- It didn't matter before because it would be cleaned up by a
t.Cleanup() function, but now that we might loop twice it will matter
during the second time through the loop
EC keys are smaller and take less time to generate. Our integration
tests were super flakey because generating an RSA key would take up to
10 seconds *gasp*. The main token verifier that we care about is
Kubernetes, which supports P256, so hopefully it won't be that much of
an issue that our default signing key type is EC. The OIDC spec seems
kinda squirmy when it comes to using non-RSA signing algorithms...
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
- Also continue renaming things related to the concierge app
- Enhance the uninstall test to also test uninstalling the supervisor
and local-user-authenticator apps
- Variables specific to concierge add it to their name
- All variables now start with `PINNIPED_TEST_` which makes it clear
that they are for tests and also helps them not conflict with the
env vars that are used in the Pinniped CLI code
- The OIDCProviderConfigWatcherController synchronizes the
OIDCProviderConfig settings to dynamically mount and unmount the
OIDC discovery endpoints for each provider
- Integration test passes but unit tests need to be added still
- Intended to be a red test in this commit; will make it go
green in a future commit
- Enhance env.go and prepare-for-integration-tests.sh to make it
possible to write integration tests for the supervisor app
by setting more env vars and by exposing the service to the kind
host on a localhost port
- Add `--clean` option to prepare-for-integration-tests.sh
to make it easier to start fresh
- Make prepare-for-integration-tests.sh advise you to run
`go test -v -count 1 ./test/integration` because this does
not buffer the test output
- Make concierge_api_discovery_test.go pass by adding expectations
for the new OIDCProviderConfig type
This will hopefully come in handy later if we ever decide to add
support for multiple OIDC providers as a part of one supervisor.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>
This change replaces our previous test helpers for checking cluster capabilities and passing external test parameters. Prior to this change, we always used `$PINNIPED_*` environment variables and these variables were accessed throughout the test code.
The new code introduces a more strongly-typed `TestEnv` structure and helpers which load and expose the parameters. Tests can now call `env := library.IntegrationEnv(t)`, then access parameters such as `env.Namespace` or `env.TestUser.Token`. This should make this data dependency easier to manage and refactor in the future. In many ways this is just an extended version of the previous cluster capabilities YAML.
Tests can also check for cluster capabilities easily by using `env := library.IntegrationEnv(t).WithCapability(xyz)`.
The actual parameters are still loaded from OS environment variables by default (for compatibility), but the code now also tries to load the data from a Kubernetes Secret (`integration/pinniped-test-env` by default). I'm hoping this will be a more convenient way to pass data between various scripts than the local `/tmp` directory. I hope to remove the OS environment code in a future commit.
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
This seems to fail on CI when the Concourse workers get slow and
kind stops working reliably. It would be interesting to see the
error message in that case to figure out if there's anything we
could do to make the test more resilient.
Simplifies the implementation, makes it more consistent with other
updaters of the cic (CredentialIssuerConfig), and also retries on
update conflicts
Signed-off-by: Ryan Richard <richardry@vmware.com>
- Only inject things through the constructor that the controller
will need
- Use pkg private constants when possible for things that are not
actually configurable by the user
- Make the agent pod template private to the pkg
- Introduce a test helper to reduce some duplicated test code
- Remove some `it.Focus` lines that were accidentally committed, and
repair the broken tests that they were hiding
- Lots of TODOs added that need to be resolved to finish this WIP
- execer_test.go seems like it should be passing, but it fails (sigh)
Signed-off-by: Andrew Keesler <akeesler@vmware.com>