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>
This may be a temporary fix. It switches the manual auth code prompt to use `promptForValue()` instead of `promptForSecret()`. The `promptForSecret()` function no longer supports cancellation (the v0.9.2 behavior) and the method of cancelling in `promptForValue()` is now based on running the blocking read in a background goroutine, which is allowed to block forever or leak (which is not important for our CLI use case).
This means that the authorization code is now visible in the user's terminal, but this is really not a big deal because of PKCE and the limited lifetime of an auth code.
The main goroutine now correctly waits for the "manual prompt" goroutine to clean up, which now includes printing the extra newline that would normally have been entered by the user in the manual flow.
The text of the manual login prompt is updated to be more concise and less scary (don't use the word "fail").
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This test is asynchronously waiting for the controller to do something, and in some of our test environments it will take a bit longer than we'd previously allowed.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
this will hopefully fix some flakes where aws provisioned a host for the
load balancer but the tests weren't able to resolve it.
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
It seems like page.ClearCookies() only clears cookies for the current
domain, so there doesn't seem to be a function to clear all browser
cookies. Instead, we'll just start a whole new browser each test.
They start fast enough that it shouldn't be a problem.
Our actual CLI code behaved correctly, but this test made some invalid assumptions about the "upstream" IDP we're testing. It assumed that the upstream didn't support `response_mode=form_post`, but Okta does. This means that when we end up on the localhost callback page, there are no URL query parameters.
Adjusting this regex makes the test pass as expected.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
Using the same fake TTY trick we used to test LDAP login, this new subtest runs through the "manual"/"jump box" login flow. It runs the login with a `--skip-listen` flag set, causing the CLI to skip opening the localhost listener. We can then wait for the login URL to be printed, visit it with the browser and log in, and finally simulate "manually" copying the auth code from the browser and entering it into the waiting CLI prompt.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
For some reason our headless Chrome test setup behaves slightly differently on Linux and macOS hosts. On Linux, the emoji characters are not recognized as valid text, so they are URL encoded. This change updates the test to cope with both cases correctly.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This adds a new login flow that allows manually pasting the authorization code instead of receiving a browser-based callback.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This is a new pacakge internal/oidc/provider/formposthtml containing a number of static files embedded using the relatively recent Go "//go:embed" functionality introduced in Go 1.16 (https://blog.golang.org/go1.16).
The Javascript and CSS files are minifiied and injected to make a single self-contained HTML response. There is a special Content-Security-Policy helper to calculate hash-based script-src and style-src rules.
This new code is covered by a new integration test that exercises the JS/HTML functionality in a real browser outside of the rest of the Supervisor.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This test would occasionally flake for me when running locally. This change moves more of the assertions into the "eventually" loop, so they can temporarily fail as long as they converge on the expected values.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This test did not tolerate this connection failing, which can happen for any number of flaky networking-related reasons. This change moves the connection setup into an "eventually" retry loop so it's allowed to fail temporarily as long as it eventually connects.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
TestSimultaneousLDAPRequestsOnSingleProvider proved to be unreliable
on AKS due to some kind of kubectl port-forward issue, so only
run the LDAP client's integration tests on Kind. They are testing
the integration between the client code and the OpenLDAP test server,
not testing anything about Kubernetes, so running only on Kind should
give us sufficient test coverage.
This fixes some rare test flakes caused by a data race inherent in the way we use `assert.Eventually()` with extra variables for followup assertions. This function is tricky to use correctly because it runs the passed function in a separate goroutine, and you have no guarantee that any shared variables are in a coherent state when the `assert.Eventually()` call returns. Even if you add manual mutexes, it's tricky to get the semantics right. This has been a recurring pain point and the cause of several test flakes.
This change introduces a new `library.RequireEventually()` that works by internally constructing a per-loop `*require.Assertions` and running everything on a single goroutine (using `wait.PollImmediate()`). This makes it very easy to write eventual assertions.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This change updates the impersonator to always authorize every
request instead of relying on the Kuberentes API server to perform
the check on the impersonated request. This protects us from
scenarios where we fail to correctly impersonate the user due to
some bug in our proxy logic. We still rely completely on the API
server to perform admission checks on the impersonated requests.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
This change updates the impersonation proxy code to run as a
distinct service account that only has permission to impersonate
identities. Thus any future vulnerability that causes the
impersonation headers to be dropped will fail closed instead of
escalating to the concierge's default service account which has
significantly more permissions.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
When anonymous authentication is disabled, the impersonation proxy
will no longer authenticate anonymous requests other than calls to
the token credential request API (this API is used to retrieve
credentials and thus must be accessed anonymously).
