Not required, but within the spirit of using the version number.
Since the existing kube cert agent deployment will get deleted anyway
during an upgrade, it shouldn't hurt to change the version number.
New installations will get the new version number on the new kube cert
agent deployment.
Fixes#801. The solution is complicated by the fact that the Selector
field of Deployments is immutable. It would have been easy to just
make the Selectors of the main Concierge Deployment, the Kube cert agent
Deployment, and the various Services use more specific labels, but
that would break upgrades. Instead, we make the Pod template labels and
the Service selectors more specific, because those not immutable, and
then handle the Deployment selectors in a special way.
For the main Concierge and Supervisor Deployments, we cannot change
their selectors, so they remain "app: app_name", and we make other
changes to ensure that only the intended pods are selected. We keep the
original "app" label on those pods and remove the "app" label from the
pods of the Kube cert agent Deployment. By removing it from the Kube
cert agent pods, there is no longer any chance that they will
accidentally get selected by the main Concierge Deployment.
For the Kube cert agent Deployment, we can change the immutable selector
by deleting and recreating the Deployment. The new selector uses only
the unique label that has always been applied to the pods of that
deployment. Upon recreation, these pods no longer have the "app" label,
so they will not be selected by the main Concierge Deployment's
selector.
The selector of all Services have been updated to use new labels to
more specifically target the intended pods. For the Concierge Services,
this will prevent them from accidentally including the Kube cert agent
pods. For the Supervisor Services, we follow the same convention just
to be consistent and to help future-proof the Supervisor app in case it
ever has a second Deployment added to it.
The selector of the auto-created impersonation proxy Service was
also previously using the "app" label. There is no change to this
Service because that label will now select the correct pods, since
the Kube cert agent pods no longer have that label. It would be possible
to update that selector to use the new more specific label, but then we
would need to invent a way to pass that label into the controller, so
it seemed like more work than was justified.
For clusters where the control plane nodes aren't running a CNI, the
kube-cert-agent pods deployed by concierge cannot be scheduled as they
don't know to use `hostNetwork: true`. This change allows embedding the
host network setting in the Concierge configuration. (by copying it from
the kube-controller-manager pod spec when generating the kube-cert-agent
Deployment)
Also fixed a stray double comma in one of the nearby tests.
- Change list of attributeParsingOverrides to a map
- Add unit test for sAMAccountName as group name without the override
- Change some comments in the the type definition.
In the upstream dynamiccertificates package, we rely on two pieces
of code:
1. DynamicServingCertificateController.newTLSContent which calls
- clientCA.CurrentCABundleContent
- servingCert.CurrentCertKeyContent
2. unionCAContent.VerifyOptions which calls
- unionCAContent.CurrentCABundleContent
This results in calls to our tlsServingCertDynamicCertProvider and
impersonationSigningCertProvider. If we Unset these providers, we
subtly break these consumers. At best this results in test slowness
and flakes while we wait for reconcile loops to converge. At worst,
it results in actual errors during runtime. For example, we
previously would Unset the impersonationSigningCertProvider on any
sync loop error (even a transient one caused by a network blip or
a conflict between writes from different replicas of the concierge).
This would cause us to transiently fail to issue new certificates
from the token credential require API. It would also cause us to
transiently fail to authenticate previously issued client certs
(which results in occasional Unauthorized errors in CI).
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
- Add `AllowPasswordGrant` boolean field to OIDCIdentityProvider's spec
- The oidc upstream watcher controller copies the value of
`AllowPasswordGrant` into the configuration of the cached provider
- Add password grant to the UpstreamOIDCIdentityProviderI interface
which is implemented by the cached provider instance for use in the
authorization endpoint
- Enhance the IDP discovery endpoint to return the supported "flows"
for each IDP ("cli_password" and/or "browser_authcode")
- Enhance `pinniped get kubeconfig` to help the user choose the desired
flow for the selected IDP, and to write the flow into the resulting
kubeconfg
- Enhance `pinniped login oidc` to have a flow flag to tell it which
client-side flow it should use for auth (CLI-based or browser-based)
- In the Dex config, allow the resource owner password grant, which Dex
implements to also return ID tokens, for use in integration tests
- Enhance the authorize endpoint to perform password grant when
requested by the incoming headers. This commit does not include unit
tests for the enhancements to the authorize endpoint, which will come
in the next commit
- Extract some shared helpers from the callback endpoint to share the
code with the authorize endpoint
- Add new integration tests
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>
Prior to this fix, this controller did not correctly react to changes to the ClusterIP service. It would still eventually react with a long delay due to our 5 minute resync interval.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This change fixes a race that can occur because we have multiple
writers with no leader election lock.
