kubectl 1.20 prints "Kubernetes control plane" instead of "Kubernetes master".
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
Prior to this we re-used the CLI testing client to test the authorize flow of the supervisor, but they really need to be separate upstream clients. For example, the supervisor client should be a non-public client with a client secret and a different callback endpoint.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
Before, we did this in an init container, which meant if the Dex pod restarted we would have fresh certs, but our Tilt/bash setup didn't account for this.
Now, the certs are generated by a Job which runs once and saves the generated files into a Secret. This should be a bit more stable.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This change deploys a small Squid-based proxy into the `dex` namespace in our integration test environment. This lets us use the cluster-local DNS name (`http://dex.dex.svc.cluster.local/dex`) as the OIDC issuer. It will make generating certificates easier, and most importantly it will mean that our CLI can see Dex at the same name/URL as the supervisor running inside the cluster.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This check predates the API renaming we did. Now that our API groups have `concierge`/`supervisor` in the name, we don't need to maintain a specific set of `cp` commands and keep them in sync, so we don't really need this check.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
These only really make sense for aggregated API types where we need `conversion-gen` to do version conversion.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
I tried to follow a principle of encapsulation here - we can still default to
peeps making connections to 80/443 on a Service object, but internally we will
use 8080/8443.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
This only matters for local development, since we don't use this script directly in CI. Makes the full codegen ste take ~90s on my laptop.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This is the first of a few related changes that re-organize our API after the big recent changes that introduced the supervisor component.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- TLS certificates can be configured on the OIDCProviderConfig using
the `secretName` field.
- When listening for incoming TLS connections, choose the TLS cert
based on the SNI hostname of the incoming request.
- Because SNI hostname information on incoming requests does not include
the port number of the request, we add a validation that
OIDCProviderConfigs where the issuer hostnames (not including port
number) are the same must use the same `secretName`.
- Note that this approach does not yet support requests made to an
IP address instead of a hostname. Also note that `localhost` is
considered a hostname by SNI.
- Add port 443 as a container port to the pod spec.
- A new controller watches for TLS secrets and caches them in memory.
That same in-memory cache is used while servicing incoming connections
on the TLS port.
- Make it easy to configure both port 443 and/or port 80 for various
Service types using our ytt templates for the supervisor.
- When deploying to kind, add another nodeport and forward it to the
host on another port to expose our new HTTPS supervisor port to the
host.
When using kind we forward the node's port to the host, so we only
really care about the `nodePort` value. For acceptance clusters,
we put an Ingress in front of a NodePort Service, so we only really
care about the `port` value.
- When using `local()` in the Tiltfile it will not know
to watch those files for changes, so each time we use
`local()` we now also use `watch_file()`
- As a result, editing a ytt template file now causes
an immediate `kubectl apply` of the results
- Tiltfile and prepare-for-integration-tests.sh both specify the
NodePort Service using `--data-value-yaml 'service_nodeport_port=31234'`
- Also rename the namespaces used by the Concierge and Supervisor apps
during integration tests running locally
- Also continue renaming things related to the concierge app
- Enhance the uninstall test to also test uninstalling the supervisor
and local-user-authenticator apps
- Variables specific to concierge add it to their name
- All variables now start with `PINNIPED_TEST_` which makes it clear
that they are for tests and also helps them not conflict with the
env vars that are used in the Pinniped CLI code
- Intended to be a red test in this commit; will make it go
green in a future commit
- Enhance env.go and prepare-for-integration-tests.sh to make it
possible to write integration tests for the supervisor app
by setting more env vars and by exposing the service to the kind
host on a localhost port
- Add `--clean` option to prepare-for-integration-tests.sh
to make it easier to start fresh
- Make prepare-for-integration-tests.sh advise you to run
`go test -v -count 1 ./test/integration` because this does
not buffer the test output
- Make concierge_api_discovery_test.go pass by adding expectations
for the new OIDCProviderConfig type
- Prevent the server binary from lying about its version number
by having it report "?.?.?" as its version number for now.
- Later we can devise a way for CI to inject the version number
for the server into the container image at release time,
not at build time, since the version number is not known
at build time.
- Pre-release builds of the binary from before the release stage or
builds on developer workstation will also report "?.?.?" as its
version number, which is fine since they are not official releases
and shouldn't find their way to the public.
New resource naming conventions:
- Do not repeat the Kind in the name,
e.g. do not call it foo-cluster-role-binding, just call it foo
- Names will generally start with a prefix to identify our component,
so when a user lists all objects of that kind, they can tell to which
component it is related,
e.g. `kubectl get configmaps` would list one named "pinniped-config"
- It should be possible for an operator to make the word "pinniped"
mostly disappear if they choose, by specifying the app_name in
values.yaml, to the extent that is practical (but not from APIService
names because those are hardcoded in golang)
- Each role/clusterrole and its corresponding binding have the same name
- Pinniped resource names that must be known by the server golang code
are passed to the code at run time via ConfigMap, rather than
hardcoded in the golang code. This also allows them to be prepended
with the app_name from values.yaml while creating the ConfigMap.
- Since the CLI `get-kubeconfig` command cannot guess the name of the
CredentialIssuerConfig resource in advance anymore, it lists all
CredentialIssuerConfig in the app's namespace and returns an error
if there is not exactly one found, and then uses that one regardless
of its name
This is essentially meant to be be "v1alpha2" of the existing CredentialRequest API, but since we want to move API groups we can just start over at v1alpha1.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
We want to be able to run kind integration tests against the same
versions that we generate code against. There is no public
kindest/node image for 1.17.9, so let's update to the next 1.17.x
version where there is an image: 1.17.11.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
The dry-run fails now because we are trying to install a CRD and a custom resource (of that CRD type) in the same step.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- Also correct the webhook url setting in prepare-for-integration-tests.sh
- Change the bcrypt count to 10, because 16 is way too slow on old laptops
Signed-off-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
I also started updating the script to deploy the test-webhook instead of
doing TMC stuff. I think the script should live in this repo so that
Pinniped contributors only need to worry about one repo for running
integration tests.
There are a bunch of TODOs in the script, but I figured this was a good
checkpoint. The script successfully runs on my machine and sets up the
test-webhook and pinniped on a local kind cluster. The integration tests
are failing because of some issue with pinniped talking to the test-webhook,
but this is step in the right direction.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
This script was basically an alias for `./hack/module.sh unittest`. We even
tell people to run the unit tests via module.sh in our contributing doc.
Let's ditch it - the best line of (shell code) is the one you don't write.
An analagous change was made in CI to use module.sh in place of test-unit.sh.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
- Upgrade from `1.19.0-rc.0` to the newly-release `1.19.0`.
- Downgrade from `1.18.6` to `1.18.2` to match some downstream consumers.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>