This change adds some security headers like Content-Security-Policy.
It does not set the HSTS header because Content-Security-Policy prevents
mixed HTTP and HTTPS content and the server does not use cookies.
However it is a header which could be added later on.
It also moves some header added by #5805 from a vendored file
to a generic handler.
Fixes ##5813
Some HTTP security headers in Minio.
To avoid problems with XSS and Clickjacking attacks.
X-Frame-Options
X-Frame-Options response header improve the protection
of web applications against Clickjacking. It declares a
policy communicated from a host to the client browser
on whether the browser must not display the transmitted
content in frames of other web pages.
X-XSS-Protection
This header enables the Cross-site scripting (XSS) filter in your browser.
- over the course of a project history every maintainer needs to update
its dependency packages, the problem essentially with godep is manipulating
GOPATH - this manipulation leads to static objects created at different locations
which end up conflicting with the overall functionality of golang.
This also leads to broken builds. There is no easier way out of this other than
asking developers to do 'godep restore' all the time. Which perhaps as a practice
doesn't sound like a clean solution. On the other hand 'godep restore' has its own
set of problems.
- govendor is a right tool but a stop gap tool until we wait for golangs official
1.5 version which fixes this vendoring issue once and for all.
- govendor provides consistency in terms of how import paths should be handled unlike
manipulation GOPATH.
This has advantages
- no more compiled objects being referenced in GOPATH and build time GOPATH
manging which leads to conflicts.
- proper import paths referencing the exact package a project is dependent on.
govendor is simple and provides the minimal necessary tooling to achieve this.
For now this is the right solution.