- 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
This allows us to target browser based tests with the regex:
go test -v -race -count 1 -timeout 0 ./test/integration -run '/_Browser'
New tests that call browsertest.Open will automatically be forced to
follow this convention.
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
When the test was going to fail, a goroutine would accidentally block
on writing to an unbuffered channel, and the spawnTestGoroutine helper
would wait for that goroutine to end on cleanup, causing the test to
hang forever while it was trying to fail.
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>
- Make everything private
- Drop unused AuthTime field
- Use %q format string instead of "%s"
- Only rely on GetRawAttributeValues in AttributeUnchangedSinceLogin
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
This change updates the new TLS integration tests to:
1. Only create the supervisor default TLS serving cert if needed
2. Port forward the node port supervisor service since that is
available in all environments
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
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>