Commit Graph

7 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Matt Moyer 2bf5c8b48b
Replace the OIDCProvider field SNICertificateSecretName with a TLS.SecretName field.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
2020-11-02 18:15:03 -06:00
Matt Moyer 2b8773aa54
Rename OIDCProviderConfig to OIDCProvider.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
2020-11-02 17:40:39 -06:00
Matt Moyer 9e1922f1ed
Split the config CRDs into two API groups.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
2020-10-30 19:22:46 -05:00
Ryan Richard 29e0ce5662 Configure name of the supervisor default TLS cert secret via ConfigMap
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
2020-10-28 11:56:50 -07:00
Ryan Richard 38802c2184 Add a way to set a default supervisor TLS cert for when SNI won't work
- Setting a Secret in the supervisor's namespace with a special name
  will cause it to get picked up and served as the supervisor's TLS
  cert for any request which does not have a matching SNI cert.
- This is especially useful for when there is no DNS record for an
  issuer and the user will be accessing it via IP address. This
  is not how we would expect it to be used in production, but it
  might be useful for other cases.
- Includes a new integration test
- Also suppress all of the warnings about ignoring the error returned by
  Close() in lines like `defer x.Close()` to make GoLand happier
2020-10-27 16:33:08 -07:00
Ryan Richard eeb110761e Rename `secretName` to `SNICertificateSecretName` in OIDCProviderConfig 2020-10-26 17:25:45 -07:00
Ryan Richard 8b7c30cfbd Supervisor listens for HTTPS on port 443 with configurable TLS certs
- 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.
2020-10-26 17:03:26 -07:00