Signed-off-by: Benjamin A. Petersen <ben@benjaminapetersen.me>
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
There was nothing to guarantee that _all_ Supervisor pods would be ready to handle this request. We saw a rare test flake where the LDAPIdentityProvider was marked as ready but one of the Supervisor pods didn't have it loaded yet and returned an HTTP 422 error (`Unprocessable Entity: No upstream providers are configured`).
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
The `require.Eventually()` function runs the body of the check in a separate goroutine, so it's not safe to use other `require` assertions as we did here. Our `library.RequireEventuallyWithoutError()` function does not spawn a goroutine, so it's safer to use here.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
The LastUpdateTime is no longer updated on every resync. It only changes if the underlying status has changed, so that it effectively shows when the transition happened.
This change happened in ab750f48aa, but we missed this test. It only fails when it has been more than ten minutes since the CredentialIssuer transitioned into a healthy state, but that can happen in our long-running CI environments.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This test felt overly complex and some of the cleanup logic wasn't 100% correct (it didn't clean up in all cases).
The new code is essentially the same flow but hopefully easier to read.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
We see that occasionally kubectl returns 11 lines (probably related to https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/issues/72628).
This test doesn't need to be so picky, so now it allows +/- one line from the expected count.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
We had this one test that mutated the CredentialIssuer, which could cause the impersonation proxy to blip on one or both of the running concierge pods. This would sometimes break other concurrently running tests.
Instead, this bit of code is split into a separate non-concurrent test.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
The new version has different behavior for the `nonce` claim, which is now omitted if it would be empty (see https://github.com/ory/fosite/pull/570).
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This is to allow the use of binary LDAP entry attributes as the UID.
For example, a user might like to configure AD’s objectGUID or maybe
objectSid attributes as the UID attribute.
This negatively impacts the readability of the UID when it did not come
from a binary value, but we're considering this an okay trade-off to
keep things simple for now. In the future, we may offer more
customizable encoding options for binary attributes.
These UIDs are currently only used in the downstream OIDC `sub` claim.
They do not effect the user's identity on the Kubernetes cluster,
which is only based on their mapped username and group memberships from
the upstream identity provider. We are not currently supporting any
special encoding for those username and group name LDAP attributes, so
their values in the LDAP entry must be ASCII or UTF-8 in order for them
to be interpreted correctly.
This test setup should tolerate when the TokenCredentialRequest API isn't quite ready to authenticate the user or issue a cert.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This check is no longer valid, because there can be ephemeral, recoverable errors that show as ErrorDuringSetup.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- This enhances our LDAP client code to make it possible to optionally
dial an LDAP server without TLS and then use StartTLS to upgrade
the connection to TLS.
- The controller for LDAPIdentityProviders is not using this option
yet. That will come in a future commit.
Previously, our controllers would automatically create a CredentialIssuer with a singleton name. The helpers we had for this also used "raw" client access and did not take advantage of the informer cache pattern.
With this change, the CredentialIssuer is always created at install time in the ytt YAML. The controllers now only update the existing CredentialIssuer status, and they do so using the informer cache as much as possible.
This change is targeted at only the kubecertagent controller to start. The impersonatorconfig controller will be updated in a following PR along with other changes.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- For testing purposes, we would like to ensure that when we connect
to the LDAP server we cannot accidentally avoid using TLS or StartTLS.
- Also enabled the openldap `memberOf` overlay in case we want to
support group search using `memberOf` in the future.
- This required changes to the docker.io/bitnami/openldap container
image, so we're using our own fork for now. Will submit a PR to
bitnami/openldap to see if they will accept it (or something similar)
upstream.
Reflect the upstream group membership into the Supervisor's
downstream tokens, so they can be added to the user's
identity on the workload clusters.
LDAP group search is configurable on the
LDAPIdentityProvider resource.
See RFC6648 which asks that people stop using `X-` on header names.
Also Matt preferred not mentioning "IDP" in the header name.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This change makes it easier to understand misconfigurations caused
by issuers with extraneous trailing slashes.
Signed-off-by: Mo Khan <mok@vmware.com>
The admin kubeconfigs we have on EKS clusters are a bit different from others, because there is no certificate/key (EKS does not use certificate auth).
This code didn't quite work correctly in that case. The fix is to allow the case where `tlsConfig.GetClientCertificate` is non-nil, but returns a value with no certificates.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
The supervisor treats all events the same hence it must use a
singleton queue.
Updated the integration test to remove the data race caused by
calling methods on testing.T outside of the main test go routine.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
This change updates the impersonator logic to pass through requests
that authenticated via a bearer token that asserts a UID. This
allows us to support service account tokens (as well as any other
form of token based authentication).
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
This controller is responsible for cleaning up kube-cert-agent pods that were deployed by previous versions.
