Also fix some tests that were broken by bumping golang and dependencies
in the previous commits.
Note that in addition to changes made to satisfy the linter which do not
impact the behavior of the code, this commit also adds ReadHeaderTimeout
to all usages of http.Server to satisfy the linter (and because it
seemed like a good suggestion).
- Two of the linters changed their names
- Updated code and nolint comments to make all linters pass with 1.44.2
- Added a new hack/install-linter.sh script to help developers install
the expected version of the linter for local development
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>
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>
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>
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>
When a CredentialIssuer is switched from one service type to another (or switched to disabled mode), the `impersonatorconfig` controller will delete the previous Service, if any. Normally one Concierge pod will succeed to delete this initially and any other pods will see a NotFound error.
Before this change, the NotFound would bubble up and cause the strategy to enter a ErrorDuringSetup status until the next reconcile loop. We now handle this case without reporting an error.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
These are tricky because a real load balancer controller (e.g., on GKE) will overwrite and set NodePort, so we can't blindly set the desired state of this fields.
For now, we will just skip reconciling these. In the future, we could be more clever about merging them together with the current state.
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
This updates the code to use a different mechanism for driving desired state:
- Read existing object
- If it does not exist, create desired object
- If it does exist, make a copy and set all the desired fields
- Do a deepequal to see if an update is necessary.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@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>