ContainerImage.Pinniped/cmd/pinniped-concierge-kube-cer.../main.go

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// Copyright 2021-2023 the Pinniped contributors. All Rights Reserved.
Switch to a slimmer distroless base image. At a high level, it switches us to a distroless base container image, but that also includes several related bits: - Add a writable /tmp but make the rest of our filesystems read-only at runtime. - Condense our main server binaries into a single pinniped-server binary. This saves a bunch of space in the image due to duplicated library code. The correct behavior is dispatched based on `os.Args[0]`, and the `pinniped-server` binary is symlinked to `pinniped-concierge` and `pinniped-supervisor`. - Strip debug symbols from our binaries. These aren't really useful in a distroless image anyway and all the normal stuff you'd expect to work, such as stack traces, still does. - Add a separate `pinniped-concierge-kube-cert-agent` binary with "sleep" and "print" functionality instead of using builtin /bin/sleep and /bin/cat for the kube-cert-agent. This is split from the main server binary because the loading/init time of the main server binary was too large for the tiny resource footprint we established in our kube-cert-agent PodSpec. Using a separate binary eliminates this issue and the extra binary adds only around 1.5MiB of image size. - Switch the kube-cert-agent code to use a JSON `{"tls.crt": "<b64 cert>", "tls.key": "<b64 key>"}` format. This is more robust to unexpected input formatting than the old code, which simply concatenated the files with some extra newlines and split on whitespace. - Update integration tests that made now-invalid assumptions about the `pinniped-server` image. Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
2021-07-26 16:18:43 +00:00
// SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0
// Package main is the combined entrypoint for the Pinniped "kube-cert-agent" component.
package main
import (
"encoding/base64"
"encoding/json"
"io"
"log"
"math"
"os"
"time"
// This side effect import ensures that we use fipsonly crypto during TLS in fips_strict mode.
//
// Commenting this out because it causes the runtime memory consumption of this binary to increase
// from ~1 MB to ~8 MB (as measured when running the sleep subcommand). This binary does not use TLS,
// so it should not be needed. If this binary is ever changed to make use of TLS client and/or server
// code, then we should bring this import back to support the use of the ptls library for client and
// server code, and we should also increase the memory limits on the kube cert agent deployment (as
// decided by the kube cert agent controller in the Concierge).
//
//nolint:godot // This is not sentence, it is a commented out line of import code.
// _ "go.pinniped.dev/internal/crypto/ptls"
// This side effect imports cgo so that runtime/cgo gets linked, when in fips_strict mode.
// Without this line, the binary will exit 133 upon startup in fips_strict mode.
// It also enables fipsonly tls mode, just to be absolutely sure that the fips code is enabled,
// even though it shouldn't be used currently by this binary.
_ "go.pinniped.dev/internal/crypto/fips"
Switch to a slimmer distroless base image. At a high level, it switches us to a distroless base container image, but that also includes several related bits: - Add a writable /tmp but make the rest of our filesystems read-only at runtime. - Condense our main server binaries into a single pinniped-server binary. This saves a bunch of space in the image due to duplicated library code. The correct behavior is dispatched based on `os.Args[0]`, and the `pinniped-server` binary is symlinked to `pinniped-concierge` and `pinniped-supervisor`. - Strip debug symbols from our binaries. These aren't really useful in a distroless image anyway and all the normal stuff you'd expect to work, such as stack traces, still does. - Add a separate `pinniped-concierge-kube-cert-agent` binary with "sleep" and "print" functionality instead of using builtin /bin/sleep and /bin/cat for the kube-cert-agent. This is split from the main server binary because the loading/init time of the main server binary was too large for the tiny resource footprint we established in our kube-cert-agent PodSpec. Using a separate binary eliminates this issue and the extra binary adds only around 1.5MiB of image size. - Switch the kube-cert-agent code to use a JSON `{"tls.crt": "<b64 cert>", "tls.key": "<b64 key>"}` format. This is more robust to unexpected input formatting than the old code, which simply concatenated the files with some extra newlines and split on whitespace. - Update integration tests that made now-invalid assumptions about the `pinniped-server` image. Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
2021-07-26 16:18:43 +00:00
)
//nolint:gochecknoglobals // these are swapped during unit tests.
