open-consul/command/acl/token/update/token_update.go

199 lines
5.8 KiB
Go

package tokenupdate
import (
"flag"
"fmt"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/api"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/command/acl"
"github.com/hashicorp/consul/command/flags"
"github.com/mitchellh/cli"
)
func New(ui cli.Ui) *cmd {
c := &cmd{UI: ui}
c.init()
return c
}
type cmd struct {
UI cli.Ui
flags *flag.FlagSet
http *flags.HTTPFlags
help string
tokenID string
policyIDs []string
policyNames []string
description string
mergePolicies bool
showMeta bool
upgradeLegacy bool
}
func (c *cmd) init() {
c.flags = flag.NewFlagSet("", flag.ContinueOnError)
c.flags.BoolVar(&c.showMeta, "meta", false, "Indicates that token metadata such "+
"as the content hash and raft indices should be shown for each entry")
c.flags.BoolVar(&c.mergePolicies, "merge-policies", false, "Merge the new policies "+
"with the existing policies")
c.flags.StringVar(&c.tokenID, "id", "", "The Accessor ID of the token to read. "+
"It may be specified as a unique ID prefix but will error if the prefix "+
"matches multiple token Accessor IDs")
c.flags.StringVar(&c.description, "description", "", "A description of the token")
c.flags.Var((*flags.AppendSliceValue)(&c.policyIDs), "policy-id", "ID of a "+
"policy to use for this token. May be specified multiple times")
c.flags.Var((*flags.AppendSliceValue)(&c.policyNames), "policy-name", "Name of a "+
"policy to use for this token. May be specified multiple times")
c.flags.BoolVar(&c.upgradeLegacy, "upgrade-legacy", false, "Add new polices "+
"to a legacy token replacing all existing rules. This will cause the legacy "+
"token to behave exactly like a new token but keep the same Secret.\n"+
"WARNING: you must ensure that the new policy or policies specified grant "+
"equivalent or appropriate access for the existing clients using this token.")
c.http = &flags.HTTPFlags{}
flags.Merge(c.flags, c.http.ClientFlags())
flags.Merge(c.flags, c.http.ServerFlags())
c.help = flags.Usage(help, c.flags)
}
func (c *cmd) Run(args []string) int {
if err := c.flags.Parse(args); err != nil {
return 1
}
if c.tokenID == "" {
c.UI.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Cannot update a token without specifying the -id parameter"))
return 1
}
client, err := c.http.APIClient()
if err != nil {
c.UI.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Error connecting to Consul agent: %s", err))
return 1
}
tokenID, err := acl.GetTokenIDFromPartial(client, c.tokenID)
if err != nil {
c.UI.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Error determining token ID: %v", err))
return 1
}
token, _, err := client.ACL().TokenRead(tokenID, nil)
if err != nil {
c.UI.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Error when retrieving current token: %v", err))
return 1
}
if c.upgradeLegacy {
if token.Rules == "" {
// This is just for convenience it should actually be harmless to allow it
// to go through anyway.
c.UI.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Can't use -upgrade-legacy on a non-legacy token"))
return 1
}
// Reset the rules to nothing forcing this to be updated as a non-legacy
// token but with same secret.
token.Rules = ""
}
if c.description != "" {
// Only update description if the user specified a new one. This does make
// it impossible to completely clear descriptions from CLI but that seems
// better than silently deleting descriptions when using command without
// manually giving the new description. If it's a real issue we can always
// add another explicit `-remove-description` flag but it feels like an edge
// case that's not going to be critical to anyone.
token.Description = c.description
}
if c.mergePolicies {
for _, policyName := range c.policyNames {
found := false
for _, link := range token.Policies {
if link.Name == policyName {
found = true
break
}
}
if !found {
// We could resolve names to IDs here but there isn't any reason why its would be better
// than allowing the agent to do it.
token.Policies = append(token.Policies, &api.ACLTokenPolicyLink{Name: policyName})
}
}
for _, policyID := range c.policyIDs {
policyID, err := acl.GetPolicyIDFromPartial(client, policyID)
if err != nil {
c.UI.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Error resolving policy ID %s: %v", policyID, err))
return 1
}
found := false
for _, link := range token.Policies {
if link.ID == policyID {
found = true
break
}
}
if !found {
token.Policies = append(token.Policies, &api.ACLTokenPolicyLink{ID: policyID})
}
}
} else {
token.Policies = nil
for _, policyName := range c.policyNames {
// We could resolve names to IDs here but there isn't any reason why its would be better
// than allowing the agent to do it.
token.Policies = append(token.Policies, &api.ACLTokenPolicyLink{Name: policyName})
}
for _, policyID := range c.policyIDs {
policyID, err := acl.GetPolicyIDFromPartial(client, policyID)
if err != nil {
c.UI.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Error resolving policy ID %s: %v", policyID, err))
return 1
}
token.Policies = append(token.Policies, &api.ACLTokenPolicyLink{ID: policyID})
}
}
token, _, err = client.ACL().TokenUpdate(token, nil)
if err != nil {
c.UI.Error(fmt.Sprintf("Failed to update token %s: %v", tokenID, err))
return 1
}
c.UI.Info("Token updated successfully.")
acl.PrintToken(token, c.UI, c.showMeta)
return 0
}
func (c *cmd) Synopsis() string {
return synopsis
}
func (c *cmd) Help() string {
return flags.Usage(c.help, nil)
}
const synopsis = "Update an ACL Token"
const help = `
Usage: consul acl token update [options]
This command will update a token. Some parts such as marking the token local
cannot be changed.
Update a token description and take the policies from the existing token:
$ consul acl token update -id abcd -description "replication" -merge-policies
Update all editable fields of the token:
$ consul acl token update -id abcd -description "replication" -policy-name "token-replication"
`