1. TestAPIServingCertificateAutoCreationAndRotation/automatic
expires the current serving certificate
2. CertsExpirerController 1 deletes expired serving certificate
3. CertsExpirerController 2 starts deletion of expired serving
certificate but has not done so yet
4. CertsManagerController 1 creates new serving certificate
5. TestAPIServingCertificateAutoCreationAndRotation/automatic
records the new serving certificate
6. CertsExpirerController 2 finishes deletion, and thus deletes the
newly created serving certificate instead of the old one
7. CertsManagerController 2 creates new serving certificate
8. TestAPIServingCertificateAutoCreationAndRotation/automatic keeps
running and eventually times out because it is expecting the
serving certificate created by CertsManagerController 2 to match
the value it recorded from CertsManagerController 1 (which will
never happen since that certificate was incorrectly deleted).
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
TestAgentController really runs the controller and evaluates multiple
calls to the controller's Sync with real informers caching updates.
There is a large amount of non-determinism in this unit test, and it
does not always behave the same way. Because it makes assertions about
the specific errors that should be returned by Sync, it was not
accounting for some errors that are only returned by Sync once in a
while depending on the exact (unpredictable) order of operations.
This commit doesn't fix the non-determinism in the test, but rather
tries to work around it by also allowing other (undesired but
inevitable) error messages to appear in the list of actual error
messages returned by the calls to the Sync function.
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
After noticing that the upstream OIDC discovery calls can hang
indefinitely, I had tried to impose a one minute timeout on them
by giving them a timeout context. However, I hadn't noticed that the
context also gets passed into the JWKS fetching object, which gets
added to our cache and used later. Therefore the timeout context
was added to the cache and timed out while sitting in the cache,
causing later JWKS fetchers to fail.
This commit is trying again to impose a reasonable timeout on these
discovery and JWKS calls, but this time by using http.Client's Timeout
field, which is documented to be a timeout for *each* request/response
cycle, so hopefully this is a more appropriate way to impose a timeout
for this use case. The http.Client instance ends up in the cache on
the JWKS fetcher object, so the timeout should apply to each JWKS
request as well.
Requests that can hang forever are effectively a server-side resource
leak, which could theoretically be taken advantage of in a denial of
service attempt, so it would be nice to avoid having them.
- Add new optional ytt params for the Supervisor deployment.
- When the Supervisor is making calls to an upstream OIDC provider,
use these variables if they were provided.
- These settings are integration tested in the main CI pipeline by
sometimes setting them on deployments in certain cases, and then
letting the existing integration tests (e.g. TestE2EFullIntegration)
provide the coverage, so there are no explicit changes to the
integration tests themselves in this commit.
- this allows the oidc upsream watcher to honor the
HTTP_PROXY,HTTPS_PROXY,NO_PROXY environment variables
Co-authored-by: Christian Ang <angc@vmware.com>
When a CredentialIssuer is switched from one service type to another (or switched to disabled mode), the `impersonatorconfig` controller will delete the previous Service, if any. Normally one Concierge pod will succeed to delete this initially and any other pods will see a NotFound error.
Before this change, the NotFound would bubble up and cause the strategy to enter a ErrorDuringSetup status until the next reconcile loop. We now handle this case without reporting an error.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
These are tricky because a real load balancer controller (e.g., on GKE) will overwrite and set NodePort, so we can't blindly set the desired state of this fields.
For now, we will just skip reconciling these. In the future, we could be more clever about merging them together with the current state.
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
If the only thing that has changed about a strategy is the LastUpdated timestamp, then we should not update the object.
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
This updates the code to use a different mechanism for driving desired state:
- Read existing object
- If it does not exist, create desired object
- If it does exist, make a copy and set all the desired fields
- Do a deepequal to see if an update is necessary.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
We also no longer need an initial event, since we don't do anything unless the CredentialIssuer exists, so we'll always be triggered at the appropriate time.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- Automatically try to fall back to using StartTLS when using TLS
doesn't work. Only complain when both don't work.
- Remember (in-memory) which one worked and keeping using that one
in the future (unless the pod restarts).
- 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>
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.
This change makes it easier to understand misconfigurations caused
by issuers with extraneous trailing slashes.
Signed-off-by: Mo Khan <mok@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>
Since 0dfb3e95c5, we no longer directly create the kube-cert-agent Pod, so our "use"
permission on PodSecurityPolicies no longer has the intended effect. Since the deployments controller is now the
one creating pods for us, we need to get the permission on the PodSpec of the target pod instead, which we do somewhat
simply by using the same service account as the main Concierge pods.
We still set `automountServiceAccountToken: false`, so this should not actually give any useful permissions to the
agent pod when running.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@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>
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>
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.
