* Update to be able to run on 3.4 with frozen strings
---------
Co-authored-by: Jeremy Daer <jeremydaer@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Sijawusz Pur Rahnama <sija@sija.pl>
Proxy changes:
- Add option to use custom TLS certificates (#17)
- Don't buffer SSE responses (#36)
- Allow routing to wildcard subdomains (#45)
Custom TLS certificates not supported in Kamal itself yet. Buffering
SSE responses and wildcard subdomains will work without any Kamal
changes.
Dotenv's variable substitution doesn't work the same way as commands run
in the shell. It needs values to be escaped.
```sh
$ cat /tmp/env
SECRETS=$(cat /tmp/json)
SECRETS2=$(echo $SECRETS | jq)
$ cat /tmp/json
\{\ \"foo\"\ :\ \"bar\" \}
$ SECRETS=$(cat /tmp/json)
$ SECRETS2=$(echo $SECRETS | jq)
jq: parse error: Invalid numeric literal at line 1, column 2
$ ruby -e 'require "dotenv"; puts Dotenv.parse("/tmp/env")["SECRETS2"]'
{
"foo": "bar"
}
```
Since you then can't use the shell to debug, `kamal secrets print` will
allow you to see what the secrets will be set to.
When fetched item is not a login, Bitwarden adapter raises NoMethodError
because the returned JSON does not have the login.password value.
Add a nicer error message for that case.
Add commands for managing proxy boot config. Since the proxy can be
shared by multiple applications, the configuration doesn't belong in
`config/deploy.yml`.
Instead you can set the config with:
```
Usage:
kamal proxy boot_config <set|get|clear>
Options:
[--publish], [--no-publish], [--skip-publish] # Publish the proxy ports on the host
# Default: true
[--http-port=N] # HTTP port to publish on the host
# Default: 80
[--https-port=N] # HTTPS port to publish on the host
# Default: 443
[--docker-options=option=value option2=value2] # Docker options to pass to the proxy container
```
By default we boot the proxy with `--publish 80:80 --publish 443:443`.
You can stop it from publishing ports, specify different ports and pass
other docker options.
The config is stored in `.kamal/proxy/options` as arguments to be passed
verbatim to docker run.
Where someone wants to set the options in their application they can do
that by calling `kamal proxy boot_config set` in a pre-deploy hook.
There's an example in the integration tests showing how to use this to
front kamal-proxy with Traefik, using an accessory.