your cookies. See the documentation of the :class:~scrapy.http.Request class for more information.

  • When the domain of a cookie, either received in the Set-Cookie header of a response or defined in a :class:~scrapy.http.Request object, is set to a public suffix <https://publicsuffix.org/>_, the cookie is now ignored unless the cookie domain is the same as the request domain.

    The old behavior could be exploited by an attacker to inject cookies into your requests to some other domains. Please, see the mfjm-vh54-3f96 security advisory_ for more information.

    .. _mfjm-vh54-3f96 security advisory: https://github.com/scrapy/scrapy/security/advisories/GHSA-mfjm-vh54-3f96

.. _release-1.8.1:

Scrapy 1.8.1 (2021-10-05)

  • Security bug fix:

    If you use

... (truncated)

Commits
  • ae41acb Bump version: 1.8.1 → 1.8.2
  • d2589c7 test_unbounded_response: to_unicode → custom six code
  • efd72b0 tests: unicode → to_unicode
  • c5c2e2c tests: fix cast (str → unicode)
  • ed2348d CI: Install mock in Python 3.5 with pinned dependencies
  • 919f52f CI: Install mock in Python 3.5
  • 610ce9b Fix typo
  • 6c55f76 Stop mixing keyword arguments and ** in function calls
  • c4b22a5 Remove further Python 3 syntax
  • c0e745e Remove Python 3 syntax
  • Additional commits viewable in compare view


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