Unfortunately, Secrets do not seem to have a Generation field, so we
use the ResourceVersion field instead. This means that any change to
the Secret will cause us to retry the connection to the LDAP server,
even if the username and password fields in the Secret were not
changed. Seems like an okay trade-off for this early draft of the
controller compared to a more complex implementation.
This early version of the controller is not intended to act as an
ongoing health check for your upstream LDAP server. It will connect
to the LDAP server to essentially "lint" your configuration once.
It will do it again only when you change your configuration. To account
for transient errors, it will keep trying to connect to the server
until it succeeds once.
This commit does not include looking for changes in the associated bind
user username/password Secret.
- The ldap_upstream_watcher.go controller validates the bind secret and
uses the Conditions to report errors. Shares some condition reporting
logic with its sibling controller oidc_upstream_watcher.go, to the
extent which is convenient without generics in golang.
- When the upstream IDP is an LDAP IDP and the user's LDAP username and
password are received as new custom headers, then authenticate the
user and, if authentication was successful, return a redirect with
an authcode. Handle errors according to the OAuth/OIDC specs.
- Still does not support having multiple upstream IDPs defined at the
same time, which was an existing limitation of this endpoint.
- Does not yet include the actual LDAP authentication, which is
hidden behind an interface from the point of view of auth_handler.go
- Move the oidctestutil package to the testutil directory.
- Add an interface for Fosite storage to avoid a cyclical test
dependency.
- Add GetURL() to the UpstreamLDAPIdentityProviderI interface.
- Extract test helpers to be shared between callback_handler_test.go
and auth_handler_test.go because the authcode and fosite storage
assertions should be identical.
- Backfill Content-Type assertions in callback_handler_test.go.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
We were previously issuing both client certs and server certs with
both extended key usages included. Split the Issue*() methods into
separate methods for issuing server certs versus client certs so
they can have different extended key usages tailored for each use
case.
Also took the opportunity to clean up the parameters of the Issue*()
methods and New() methods to more closely match how we prefer to call
them. We were always only passing the common name part of the
pkix.Name to New(), so now the New() method just takes the common name
as a string. When making a server cert, we don't need to set the
deprecated common name field, so remove that param. When making a client
cert, we're always making it in the format expected by the Kube API
server, so just accept the username and group as parameters directly.
To make an impersonation request, first make a TokenCredentialRequest
to get a certificate. That cert will either be issued by the Kube
API server's CA or by a new CA specific to the impersonator. Either
way, you can then make a request to the impersonator and present
that client cert for auth and the impersonator will accept it and
make the impesonation call on your behalf.
The impersonator http handler now borrows some Kube library code
to handle request processing. This will allow us to more closely
mimic the behavior of a real API server, e.g. the client cert
auth will work exactly like the real API server.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@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".
In impersonator_config_test.go, instead of waiting for the resource
version to appear in the informers, wait for the actual object to
appear.
This is an attempt to resolve flaky failures that only happen in CI,
but it also cleans up the test a bit by avoiding inventing fake resource
version numbers all over the test.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
- Use `Eventually` when making tls connections because the production
code's handling of starting and stopping the TLS server port
has some async behavior.
- Don't use resource version "0" because that has special meaning
in the informer libraries.
This updates our issuerconfig.UpdateStrategy to sort strategies according to a weighted preference.
The TokenCredentialRequest API strategy is preffered, followed by impersonation proxy, followed by any other unknown types.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- This commit does not include the updates that we plan to make to
the `status.strategies[].frontend` field of the CredentialIssuer.
That will come in a future commit.
This is more than an automatic merge. It also includes a rewrite of the CredentialIssuer API impersonation proxy fields using the new structure, and updates to the CLI to account for that new API.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
These controllers were a bit inconsistent. There were cases where the controllers ran out of the expected order and the custom labels might not have been applied.
We should still plan to remove this label handling or move responsibility into the middleware layer, but this avoids any regression.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- The CA cert will end up in the end user's kubeconfig on their client
machine, so if it changes they would need to fetch the new one and
update their kubeconfig. Therefore, we should avoid changing it as
much as possible.
- Now the controller writes the CA to a different Secret. It writes both
the cert and the key so it can reuse them to create more TLS
certificates in the future.
- For now, it only needs to make more TLS certificates if the old
TLS cert Secret gets deleted or updated to be invalid. This allows
for manual rotation of the TLS certs by simply deleting the Secret.
In the future, we may want to implement some kind of auto rotation.
- For now, rotation of both the CA and TLS certs will also happen if
you manually delete the CA Secret. However, this would cause the end
users to immediately need to get the new CA into their kubeconfig,
so this is not as elegant as a normal rotation flow where you would
have a window of time where you have more than one CA.