Also fix some tests that were broken by bumping golang and dependencies
in the previous commits.
Note that in addition to changes made to satisfy the linter which do not
impact the behavior of the code, this commit also adds ReadHeaderTimeout
to all usages of http.Server to satisfy the linter (and because it
seemed like a good suggestion).
This change updates the TLS config used by all pinniped components.
There are no configuration knobs associated with this change. Thus
this change tightens our static defaults.
There are four TLS config levels:
1. Secure (TLS 1.3 only)
2. Default (TLS 1.2+ best ciphers that are well supported)
3. Default LDAP (TLS 1.2+ with less good ciphers)
4. Legacy (currently unused, TLS 1.2+ with all non-broken ciphers)
Highlights per component:
1. pinniped CLI
- uses "secure" config against KAS
- uses "default" for all other connections
2. concierge
- uses "secure" config as an aggregated API server
- uses "default" config as a impersonation proxy API server
- uses "secure" config against KAS
- uses "default" config for JWT authenticater (mostly, see code)
- no changes to webhook authenticater (see code)
3. supervisor
- uses "default" config as a server
- uses "secure" config against KAS
- uses "default" config against OIDC IDPs
- uses "default LDAP" config against LDAP IDPs
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
Our Supervisor callback handler now needs to load JS and CSS from the provider endpoint, and this JS needs to make a `fetch()` call across origins (to post the form to the CLI callback). This requires a custom Content-Security-Policy compared to other pages we render.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
All controller unit tests were accidentally using a timeout context
for the informers, instead of a cancel context which stays alive until
each test is completely finished. There is no reason to risk
unpredictable behavior of a timeout being reached during an individual
test, even though with the previous 3 second timeout it could only be
reached on a machine which is running orders of magnitude slower than
usual, since each test usually runs in about 100-300 ms. Unfortunately,
sometimes our CI workers might get that slow.
This sparked a review of other usages of timeout contexts in other
tests, and all of them were increased to a minimum value of 1 minute,
under the rule of thumb that our tests will be more reliable on slow
machines if they "pass fast and fail slow".
From RFC2616 (https://www.w3.org/Protocols/rfc2616/rfc2616-sec4.html#sec4.2):
> It MUST be possible to combine the multiple header fields into one "field-name: field-value" pair,
> without changing the semantics of the message, by appending each subsequent field-value to the first,
> each separated by a comma.
This was correct before, but this simplifes a bit and shaves off a few bytes from the response.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
The bug itself has to do with when headers are streamed to the client. Once a wrapped handler has sent any bytes to the `http.ResponseWriter`, the value of the map returned from `w.Header()` no longer matters for the response. The fix is fairly trivial, which is to add those response headers before invoking the wrapped handler.
The existing unit test didn't catch this due to limitations in `httptest.NewRecorder()`. It is now replaced with a new test that runs a full HTTP test server, which catches the previous bug.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>