They are easily identified because they use a different `kube-cert-agent.pinniped.dev` label compared to the new agent pods (`true` vs. `v2`).
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This is a relatively large rewrite of much of the kube-cert-agent controllers. Instead of managing raw Pod objects, they now create a single Deployment and let the builtin k8s controller handle it from there.
This reduces the amount of code we need and should handle a number of edge cases better, especially those where a Pod becomes "wedged" and needs to be recreated.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- Make PINNIPED_TEST_LDAP_LDAPS_CA_BUNDLE optional for integration tests
- When there is no CA bundle provided, be careful to use nil instead of
an empty bundle, because nil means to use the OS defaults
Now that we have the fix from https://github.com/kubernetes/kubernetes/pull/97693, we no longer need these sleeps.
The underlying authenticator initialization is still asynchronous, but should happen within a few milliseconds.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This change updates the impersonator logic to use the delegated
authorizer for all non-rest verbs such as impersonate. This allows
it to correctly perform authorization checks for incoming requests
that set impersonation headers while not performing unnecessary
checks that are already handled by KAS.
The audit layer is enabled to track the original user who made the
request. This information is then included in a reserved extra
field original-user-info.impersonation-proxy.concierge.pinniped.dev
as a JSON blob.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
Also force the LDAP server pod to restart whenever the LDIF file
changes, so whenever you redeploy the tools deployment with a new test
user password the server will be updated.
Avoid them because they can't be used in GoLand for running integration
tests in the UI, like running in the debugger.
Also adds optional PINNIPED_TEST_TOOLS_NAMESPACE because we need it
on the LDAP feature branch where we are developing the upcoming LDAP
support for the Supervisor.
- Bad usernames and passwords aren't really errors, since they are
based on end-user input.
- Other kinds of authentication failures are caused by bad configuration
so still treat those as errors.
- Empty usernames and passwords are already prevented by our endpoint
handler, but just to be safe make sure they cause errors inside the
authenticator too.
- The unit tests for upstreamldap.Provider need to mock the LDAP server,
so add an integration test which allows us to get fast feedback for
this code against a real LDAP server.
- Automatically wrap the user search filter in parenthesis if it is not
already wrapped in parens.
- More special handling for using "dn" as the username or UID attribute
name.
- Also added some more comments to types_ldapidentityprovider.go.tmpl
- Add some fields to LDAPIdentityProvider that we will need to be able
to search for users during login
- Enhance TestSupervisorLogin to test logging in using an upstream LDAP
identity provider. Part of this new test is skipped for now because
we haven't written the corresponding production code to make it
pass yet.
- Some refactoring and enhancement to env.go and the corresponding env
vars to support the new upstream LDAP provider integration tests.
- Use docker.io/bitnami/openldap for our test LDAP server instead of our
own fork now that they have fixed the bug that we reported.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
The goal here was to start on an integration test to get us closer to the red
test that we want so we can start working on LDAP.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
- Rename the test/deploy/dex directory to test/deploy/tools
- Rename the dex namespace to tools
- Add a new ytt value called `pinny_ldap_password` for the tools
ytt templates
- This new value is not used on main at this time. We intend to use
it in the forthcoming ldap branch. We're defining it on main so
that the CI scripts can use it across all branches and PRs.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
This test could flake if the load balancer hostname was provisioned but is not yet resolving in DNS from the test process.
The fix is to retry this step for up to 5 minutes.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This test could fail when the cluster was under heavy load. This could cause kubectl to emit "Throttling request took [...]" logs that triggered a failure in the test.
The fix is to ignore these innocuous warnings.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
We had this code that printed out pod logs when certain tests failed, but it is a bit cumbersome. We're removing it because we added a CI task that exports all pod logs after every CI run, which accomplishes the same thing and provides us a bunch more data.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This allows setting `$PINNIPED_TEST_CLI` to point at an existing `pinniped` CLI binary instead of having the test build one on-the-fly. This is more efficient when you're running the tests across many clusters as we do in CI.
Building the CLI from scratch in our CI environment takes 1.5-2 minutes, so this change should save nearly that much time on every test job.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
We've seen some test flakes caused by this test. Some small changes:
- Use a 30s timeout for each iteration of the test loop (so each iteration needs to check or fail more quickly).
- Log a bit more during the checks so we can diagnose what's going on.
- Increase the overall timeout from one minute to five minutes
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
In the case where we are using middleware (e.g., when the api group is
different) in our kubeclient, these error messages have a "...middleware request
for..." bit in the middle.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
This is probably a good idea regardless, but it also avoids an infinite recursion from IntegrationEnv() -> assertNoRestartsDuringTest() -> NewKubeclient() -> IntegrationEnv() -> ...
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>