Switch to a slimmer distroless base image. At a high level, it switches us to a distroless base container image, but that also includes several related bits: - Add a writable /tmp but make the rest of our filesystems read-only at runtime. - Condense our main server binaries into a single pinniped-server binary. This saves a bunch of space in the image due to duplicated library code. The correct behavior is dispatched based on `os.Args[0]`, and the `pinniped-server` binary is symlinked to `pinniped-concierge` and `pinniped-supervisor`. - Strip debug symbols from our binaries. These aren't really useful in a distroless image anyway and all the normal stuff you'd expect to work, such as stack traces, still does. - Add a separate `pinniped-concierge-kube-cert-agent` binary with "sleep" and "print" functionality instead of using builtin /bin/sleep and /bin/cat for the kube-cert-agent. This is split from the main server binary because the loading/init time of the main server binary was too large for the tiny resource footprint we established in our kube-cert-agent PodSpec. Using a separate binary eliminates this issue and the extra binary adds only around 1.5MiB of image size. - Switch the kube-cert-agent code to use a JSON `{"tls.crt": "<b64 cert>", "tls.key": "<b64 key>"}` format. This is more robust to unexpected input formatting than the old code, which simply concatenated the files with some extra newlines and split on whitespace. - Update integration tests that made now-invalid assumptions about the `pinniped-server` image. Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
2021-07-26 16:18:43 +00:00
var (
getenv = os.Getenv
fail = log.Fatalf
sleep = time.Sleep
out = io.Writer(os.Stdout)
)
func main() {
if len(os.Args) < 2 {
fail("missing subcommand")
}
switch os.Args[1] {
case "sleep":
sleep(math.MaxInt64)
case "print":
certBytes, err := os.ReadFile(getenv("CERT_PATH"))
Switch to a slimmer distroless base image. At a high level, it switches us to a distroless base container image, but that also includes several related bits: - Add a writable /tmp but make the rest of our filesystems read-only at runtime. - Condense our main server binaries into a single pinniped-server binary. This saves a bunch of space in the image due to duplicated library code. The correct behavior is dispatched based on `os.Args[0]`, and the `pinniped-server` binary is symlinked to `pinniped-concierge` and `pinniped-supervisor`. - Strip debug symbols from our binaries. These aren't really useful in a distroless image anyway and all the normal stuff you'd expect to work, such as stack traces, still does. - Add a separate `pinniped-concierge-kube-cert-agent` binary with "sleep" and "print" functionality instead of using builtin /bin/sleep and /bin/cat for the kube-cert-agent. This is split from the main server binary because the loading/init time of the main server binary was too large for the tiny resource footprint we established in our kube-cert-agent PodSpec. Using a separate binary eliminates this issue and the extra binary adds only around 1.5MiB of image size. - Switch the kube-cert-agent code to use a JSON `{"tls.crt": "<b64 cert>", "tls.key": "<b64 key>"}` format. This is more robust to unexpected input formatting than the old code, which simply concatenated the files with some extra newlines and split on whitespace. - Update integration tests that made now-invalid assumptions about the `pinniped-server` image. Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
2021-07-26 16:18:43 +00:00
if err != nil {
fail("could not read CERT_PATH: %v", err)
}
keyBytes, err := os.ReadFile(getenv("KEY_PATH"))
Switch to a slimmer distroless base image. At a high level, it switches us to a distroless base container image, but that also includes several related bits: - Add a writable /tmp but make the rest of our filesystems read-only at runtime. - Condense our main server binaries into a single pinniped-server binary. This saves a bunch of space in the image due to duplicated library code. The correct behavior is dispatched based on `os.Args[0]`, and the `pinniped-server` binary is symlinked to `pinniped-concierge` and `pinniped-supervisor`. - Strip debug symbols from our binaries. These aren't really useful in a distroless image anyway and all the normal stuff you'd expect to work, such as stack traces, still does. - Add a separate `pinniped-concierge-kube-cert-agent` binary with "sleep" and "print" functionality instead of using builtin /bin/sleep and /bin/cat for the kube-cert-agent. This is split from the main server binary because the loading/init time of the main server binary was too large for the tiny resource footprint we established in our kube-cert-agent PodSpec. Using a separate binary eliminates this issue and the extra binary adds only around 1.5MiB of image size. - Switch the kube-cert-agent code to use a JSON `{"tls.crt": "<b64 cert>", "tls.key": "<b64 key>"}` format. This is more robust to unexpected input formatting than the old code, which simply concatenated the files with some extra newlines and split on whitespace. - Update integration tests that made now-invalid assumptions about the `pinniped-server` image. Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
2021-07-26 16:18:43 +00:00
if err != nil {
fail("could not read KEY_PATH: %v", err)
}
if err := json.NewEncoder(out).Encode(&struct {
Cert string `json:"tls.crt"`
Key string `json:"tls.key"`
}{
Cert: base64.StdEncoding.EncodeToString(certBytes),
Key: base64.StdEncoding.EncodeToString(keyBytes),
}); err != nil {
fail("failed to write output: %v", err)
}
default:
fail("invalid subcommand %q", os.Args[1])
}
}