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.
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
- 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.
I don't believe this is used by any tests or docs. I think it was for some initial local testing of the impersonation proxy?
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- 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>
This isn't strictly necessary because we currently always have the concierge endpoint and CA as CLI flags, but it doesn't hurt and it's better to err on the side of _not_ reusing a cache entry.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
We have some nice normalization code in this package to remove expired or otherwise malformed cache entries, but we weren't calling it in the appropriate place.
Added calls to normalize the cache data structure before and after each transaction, and added test cases to ensure that it's being called.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>