open-vault/vault/logical_passthrough.go

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package vault
import (
"encoding/json"
"fmt"
"strings"
"time"
"github.com/hashicorp/vault/logical"
"github.com/hashicorp/vault/logical/framework"
)
// PassthroughBackendFactory returns a PassthroughBackend
// with leases switched off
func PassthroughBackendFactory(conf *logical.BackendConfig) (logical.Backend, error) {
return LeaseSwitchedPassthroughBackend(conf, false)
}
// PassthroughBackendWithLeasesFactory returns a PassthroughBackend
// with leases switched on
func LeasedPassthroughBackendFactory(conf *logical.BackendConfig) (logical.Backend, error) {
return LeaseSwitchedPassthroughBackend(conf, true)
}
// LeaseSwitchedPassthroughBackendFactory returns a PassthroughBackend
// with leases switched on or off
func LeaseSwitchedPassthroughBackend(conf *logical.BackendConfig, leases bool) (logical.Backend, error) {
var b PassthroughBackend
b.generateLeases = leases
vault: clean up VaultID duplications, make secret responses clearer /cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I found the existing API to be really awkward to work with. Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to). At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal data that might help an operator. So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in `logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret struct encapsulates all the lease info and such. It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields that differ based on client/server. I copied this style. All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix that up in the next commit.
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b.Backend = &framework.Backend{
Help: strings.TrimSpace(passthroughHelp),
Paths: []*framework.Path{
&framework.Path{
Pattern: ".*",
Fields: map[string]*framework.FieldSchema{
//TODO: Deprecated in 0.3; remove in 0.4
"lease": &framework.FieldSchema{
Type: framework.TypeString,
Description: "Lease time for this key when read. Ex: 1h",
},
"ttl": &framework.FieldSchema{
Type: framework.TypeString,
Description: "TTL time for this key when read. Ex: 1h",
},
},
Callbacks: map[logical.Operation]framework.OperationFunc{
logical.ReadOperation: b.handleRead,
logical.CreateOperation: b.handleWrite,
logical.UpdateOperation: b.handleWrite,
logical.DeleteOperation: b.handleDelete,
logical.ListOperation: b.handleList,
},
ExistenceCheck: b.handleExistenceCheck,
HelpSynopsis: strings.TrimSpace(passthroughHelpSynopsis),
HelpDescription: strings.TrimSpace(passthroughHelpDescription),
},
},
}
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b.Backend.Secrets = []*framework.Secret{
&framework.Secret{
Type: "generic",
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Renew: b.handleRead,
Revoke: b.handleRevoke,
},
vault: clean up VaultID duplications, make secret responses clearer /cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I found the existing API to be really awkward to work with. Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to). At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal data that might help an operator. So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in `logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret struct encapsulates all the lease info and such. It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields that differ based on client/server. I copied this style. All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix that up in the next commit.
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}
if conf == nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("Configuation passed into backend is nil")
}
b.Backend.Setup(conf)
return &b, nil
}
// PassthroughBackend is used storing secrets directly into the physical
// backend. The secrets are encrypted in the durable storage and custom TTL
// information can be specified, but otherwise this backend doesn't do anything
// fancy.
vault: clean up VaultID duplications, make secret responses clearer /cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I found the existing API to be really awkward to work with. Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to). At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal data that might help an operator. So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in `logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret struct encapsulates all the lease info and such. It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields that differ based on client/server. I copied this style. All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix that up in the next commit.
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type PassthroughBackend struct {
*framework.Backend
generateLeases bool
vault: clean up VaultID duplications, make secret responses clearer /cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I found the existing API to be really awkward to work with. Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to). At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal data that might help an operator. So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in `logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret struct encapsulates all the lease info and such. It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields that differ based on client/server. I copied this style. All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix that up in the next commit.
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}
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func (b *PassthroughBackend) handleRevoke(
vault: clean up VaultID duplications, make secret responses clearer /cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I found the existing API to be really awkward to work with. Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to). At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal data that might help an operator. So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in `logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret struct encapsulates all the lease info and such. It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields that differ based on client/server. I copied this style. All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix that up in the next commit.
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req *logical.Request, data *framework.FieldData) (*logical.Response, error) {
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// This is a no-op
return nil, nil
}
func (b *PassthroughBackend) handleExistenceCheck(
req *logical.Request, data *framework.FieldData) (bool, error) {
out, err := req.Storage.Get(req.Path)
if err != nil {
return false, fmt.Errorf("existence check failed: %v", err)
}
return out != nil, nil
}
func (b *PassthroughBackend) handleRead(
vault: clean up VaultID duplications, make secret responses clearer /cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I found the existing API to be really awkward to work with. Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to). At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal data that might help an operator. So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in `logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret struct encapsulates all the lease info and such. It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields that differ based on client/server. I copied this style. All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix that up in the next commit.
