// Copyright 2020-2023 the Pinniped contributors. All Rights Reserved. // SPDX-License-Identifier: Apache-2.0 package timeouts import "time" type Configuration struct { // The length of time that our state param that we encrypt and pass to the upstream OIDC IDP should be considered // valid. If a state param generated by the authorize endpoint is sent to the callback endpoint after this much // time has passed, then the callback endpoint should reject it. This allows us to set a limit on how long // the end user has to finish their login with the upstream IDP, including the time that it takes to fumble // with password manager and two-factor authenticator apps, and also accounting for taking a coffee break while // the browser is sitting at the upstream IDP's login page. UpstreamStateParamLifespan time.Duration // How long an authcode issued by the callback endpoint is valid. This determines how much time the end user // has to come back to exchange the authcode for tokens at the token endpoint. AuthorizeCodeLifespan time.Duration // The lifetime of an downstream access token issued by the token endpoint. Access tokens should generally // be fairly short-lived. AccessTokenLifespan time.Duration // The lifetime of an downstream ID token issued by the token endpoint. This should generally be the same // as the AccessTokenLifespan, or longer if it would be useful for the user's proof of identity to be valid // for longer than their proof of authorization. IDTokenLifespan time.Duration // The lifetime of an downstream refresh token issued by the token endpoint. This should generally be // significantly longer than the access token lifetime, so it can be used to refresh the access token // multiple times. Once the refresh token expires, the user's session is over and they will need // to start a new authorization request, which will require them to log in again with the upstream IDP // in their web browser. RefreshTokenLifespan time.Duration // AuthorizationCodeSessionStorageLifetime is the length of time after which an authcode is allowed to be garbage // collected from storage. Authcodes are kept in storage after they are redeemed to allow the system to mark the // authcode as already used, so it can reject any future uses of the same authcode with special case handling which // include revoking the access and refresh tokens associated with the session. Therefore, this should be // significantly longer than the AuthorizeCodeLifespan, and there is probably no reason to make it longer than // the sum of the AuthorizeCodeLifespan and the RefreshTokenLifespan. AuthorizationCodeSessionStorageLifetime time.Duration // PKCESessionStorageLifetime is the length of time after which PKCE data is allowed to be garbage collected from // storage. PKCE sessions are closely related to authorization code sessions. After the authcode is successfully // redeemed, the PKCE session is explicitly deleted. After the authcode expires, the PKCE session is no longer needed, // but it is not explicitly deleted. Therefore, this can be just slightly longer than the AuthorizeCodeLifespan. We'll // avoid making it exactly the same as AuthorizeCodeLifespan to avoid any chance of the garbage collector deleting it // while it is being used. PKCESessionStorageLifetime time.Duration // OIDCSessionStorageLifetime is the length of time after which the OIDC session data related to an authcode // is allowed to be garbage collected from storage. Due to a bug in an underlying library, these are not explicitly // deleted. Similar to the PKCE session, they are not needed anymore after the corresponding authcode has expired. // Therefore, this can be just slightly longer than the AuthorizeCodeLifespan. We'll avoid making it exactly the same // as AuthorizeCodeLifespan to avoid any chance of the garbage collector deleting it while it is being used. OIDCSessionStorageLifetime time.Duration // AccessTokenSessionStorageLifetime is the length of time after which an access token's session data is allowed // to be garbage collected from storage. These must exist in storage for as long as the refresh token is valid // or else the refresh flow will not work properly. So this must be longer than RefreshTokenLifespan. AccessTokenSessionStorageLifetime time.Duration // RefreshTokenSessionStorageLifetime is the length of time after which a refresh token's session data is allowed // to be garbage collected from storage. These must exist in storage for as long as the refresh token is valid. // Therefore, this can be just slightly longer than the RefreshTokenLifespan. We'll avoid making it exactly the same // as RefreshTokenLifespan to avoid any chance of the garbage collector deleting it while it is being used. // If an expired token is still stored when the user tries to refresh it, then they will get a more specific // error message telling them that the token is expired, rather than a more generic error that is returned // when the token does not exist. If this is desirable, then the RefreshTokenSessionStorageLifetime can be made // to be significantly larger than RefreshTokenLifespan, at the cost of slower cleanup. RefreshTokenSessionStorageLifetime time.Duration }