Their release notes are here: https://github.com/golang-jwt/jwt/releases
Seemed wise to upgrade before we do even more with JWTs. For example
this upgrade *would* have mattered if we already implemented common JWT
claims such as expiration. Since we didn't rely on any claim
verification this upgrade is a noop...
...except for 1 test that called `Claims.Valid()`! Removing that
assertion *seems* scary, but it didn't actually do anything because we
didn't implement any of the standard claims it validated:
https://github.com/golang-jwt/jwt/blob/v4.5.0/map_claims.go#L120-L151
So functionally this major upgrade is a noop.
The ACL token decoding was not correctly handling time duration
syntax such as "1h" which forced people to use the nanosecond
representation via the HTTP API.
The change adds an unmarshal function which allows this syntax to
be used, along with other styles correctly.
This change add the RPC ACL binding rule handlers. These handlers
are responsible for the creation, updating, reading, and deletion
of binding rules.
The write handlers are feature gated so that they can only be used
when all federated servers are running the required version.
The HTTP API handlers and API SDK have also been added where
required. This allows the endpoints to be called from the API by users
and clients.
Currently CRUD code that operates on SSO auth methods does not return created or updated object upon creation/update. This is bad UX and inconsistent behavior compared to other ACL objects like roles, policies or tokens.
This PR fixes it.
Relates to #13120
Making the ACL Role listing return object a stub future-proofs the
endpoint. In the event the role object grows, we are not bound by
having to return all fields within the list endpoint or change the
signature of the endpoint to reduce the list return size.
ACL Roles along with policies and global token will be replicated
from the authoritative region to all federated regions. This
involves a new replication loop running on the federated leader.
Policies and roles may be replicated at different times, meaning
the policies and role references may not be present within the
local state upon replication upsert. In order to bypass the RPC
and state check, a new RPC request parameter has been added. This
is used by the replication process; all other callers will trigger
the ACL role policy validation check.
There is a new ACL RPC endpoint to allow the reading of a set of
ACL Roles which is required by the replication process and matches
ACL Policies and Tokens. A bug within the ACL Role listing RPC has
also been fixed which returned incorrect data during blocking
queries where a deletion had occurred.