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>
Followup on the previous comment to split apart the ServiceAccount of the kube-cert-agent and the main concierge pod. This is a bit cleaner and ensures that in testing our main Concierge pod never requires any privileged permissions.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@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>
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>
Instead of using the LongRunningFunc to determine if we can safely
use http2, follow the same logic as the aggregation proxy and only
use http2 when the request is not an upgrade.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
When the frontend connection to our proxy is closed, the proxy falls through to
a panic(), which means the HTTP handler goroutine is killed, so we were not
seeing this log statement.
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.
The impersonator_test.go unit test now starts the impersonation
server and makes real HTTP requests against it using client-go.
It is backed by a fake Kube API server.
The CA IssuePEM() method was missing the argument to allow a slice
of IP addresses to be passed in.
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>
This makes output that's easier to copy-paste into the test. We could also make it ignore the order of key/value pairs in the future.
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".
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.