* Adapt DB related code to return the InstanceId and RemoteSharerId
* Previously, when fetching a known shared key, we were running a DB
check/update for the shared usage record. I noticed - and hopefully I
correctly noticed - that this check already runs when we discover the keyId
points to a shared key we already know. So, after successful sig
verification, there's no need to run the check again. So I removed it.
- Exclude hosts without periods, so things like localhost and IPv6 are rejected
- Exclude hosts without letters, so things like IPv4 are rejected
- Exclude the instance's own host, just in case somehow some fake activity
slips in and gets approved, maybe even accidentally when delivered by another
server
Before, things worked like this:
* Only signatures of Ed25519 keys could be verified
* Key encoding placed the plain binary Ed25519 key in the PEM, instead of the
key's ASN1 encoding
With this patch it now works like this:
* Ed25519 signatures are supported as before
* RSA keys are now supported too, assuming RSA-SHA256 signatures
* Both Ed25519 and RSA keys are encoded and decoded using actual PEM with ASN1
When we verify an HTTP signature,
* If we know the key, check in the DB whether we know the actor lists it. If it
doesn't, and there's room left for keys, HTTP GET the actor and update the DB
accordingly.
* If we know the key but had to update it, do the same, check usage in DB and
update DB if needed
* If we don't know the key, record usage in DB
However,
* If we're GETing a key and discovering it's a shared key, we GET the actor to
verify it lists the key. When we don't know the key at all yet, that's fine
(can be further optimized but it's marginal), but if it's a key we do know,
it means we already know the actor and for now it's enough for us to rely
only on the DB to test usage.
Previously, when verifying an HTTP signature and we fetched the key and
discovered it's shared, we'd fetch the actor and make sure it lists the key URI
in the `publicKey` field. But if we already knew the key, had it cached in our
DB, we wouldn't check the actor at all, despite not knowing whether it lists
the key.
With this patch, we now always GET the actor when the key is shared,
determining the actor URI from the `ActivityPub-Actor` request header, and we
verify that the actor lists the key URI. We do that regardless of whether or
not we have the key in the DB, although these two cases and handled in
different parts of the code right now (for a new key, it's in Web.ActivityPub
fetchKey; for a known key, it's in Vervis.Foundation httpVerifySig).