Also fix some test failures on the callback handler, register the
new login handler in manager.go and add a (half baked) integration test
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
This allows us to target browser based tests with the regex:
go test -v -race -count 1 -timeout 0 ./test/integration -run '/_Browser'
New tests that call browsertest.Open will automatically be forced to
follow this convention.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
When the test was going to fail, a goroutine would accidentally block
on writing to an unbuffered channel, and the spawnTestGoroutine helper
would wait for that goroutine to end on cleanup, causing the test to
hang forever while it was trying to fail.
- 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
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>
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.
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>
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>
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.
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>