- Enhance the token exchange to check that the same client is used
compared to the client used during the original authorization and
token requests, and also check that the client has the token-exchange
grant type allowed in its configuration.
- Reduce the minimum required bcrypt cost for OIDCClient secrets
because 15 is too slow for real-life use, especially considering
that every login and every refresh flow will require two client auths.
- In unit tests, use bcrypt hashes with a cost of 4, because bcrypt
slows down by 13x when run with the race detector, and we run our
tests with the race detector enabled, causing the tests to be
unacceptably slow. The production code uses a higher minimum cost.
- Centralize all pre-computed bcrypt hashes used by unit tests to a
single place. Also extract some other useful test helpers for
unit tests related to OIDCClients.
- Add tons of unit tests for the token endpoint related to dynamic
clients for authcode exchanges, token exchanges, and refreshes.
This is only a first commit towards making this feature work.
- Hook dynamic clients into fosite by returning them from the storage
interface (after finding and validating them)
- In the auth endpoint, prevent the use of the username and password
headers for dynamic clients to force them to use the browser-based
login flows for all the upstream types
- Add happy path integration tests in supervisor_login_test.go
- Add lots of comments (and some small refactors) in
supervisor_login_test.go to make it much easier to understand
- Add lots of unit tests for the auth endpoint regarding dynamic clients
(more unit tests to be added for other endpoints in follow-up commits)
- Enhance crud.go to make lifetime=0 mean never garbage collect,
since we want client secret storage Secrets to last forever
- Move the OIDCClient validation code to a package where it can be
shared between the controller and the fosite storage interface
- Make shared test helpers for tests that need to create OIDC client
secret storage Secrets
- Create a public const for "pinniped-cli" now that we are using that
string in several places in the production code
Also:
- Add CSS to login page
- Refactor login page HTML and CSS into a new package
- New custom CSP headers for the login page, because the requirements
are different from the form_post page
The other handlers for GET and POST requests are not yet implemented in
this commit. The shared handler code in login_handler.go takes care of
things checking the method, checking the CSRF cookie, decoding the state
param, and adding security headers on behalf of both the GET and POST
handlers.
Some code has been extracted from callback_handler.go to be shared.
Also fix some test failures on the callback handler, register the
new login handler in manager.go and add a (half baked) integration test
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
- If the upstream refresh fails, then fail the downstream refresh
- If the upstream refresh returns an ID token, then validate it (we
use its claims in the future, but not in this commit)
- If the upstream refresh returns a new refresh token, then save it
into the user's session in storage
- Pass the provider cache into the token handler so it can use the
cached providers to perform upstream refreshes
- Handle unexpected errors in the token handler where the user's session
does not contain the expected data. These should not be possible
in practice unless someone is manually editing the storage, but
handle them anyway just to be safe.
- Refactor to share the refresh code between the CLI and the token
endpoint by moving it into the UpstreamOIDCIdentityProviderI
interface, since the token endpoint needed it to be part of that
interface anyway
This also sets the CSRF cookie Secret's OwnerReference to the Pod's grandparent
Deployment so that when the Deployment is cleaned up, then the Secret is as
well.
Obviously this controller implementation has a lot of issues, but it will at
least get us started.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
- This struct represents the configuration of all timeouts. These
timeouts are all interrelated to declare them all in one place.
This should also make it easier to allow the user to override
our defaults if we would like to implement such a feature in the
future.
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
This commit includes a failing test (amongst other compiler failures) for the
dynamic signing key fetcher that we will inject into fosite. We are checking it
in so that we can pass the WIP off.
Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
We missed this in the original interface specification, but the `grant_type=authorization_code` requires it, per RFC6749 (https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749#section-4.1.3).
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This will allow it to be imported by Go code outside of our repository, which was something we have planned for since this code was written.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- To better support having multiple downstream providers configured,
the authorize endpoint will share a CSRF cookie between all
downstream providers' authorize endpoints. The first time a
user's browser hits the authorize endpoint of any downstream
provider, that endpoint will set the cookie. Then if the user
starts an authorize flow with that same downstream provider or with
any other downstream provider which shares the same domain name
(i.e. differentiated by issuer path), then the same cookie will be
submitted and respected.
- Just in case we are sharing the domain name with some other app,
we sign the value of any new CSRF cookie and check the signature
when we receive the cookie. This wasn't strictly necessary since
we probably won't share a domain name with other apps, but it
wasn't hard to add this cookie signing.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
We want to run all of the fosite validations in the authorize
endpoint, but we don't need to store anything yet because
we are storing what we need for later in the upstream state
parameter.
Signed-off-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
- When two different Issuers have the same host (i.e. they differ
only by path) then they must have the same secretName. This is because
it wouldn't make sense for there to be two different TLS certificates
for one host. Find any that do not have the same secret name to
put an error status on them and to avoid serving OIDC endpoints for
them. The host comparison is case-insensitive.
- Issuer hostnames should be treated as case-insensitive, because
DNS hostnames are case-insensitive. So https://me.com and
https://mE.cOm are duplicate issuers. However, paths are
case-sensitive, so https://me.com/A and https://me.com/a are
different issuers. Fixed this in the issuer validations and in the
OIDC Manager's request router logic.