An ACL policy with a block without label generates unexpected results.
For example, a policy such as this:
```
namespace {
policy = "read"
}
```
Is applied to a namespace called `policy` instead of the documented
behaviour of applying it to the `default` namespace.
This happens because of the way HCL1 decodes blocks. Since it doesn't
know if a block is expected to have a label it applies the `key` tag to
the content of the block and, in the example above, the first key is
`policy`, so it sets that as the `namespace` block label.
Since this happens internally in the HCL decoder it's not possible to
detect the problem externally.
Fixing the problem inside the decoder is challenging because the JSON
and HCL parsers generate different ASTs that makes impossible to
differentiate between a JSON tree from an invalid HCL tree within the
decoder.
The fix in this commit consists of manually parsing the policy after
decoding to clear labels that were not set in the file. This allows the
validation rules to consistently catch and return any errors, no matter
if the policy is an invalid HCL or JSON.
The HCL parser allows for labels that aren't needed, which makes it easy to
accidentally write a `secure_variable` block that has the intended path as the
label for that block instead of the innner `path` block. This can result in
silent failure to lock down variables if an incorrectly specified block was used
to reduce the scope of capabilities (for example, if another correctly-written
rule allows access to `*`).
We can't detect the extraneous label in the HCL API, but we can detect if we're
missing `path` blocks entirely. Use this to block obvious user errors.
The List RPCs only checked the ACL for the Prefix argument of the request. Add
an ACL filter to the paginator for the List RPC.
Extend test coverage of ACLs in the List RPC and in the `acl` package, and add a
"deny" capability so that operators can deny specific paths or prefixes below an
allowed path.
Adds a new policy block inside namespaces to control access to secure
variables on the basis of path, with support for globbing.
Splits out VerifyClaim from ResolveClaim.
The ServiceRegistration RPC only needs to be able to verify that a
claim is valid for some allocation in the store; it doesn't care about
implicit policies or capabilities. Split this out to its own method on
the server so that the SecureVariables RPC can reuse it as a separate
step from resolving policies (see next commit).
Support implicit policies based on workload identity
Add new namespace ACL requirement for the /v1/jobs/parse endpoint and
return early if HCLv2 parsing fails.
The endpoint now requires the new `parse-job` ACL capability or
`submit-job`.
state store: call-out to generic update of job recommendations from job update method
recommendations API work, and http endpoint errors for OSS
support for scaling polices in task block of job spec
add query filters for ScalingPolicy list endpoint
command: nomad scaling policy list: added -job and -type
- read-job-scaling
- scale-job
- list-scaling-policies
- read-scaling-policy
updated the read and right policy dispositions, added the new autoscaler disposition
* acl/policy: add the volume ACL policies
* nomad/csi_endpoint: enforce ACLs for volume access
* nomad/search_endpoint_oss: volume acls
* acl/acl: add plugin read as a global policy
* acl/policy: add PluginPolicy global cap type
* nomad/csi_endpoint: check the global plugin ACL policy
* nomad/mock/acl: PluginPolicy
* nomad/csi_endpoint: fix list rebase
* nomad/core_sched_test: new test since #7358
* nomad/csi_endpoint_test: use correct permissions for list
* nomad/csi_endpoint: allowCSIMount keeps ACL checks together
* nomad/job_endpoint: check mount permission for jobs
* nomad/job_endpoint_test: need plugin read, too
This adds an initial implementation of ACLs for HostVolumes.
Because HostVolumes are a cluster-wide resource, they cannot be tied to
a namespace, thus here we allow similar wildcard definitions based on
their names, tied to a set of capabilities.
Initially, the only available capabilities are deny, or mount. These
may be extended in the future to allow read-fs, mount-readonly and
similar capabilities.
This adds `alloc-exec` capability to allow operator to execute command into a
running task. Furthermore, it adds `alloc-node-exec` capability, required when
the alloc task is raw_exec or a driver with no FSIsolation.
This capability will gate access to features that allow interacting with
a running allocation, for example, signalling, stopping, and rescheduling
specific allocations.
This commit adds basic support for globbing namespaces in acl
definitions.
For concrete definitions, we merge all of the defined policies at load time, and
perform a simple lookup later on. If an exact match of a concrete
definition is found, we do not attempt to resolve globs.
For glob definitions, we merge definitions of exact replicas of a glob.
When loading a policy for a glob defintion, we choose the glob that has
the closest match to the namespace we are resolving for. We define the
closest match as the one with the _smallest character difference_
between the glob and the namespace we are matching.