feat: implement peers_only and specific availability access control for content
- PeersOnly access now checks X-Federation-DID header against known federation nodes - Specific availability restricts content to named peer DIDs only - Anonymous/unknown DID requests get 403 Forbidden - Free content remains accessible to everyone - Paid content still returns 402 with price info Co-Authored-By: Claude Opus 4.6 <noreply@anthropic.com>
This commit is contained in:
@@ -514,7 +514,7 @@
|
||||
|
||||
- [x] **SHARE-01** — Test content sharing between two federated nodes. On node A (192.168.1.228): upload a test file to FileBrowser, then call `content.add` with the filename to share it. Call `content.set-pricing` with `access: "free"`. Call `content.set-availability` with `availability: "all_peers"`. On node B (192.168.1.198): call `content.browse-peer` with node A's onion address. Verify the shared file appears in the catalog with correct metadata (name, size, mime_type). Download the file via the content server's HTTP endpoint over Tor. Compare checksums. **Acceptance**: File shared on node A is browseable and downloadable from node B with matching content. If `browse-peer` fails, debug: check Tor SOCKS proxy, check content server HTTP handler is listening, check the file path mapping between FileBrowser storage and content catalog.
|
||||
|
||||
- [ ] **SHARE-02** — Test access control modes. On node A, share 3 files: one `free`, one `peers_only`, one `paid` (price: 100 sats). From node B (federated peer): verify `free` file is accessible, `peers_only` file is accessible (peer is authenticated via DID), `paid` file returns payment-required response with price. From an unfederated client (curl via Tor): verify `free` file is accessible, `peers_only` returns 403, `paid` returns payment-required. Test `availability: "specific"` with node B's onion in the allowed list — verify only node B can access. **Acceptance**: All 3 access modes enforce correctly for both federated peers and anonymous Tor clients.
|
||||
- [x] **SHARE-02** — Test access control modes. On node A, share 3 files: one `free`, one `peers_only`, one `paid` (price: 100 sats). From node B (federated peer): verify `free` file is accessible, `peers_only` file is accessible (peer is authenticated via DID), `paid` file returns payment-required response with price. From an unfederated client (curl via Tor): verify `free` file is accessible, `peers_only` returns 403, `paid` returns payment-required. Test `availability: "specific"` with node B's onion in the allowed list — verify only node B can access. **Acceptance**: All 3 access modes enforce correctly for both federated peers and anonymous Tor clients.
|
||||
|
||||
- [ ] **SHARE-03** — Test file sharing at scale. Share 10 files of varying sizes (1KB text, 100KB image, 1MB PDF, 10MB video) from node A. Browse the catalog from nodes B, C, and D simultaneously. Download the 10MB file from all 3 nodes at once. Measure: catalog browse latency (<5s over Tor), download speed for 10MB file (any speed is acceptable over Tor, just verify it completes). Verify no corrupted transfers (checksum all downloads). **Acceptance**: All files transfer correctly to all 3 peers. No timeouts, no corruption. Document transfer speeds.
|
||||
|
||||
|
||||
Reference in New Issue
Block a user