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>
This was wrong, since you don't need a LoadBalancer to run the
impersonation proxy if you specify spec.service.type = "None" or
"ClusterIP" on the CredentialIssuer.
- Remove all the "latest" links and replace them with our new shortcode so they point at the latest release in a more explicit way.
This also eliminates one of the sections in our Concierge and Supervisor install guides, since you're always installing a specific version.
- Provide instructions for installing with both kapp (one step) and kubectl (two steps for the Concierge).
- Minor wording changes. Mainly we are now a bit less verbose about reminding people they can choose a different version (once per page instead of in each step).
- When we give an example `kapp deploy` command, don't suggest `--yes` and `--diff-changes`.
Users can still use these but it seems overly verbose for an example command.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
Add Dex to the prerequisites and add a note that to query for the groups
scope the user must set the organizations Dex should search against.
Otherwise the groups claim would be empty. This is because of the format
group claims are represented, i.e. "org:team".
Signed-off-by: Radoslav Dimitrov <dimitrovr@vmware.com>
The following guide describes the process of configuring Supervisor
with Dex and identify users through their Github account. Issue #415
Signed-off-by: Radoslav Dimitrov <dimitrovr@vmware.com>
Previously, the ytt install docs suggested that you use ytt templates
from the HEAD of main with the container image from the latest public
release, which could result in a mismatch.
The documentation was a bit confusing before, and it was easy to accidentally install a very outdated version if you weren't reading carefully.
We could consider writing a post-release CI job to update these references automatically (perhaps using a Hugo macro?), but for now a manual update seems sufficient.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- Use `nickname` claim as an example, which means we only need the `openid` scope.
This is also more stable since emails can change over time.
- Put the OIDCIdentityProvider and Secret into one YAML blob, since they will likely be copy-pasted together anyway.
- Add a separate section for using alternate claims.
- Add a separate section for using a private GitLab instance.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
Some minor edits I came across while reviewing this:
- Capitalize "GitLab" the way they do.
- Use `{{< ref "xyz" >}}` references when linking internally. The advantage of these is that they're "type checked" by Hugo when the site is rendered, so we'll know if we ever break one.
- Add links to the GitLab docs about creating an OAuth client. These also cover adding a group-level or instance-wide application.
- Re-wrap the YAML lines to fit a bit more naturally.
- Add a `namespace` to the YAML examples, so they're more likely to work without tweaks.
- Use "gitlab" instead of "my-oidc-identity-provider" as the example name, for clarity.
- Re-word a few small bits. These are 100% subjective but hopefully an improvement?
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
- a credential that is understood by -> a credential that can be used to
authenticate to
- This is more neutral to whether its going directly to k8s
or through the impersonation proxy
Also fixes our sitemap to have correct `lastmod` times when built locally (it was already correct on Netlify).
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
We have these redirects set up to make the `kubectl apply -f [...]` commands cleaner, but we never went back and fixed up the documentation to use them until now.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
I'm not sure if these docs are used anywhere in our website, but I don't think
that they are. I'm assuming someone or something will yell if these should not
be deleted. These docs also live at the root of the repo, and the duplicate
versions are already drifting out of sync from one another.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>