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req *logical.Request, data *framework.FieldData) (*logical.Response, error) {
// Read the path
out, err := req.Storage.Get(req.Path)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("read failed: %v", err)
}
// Fast-path the no data case
if out == nil {
return nil, nil
}
// Decode the data
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var rawData map[string]interface{}
if err := json.Unmarshal(out.Value, &rawData); err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("json decoding failed: %v", err)
}
var resp *logical.Response
if b.generateLeases {
// Generate the response
resp = b.Secret("generic").Response(rawData, nil)
resp.Secret.Renewable = false
} else {
resp = &logical.Response{
Secret: &logical.Secret{},
Data: rawData,
}
}
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// Check if there is a ttl key
var ttl string
ttl, _ = rawData["ttl"].(string)
if len(ttl) == 0 {
ttl, _ = rawData["lease"].(string)
}
ttlDuration := b.System().DefaultLeaseTTL()
if len(ttl) != 0 {
parsedDuration, err := time.ParseDuration(ttl)
if err != nil {
resp.AddWarning(fmt.Sprintf("failed to parse stored ttl '%s' for entry; using default", ttl))
} else {
ttlDuration = parsedDuration
}
if b.generateLeases {
resp.Secret.Renewable = true
}
}
resp.Secret.TTL = ttlDuration
return resp, nil
}
func (b *PassthroughBackend) handleWrite(
vault: clean up VaultID duplications, make secret responses clearer /cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I found the existing API to be really awkward to work with. Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to). At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal data that might help an operator. So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in `logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret struct encapsulates all the lease info and such. It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields that differ based on client/server. I copied this style. All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix that up in the next commit.
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req *logical.Request, data *framework.FieldData) (*logical.Response, error) {
// Check that some fields are given
if len(req.Data) == 0 {
return logical.ErrorResponse("missing data fields"), nil
}
// Check if there is a ttl key; verify parseability if so
var ttl string
ttl = data.Get("ttl").(string)
if len(ttl) == 0 {
ttl = data.Get("lease").(string)
}
if len(ttl) != 0 {
_, err := time.ParseDuration(ttl)
if err != nil {
return logical.ErrorResponse("failed to parse ttl for entry"), nil
}
// Verify that ttl isn't the *only* thing we have
if len(req.Data) == 1 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("missing data; only ttl found")
}
}
// JSON encode the data
buf, err := json.Marshal(req.Data)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("json encoding failed: %v", err)
}
// Write out a new key
entry := &logical.StorageEntry{
Key: req.Path,
Value: buf,
}
if err := req.Storage.Put(entry); err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("failed to write: %v", err)
}
return nil, nil
}
func (b *PassthroughBackend) handleDelete(
vault: clean up VaultID duplications, make secret responses clearer /cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I found the existing API to be really awkward to work with. Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to). At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal data that might help an operator. So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in `logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret struct encapsulates all the lease info and such. It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields that differ based on client/server. I copied this style. All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix that up in the next commit.
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req *logical.Request, data *framework.FieldData) (*logical.Response, error) {
// Delete the key at the request path
if err := req.Storage.Delete(req.Path); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return nil, nil
}
func (b *PassthroughBackend) handleList(
vault: clean up VaultID duplications, make secret responses clearer /cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I found the existing API to be really awkward to work with. Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to). At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal data that might help an operator. So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in `logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret struct encapsulates all the lease info and such. It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields that differ based on client/server. I copied this style. All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix that up in the next commit.
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req *logical.Request, data *framework.FieldData) (*logical.Response, error) {
// List the keys at the prefix given by the request
keys, err := req.Storage.List(req.Path)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
// Generate the response
return logical.ListResponse(keys), nil
}
func (b *PassthroughBackend) GeneratesLeases() bool {
return b.generateLeases
}
const passthroughHelp = `
The generic backend reads and writes arbitrary secrets to the backend.
The secrets are encrypted/decrypted by Vault: they are never stored
unencrypted in the backend and the backend never has an opportunity to
see the unencrypted value.
TTLs can be set on a per-secret basis. These TTLs will be sent down
when that secret is read, and it is assumed that some outside process will
revoke and/or replace the secret at that path.
`
const passthroughHelpSynopsis = `
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Pass-through secret storage to the storage backend, allowing you to
read/write arbitrary data into secret storage.
`
const passthroughHelpDescription = `
The pass-through backend reads and writes arbitrary data into secret storage,
encrypting it along the way.
A TTL can be specified when writing with the "ttl" field. If given, the
duration of leases returned by this backend will be set to this value. This
can be used as a hint from the writer of a secret to the consumer of a secret
that the consumer should re-read the value before the TTL has expired.
However, any revocation must be handled by the user of this backend; the lease
duration does not affect the provided data in any way.
`