* chore(docker): clear most CVEs in published image — npm/pnpm/uuid + drop curl
Cuts published-image vulnerabilities from 18 (4H/13M/1L) across 8 packages
to 12 (2H/9M/1L) across 3 packages. The remaining three (curl/libcurl,
git, busybox) are all upstream Alpine 3.23 packages with "not fixed"
status — libcurl is pulled in transitively by git and cannot be
removed independently.
Changes:
- Provision pnpm via corepack instead of `npm install -g pnpm`, then
remove the bundled npm. The base image's npm@10.9.7 ships old
transitives (picomatch 4.0.3 → CVE-2026-33671/33672, brace-expansion
2.0.2 → CVE-2026-33750) that we don't otherwise need at runtime;
corepack handles pnpm directly without npm. Fixes 1H + 1M.
- Bump PnpmVersion 10.28.2 → 10.33.2 to align with the rest of the
workflow and pull in pnpm's patched bundled brace-expansion (5.0.5
vs 5.0.4). Fixes 1M.
- Add `uuid@<14.0.0` → `>=14.0.0` to pnpm.overrides
(GHSA-w5hq-g745-h8pq). Fixes 1M.
- Drop `curl` from the runtime apk add list and switch HEALTHCHECK to
wget (busybox built-in). curl was only invoked by the healthcheck and
by dev/CI scripts that don't run in the container. Removes the curl
CLI binary; libcurl remains as a git transitive dep, so the
`apk/alpine/curl` advisories scout reports against libcurl persist
but aren't reachable from any code we ship. As a side-effect this
also clears nghttp2 (CVE-2026-27135) which was a curl-CLI dep.
- Switch HEALTHCHECK URL from `localhost` to `127.0.0.1` — alpine/musl
resolves localhost to ::1 first and Etherpad only binds IPv4.
Verified locally: docker build → docker run → healthy → docker scout
cves shows 12 CVEs / 3 packages.
* fix(docker): refresh corepack before preparing pnpm (Qodo)
Node 22's bundled corepack ships a stale signing-key list and can reject
newer pnpm releases (nodejs/corepack#612), which would fail the image
build at `corepack prepare`. Mirror the snap/snapcraft.yaml workaround:
`npm install -g corepack@latest` before activating pnpm, in both
adminbuild and build stages. npm is still removed afterwards.
* docs(changelog): note docker image dropping curl/npm/npx (Qodo)
Address Qodo's "backwards-incompatible change without mitigation" rule
violations by documenting the removal in the 2.7.3 breaking-changes
section. Operators who exec into the container can apk add curl on
demand or use the busybox wget / pnpm already present.
* chore: pnpm
* chore: pnpm
* chore: pnpm
* chore: pnpm
* chore: pnpm
* chore: pnpm
* chore: pnpm
* chore: pnpm
* chore: pnpm
---------
Co-authored-by: SamTV12345 <40429738+samtv12345@users.noreply.github.com>
* chore: use gnpm
* chore: fixed pnpm
* chore: fixed gnpm
* chore: fixed jq
* chore: use 0.0.7
* chore: use flag for building
* chore: fixed all backend tests
* chore: continue with porting things
* chore: fixed path
* chore: fixed backend tests
* chore: upgraded all to gnpm
* chore: updated to gnpm 0.0.9
* chore: echo current env with debug logs
* chore: install with frozen lockfile
* chore: use 0.0.10
* chore: use 0.0.11
* chore: use 0.0.12 globally
* chore: reworked handleRelease workflow to be up to date and depend on other workflows
* fix bin folder and workflows as far its possible
cleanup of dockerfile
changed paths of scripts
add lock file
fix working directory for workflows
fix windows bin
fix travis (is travis used anyway?)
fix package refs
remove pnpm-lock file in root as these conflicts with the docker volume setup
optimize comments
use install again
refactor prod image call to run
fix --workspace can only be used inside a workspace
correct comment
try fix pipeline
try fix pipeline for upgrade-from-latest-release
install all deps
smaller adjustments
save
update dockerfile
remove workspace command
fix run test command
start repair latest release workflow
start repair latest release workflow
start repair latest release workflow
further repairs
* remove test plugin from docker compose
I'm not sure how these tests ever worked. I guess some version of
Node.js and npm come pre-installed on the ubuntu-latest images?
I would have prefered to use Node.js v10 because that is our current
minimum supported version, but we have a surprising number of tests
that don't work on Node.js v10 (mostly due to `assert.match()`, which
was added in Node.js v12).
Travis placed an unnecessary breaking restriction on our tests and failed to respond within 72 hours to our complaint. This has forced us to introduce Github Actions to manage our testing. This is hopefully a temporary measure while Travis either gets itself together or we find a non-Github requirement.