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>
- Requiring refresh tokens to be returned from upstream OIDC idps
- Storing refresh tokens (for oidc) and idp information (for all idps) in custom session data during authentication
- Don't pass access=offline all the time
This change fixes a copy paste error that led to the impersonation
proxy signer CA being rotated based on the configuration of the
rotation of the aggregated API serving certificate. This would lead
to occasional "Unauthorized" flakes in our CI environments that
rotate the serving certificate at a frequent interval.
Updated the certs_expirer controller logs to be more detailed.
Updated CA common names to be more specific (this does not update
any previously generated CAs).
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
This change updates the kube cert agent to a middle ground behavior
that balances leader election gating with how quickly we load the
signer.
If the agent labels have not changed, we will attempt to load the
signer even if we cannot roll out the latest version of the kube
cert agent deployment.
This gives us the best behavior - we do not have controllers
fighting over the state of the deployment and we still get the
signer loaded quickly.
We will have a minute of downtime when the kube cert agent deployment
changes because the new pods will have to wait to become a leader
and for the new deployment to rollout the new pods. We would need
to have a per pod deployment if we want to avoid that downtime (but
this would come at the cost of startup time and would require
coordination with the kubelet in regards to pod readiness).
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
This change updates our certificate code to use the same 5 minute
backdate that is used by the Kubernetes controller manager. This
helps to account for clock skews between the API servers and the
kubelets that are running the pinniped pods. While this backdating
reflects a large percentage of the lifetime of our short lived
certificates (100% for the 5 minute client certificates), even a 10
minute irrevocable client certificate is within our limits. When
we move to the CSR based short lived certificates, they will always
have at least a 15 minute lifetime (5 minute backdating plus 10 minute
minimum valid duration).
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
This commit makes the following changes to the kube cert agent tests:
1. Informers are synced on start using the controllerinit code
2. Deployment client and informer are synced per controller sync loop
3. Controller sync loop exits after two consistent errors
4. Use assert instead of require to avoid ending the test early
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
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>