Commit Graph

6 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Monis Khan
266d64f7d1
Do not truncate x509 errors
Signed-off-by: Monis Khan <mok@vmware.com>
2021-09-29 09:38:22 -04:00
Ryan Richard
84c3c3aa9c Optionally allow OIDC password grant for CLI-based login experience
- Add `AllowPasswordGrant` boolean field to OIDCIdentityProvider's spec
- The oidc upstream watcher controller copies the value of
  `AllowPasswordGrant` into the configuration of the cached provider
- Add password grant to the UpstreamOIDCIdentityProviderI interface
  which is implemented by the cached provider instance for use in the
  authorization endpoint
- Enhance the IDP discovery endpoint to return the supported "flows"
  for each IDP ("cli_password" and/or "browser_authcode")
- Enhance `pinniped get kubeconfig` to help the user choose the desired
  flow for the selected IDP, and to write the flow into the resulting
  kubeconfg
- Enhance `pinniped login oidc` to have a flow flag to tell it which
  client-side flow it should use for auth (CLI-based or browser-based)
- In the Dex config, allow the resource owner password grant, which Dex
  implements to also return ID tokens, for use in integration tests
- Enhance the authorize endpoint to perform password grant when
  requested by the incoming headers. This commit does not include unit
  tests for the enhancements to the authorize endpoint, which will come
  in the next commit
- Extract some shared helpers from the callback endpoint to share the
  code with the authorize endpoint
- Add new integration tests
2021-08-12 10:45:39 -07:00
Ryan Richard
f0d120a6ca Fix broken upstream OIDC discovery timeout added in previous commit
After noticing that the upstream OIDC discovery calls can hang
indefinitely, I had tried to impose a one minute timeout on them
by giving them a timeout context. However, I hadn't noticed that the
context also gets passed into the JWKS fetching object, which gets
added to our cache and used later. Therefore the timeout context
was added to the cache and timed out while sitting in the cache,
causing later JWKS fetchers to fail.

This commit is trying again to impose a reasonable timeout on these
discovery and JWKS calls, but this time by using http.Client's Timeout
field, which is documented to be a timeout for *each* request/response
cycle, so hopefully this is a more appropriate way to impose a timeout
for this use case. The http.Client instance ends up in the cache on
the JWKS fetcher object, so the timeout should apply to each JWKS
request as well.

Requests that can hang forever are effectively a server-side resource
leak, which could theoretically be taken advantage of in a denial of
service attempt, so it would be nice to avoid having them.
2021-07-08 09:44:02 -07:00
Ryan Richard
f1e63c55d4 Add https_proxy and no_proxy settings for the Supervisor
- Add new optional ytt params for the Supervisor deployment.
- When the Supervisor is making calls to an upstream OIDC provider,
  use these variables if they were provided.
- These settings are integration tested in the main CI pipeline by
  sometimes setting them on deployments in certain cases, and then
  letting the existing integration tests (e.g. TestE2EFullIntegration)
  provide the coverage, so there are no explicit changes to the
  integration tests themselves in this commit.
2021-07-07 12:50:13 -07:00
Ryan Richard
29ca8acab4 oidc_upstream_watcher.go: two methods become private funcs 2021-05-12 14:05:08 -07:00
Ryan Richard
1ae3c6a1ad Split package upstreamwatchers into four packages 2021-05-12 14:00:39 -07:00