This change allows configuration of the http and https listeners
used by the supervisor.
TCP (IPv4 and IPv6 with any interface and port) and Unix domain
socket based listeners are supported. Listeners may also be
disabled.
Binding the http listener to TCP addresses other than 127.0.0.1 or
::1 is deprecated.
The deployment now uses https health checks. The supervisor is
always able to complete a TLS connection with the use of a bootstrap
certificate that is signed by an in-memory certificate authority.
To support sidecar containers used by service meshes, Unix domain
socket based listeners include ACLs that allow writes to the socket
file from any runAsUser specified in the pod's containers.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
Highlights from this dep bump:
1. Made a copy of the v0.4.0 github.com/go-logr/stdr implementation
for use in tests. We must bump this dep as Kube code uses a
newer version now. We would have to rewrite hundreds of test log
assertions without this copy.
2. Use github.com/felixge/httpsnoop to undo the changes made by
ory/fosite#636 for CLI based login flows. This is required for
backwards compatibility with older versions of our CLI. A
separate change after this will update the CLI to be more
flexible (it is purposefully not part of this change to confirm
that we did not break anything). For all browser login flows, we
now redirect using http.StatusSeeOther instead of http.StatusFound.
3. Drop plog.RemoveKlogGlobalFlags as klog no longer mutates global
process flags
4. Only bump github.com/ory/x to v0.0.297 instead of the latest
v0.0.321 because v0.0.298+ pulls in a newer version of
go.opentelemetry.io/otel/semconv which breaks k8s.io/apiserver.
We should update k8s.io/apiserver to use the newer code.
5. Migrate all code from k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/util/clock to
k8s.io/utils/clock and k8s.io/utils/clock/testing
6. Delete testutil.NewDeleteOptionsRecorder and migrate to the new
kubetesting.NewDeleteActionWithOptions
7. Updated ExpectedAuthorizeCodeSessionJSONFromFuzzing caused by
fosite's new rotated_secrets OAuth client field. This new field
is currently not relevant to us as we have no private clients.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
- Used to determine on which port the impersonation proxy will bind
- Defaults to 8444, which is the old hard-coded port value
- Allow the port number to be configured to any value within the
range 1024 to 65535
- This commit does not include adding new config knobs to the ytt
values file, so while it is possible to change this port without
needing to recompile, it is not convenient
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>
Changes made to both components:
1. Logs are always flushed on process exit
2. Informer cache sync can no longer hang process start up forever
Changes made to concierge:
1. Add pre-shutdown hook that waits for controllers to exit cleanly
2. Informer caches are synced in post-start hook
Changes made to supervisor:
1. Add shutdown code that waits for controllers to exit cleanly
2. Add shutdown code that waits for active connections to become idle
Waiting for controllers to exit cleanly is critical as this allows
the leader election logic to release the lock on exit. This reduces
the time needed for the next leader to be elected.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@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>
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>
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 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>
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 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.
This change adds a new virtual aggregated API that can be used by
any user to echo back who they are currently authenticated as. This
has general utility to end users and can be used in tests to
validate if authentication was successful.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
This is a more reliable way to determine whether the load balancer
is already running.
Also added more unit tests for the load balancer.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
- Watch a configmap to read the configuration of the impersonation
proxy and reconcile it.
- Implements "auto" mode by querying the API for control plane nodes.
- WIP: does not create a load balancer or proper TLS certificates yet.
Those will come in future commits.
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
Yes, this is a huge commit.
The middleware allows you to customize the API groups of all of the
*.pinniped.dev API groups.
Some notes about other small things in this commit:
- We removed the internal/client package in favor of pkg/conciergeclient. The
two packages do basically the same thing. I don't think we use the former
anymore.
- We re-enabled cluster-scoped owner assertions in the integration tests.
This code was added in internal/ownerref. See a0546942 for when this
assertion was removed.
- Note: the middlware code is in charge of restoring the GV of a request object,
so we should never need to write mutations that do that.
- We updated the supervisor secret generation to no longer manually set an owner
reference to the deployment since the middleware code now does this. I think we
still need some way to make an initial event for the secret generator
controller, which involves knowing the namespace and the name of the generated
secret, so I still wired the deployment through. We could use a namespace/name
tuple here, but I was lazy.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
Co-authored-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
This change updates our clients to always set an owner ref when:
1. The operation is a create
2. The object does not already have an owner ref set
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>