open-vault/logical/response.go

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package logical
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import (
"encoding/json"
"errors"
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"github.com/hashicorp/vault/helper/wrapping"
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)
const (
// HTTPContentType can be specified in the Data field of a Response
// so that the HTTP front end can specify a custom Content-Type associated
// with the HTTPRawBody. This can only be used for non-secrets, and should
// be avoided unless absolutely necessary, such as implementing a specification.
// The value must be a string.
HTTPContentType = "http_content_type"
// HTTPRawBody is the raw content of the HTTP body that goes with the HTTPContentType.
// This can only be specified for non-secrets, and should should be similarly
// avoided like the HTTPContentType. The value must be a byte slice.
HTTPRawBody = "http_raw_body"
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// HTTPStatusCode is the response code of the HTTP body that goes with the HTTPContentType.
// This can only be specified for non-secrets, and should should be similarly
// avoided like the HTTPContentType. The value must be an integer.
HTTPStatusCode = "http_status_code"
)
// Response is a struct that stores the response of a request.
// It is used to abstract the details of the higher level request protocol.
type Response struct {
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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// Secret, if not nil, denotes that this response represents a secret.
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Secret *Secret `json:"secret" structs:"secret" mapstructure:"secret"`
// Auth, if not nil, contains the authentication information for
// this response. This is only checked and means something for
// credential backends.
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Auth *Auth `json:"auth" structs:"auth" mapstructure:"auth"`
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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// Response data is an opaque map that must have string keys. For
// secrets, this data is sent down to the user as-is. To store internal
// data that you don't want the user to see, store it in
// Secret.InternalData.
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Data map[string]interface{} `json:"data" structs:"data" mapstructure:"data"`
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// Redirect is an HTTP URL to redirect to for further authentication.
// This is only valid for credential backends. This will be blanked
// for any logical backend and ignored.
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Redirect string `json:"redirect" structs:"redirect" mapstructure:"redirect"`
// Warnings allow operations or backends to return warnings in response
// to user actions without failing the action outright.
Warnings []string `json:"warnings" structs:"warnings" mapstructure:"warnings"`
// Information for wrapping the response in a cubbyhole
WrapInfo *wrapping.ResponseWrapInfo `json:"wrap_info" structs:"wrap_info" mapstructure:"wrap_info"`
}
// AddWarning adds a warning into the response's warning list
func (r *Response) AddWarning(warning string) {
if r.Warnings == nil {
r.Warnings = make([]string, 0, 1)
}
r.Warnings = append(r.Warnings, warning)
}
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// IsError returns true if this response seems to indicate an error.
func (r *Response) IsError() bool {
return r != nil && r.Data != nil && len(r.Data) == 1 && r.Data["error"] != nil
}
func (r *Response) Error() error {
if !r.IsError() {
return nil
}
switch r.Data["error"].(type) {
case string:
return errors.New(r.Data["error"].(string))
case error:
return r.Data["error"].(error)
}
return nil
}
// HelpResponse is used to format a help response
func HelpResponse(text string, seeAlso []string) *Response {
return &Response{
Data: map[string]interface{}{
"help": text,
"see_also": seeAlso,
},
}
}
// ErrorResponse is used to format an error response
func ErrorResponse(text string) *Response {
return &Response{
Data: map[string]interface{}{
"error": text,
},
}
}
// ListResponse is used to format a response to a list operation.
func ListResponse(keys []string) *Response {
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resp := &Response{
Data: map[string]interface{}{},
}
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if len(keys) != 0 {
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resp.Data["keys"] = keys
}
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return resp
}
// ListResponseWithInfo is used to format a response to a list operation and
// return the keys as well as a map with corresponding key info.
func ListResponseWithInfo(keys []string, keyInfo map[string]interface{}) *Response {
resp := ListResponse(keys)
keyInfoData := make(map[string]interface{})
for _, key := range keys {
val, ok := keyInfo[key]
if ok {
keyInfoData[key] = val
}
}
if len(keyInfoData) > 0 {
resp.Data["key_info"] = keyInfoData
}
return resp
}
// RespondWithStatusCode takes a response and converts it to a raw response with
// the provided Status Code.
func RespondWithStatusCode(resp *Response, req *Request, code int) (*Response, error) {
httpResp := LogicalResponseToHTTPResponse(resp)
httpResp.RequestID = req.ID
body, err := json.Marshal(httpResp)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &Response{
Data: map[string]interface{}{
HTTPContentType: "application/json",
HTTPRawBody: body,
HTTPStatusCode: code,
},
}, nil
}