* Return signed ca as part of ca_chain field within sign-intermediate
- When signing a CA certificate we should include it along with the signing CA's CA chain in the response.
* PKI - Add not_before_duration API parameter to:
- Root CA generation
- Intermediate CA generation
- Intermediate CA signing
* Move not_before_duration to addCACommonFields
This gets applied on both root generation and intermediate signing,
which is the correct place to apply this.
Co-authored-by: guysv <sviryguy@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add changelog entry
Resolves: #10631
Co-authored-by: guysv <sviryguy@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add test case for root/generate, sign-intermediate
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Update path role description
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add new not_before_duration to relevant docs
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: guysv <sviryguy@gmail.com>
* Add warning on missing AIA info fields
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add changelog:
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add a warning when Issuing Certificate set on a role does not resolve.
* Ivanka's requests - add a warning on deleting issuer or changing it's name.
* reduce number of roles to iterate through; only verify roles after migration. ignore roles deleted behind our back.
* Protect against key and issuer name re-use
- While importing keys and issuers verify that the provided name if any has not been used by another key that we did not match against.
- Validate an assumption within the key import api, that we were provided a single key
- Add additional tests on the new key generation and key import handlers.
* Protect key import api end-users from using "default" as a name
- Do not allow end-users to provide the value of default as a name for key imports
as that would lead to weird and wonderful behaviors to the end-user.
* Add missing api-docs for PKI key import
* Warn on empty Subject field for issuers
When generating a root or signing an intermediate certificate, it is
possible to have Vault generate a certificate with an empty Subject.
These don't validate in most TLS implementations well, so add a warning.
Note that non-Common Name fields could be present to make a non-empty
subject, so simply requiring a CommonName isn't strictly the best.
For example:
$ vault write pki/root/generate/exported common_name=""
WARNING! The following warnings were returned from Vault:
* This issuer certificate was generated without a Subject; this makes
it likely that issuing leaf certs with this certificate will cause TLS
validation libraries to reject this certificate.
....
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add changelog
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Remove signature_bits on intermediate generate
This extraneous field wasn't respected during intermediate generation
and it isn't clear that it should be. Strictly, this field, if it were
to exist, would control the CSR's internal signature algorithm (certutil
defaults to the sane SHA-256 here). However, there's little value in
changing this as the signing authority can and probably will override
the final certificate's signature bits value, completely ignoring
whatever was in the provided CSR.
Removing this field will now cause warnings for those providing the
parameter (which already wasn't respected), which is the desired
behavior. No breakage should occur as a result of this change.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add changelog
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Always return non-nil CRL configuration
When using the default CRL configuration (as none has been set), return
the default configuration rather than inferring it in buildCRL. This
additionally allows us to return the default configuration on GET
operations to /config/crl.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Always return non-nil URL configuration
When using the default (empty) URL configuration as none has been set,
return the default configuration rather than inferring it inside of
fetchCAInfoByIssuerId or generateCert. This additionally allows us to
return the default configuration on GET operations to /config/urls.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add changelog
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* secret/pki: Return correct algorithm type from key fetch api for managed keys
- fix an issue that key_type field returned from the key fetch api had
the ManagedPrivateKey type instead of the real algorithm of the managed key.
* Remove key_type from key list PKI operation. Partial revert of #15435
- The key_type field should be used solely for the key algorithm but as implemented
we would be returning the value ManagedPrivateKey for managed keys which is not
in sync with the rest of the apis. We also did not want to take the performance
hit if many managed keys existed so we will simply remove the field from the list
operation
- No point in writing any logs if no previous bundle exists
- Only log output and schedule a CRL rebuild is we actually migration something
- Do not log on PKI storage version set/checks.
* Use "not_before_duration" fiueld from role if above 0
* 'test' and update docs
* changelog file
* Requested changes - improved test and better description to changelog
* changelog description:
* update to ttl and not_before_duration API docs
* Use new parseutil helper: Safe variants
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Update parseutil to v0.1.5
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Fix additional integer overflow in command/server
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* add import endpoint
* fix unlock
* add import_version
* refactor import endpoints and add tests
* add descriptions
* Update dependencies to include tink for Transit import operations. Convert Transit wrapping key endpoint to use shared wrapping key retrieval method. Disallow import of convergent keys to Transit via BYOK process.
* Include new 'hash_function' parameter on Transit import endpoints to specify OAEP random oracle hash function used to wrap ephemeral AES key.
* Add default values for Transit import endpoint fields. Prevent an OOB panic in Transit import. Proactively zero out ephemeral AES key used in Transit imports.
* Rename some Transit BYOK import variables. Ensure Transit BYOK ephemeral key is of the size specified byt the RFC.
* Add unit tests for Transit BYOK import endpoint.
* Simplify Transit BYOK import tests. Add a conditional on auto rotation to avoid errors on BYOK keys with allow_rotation=false.
* Added hash_function field to Transit import_version endpoint. Reworked Transit import unit tests. Added unit tests for Transit import_version endpoint.
* Add changelog entry for Transit BYOK.
* Transit BYOK formatting fixes.
* Omit 'convergent_encryption' field from Transit BYOK import endpoint, but reject with an error when the field is provided.
* Minor formatting fix in Transit import.
Co-authored-by: rculpepper <rculpepper@hashicorp.com>
* Add default timeout to legacy ssh.ClientConfig
When using the deprecated Dynamic SSH Keys method, Vault will make an
outbound SSH connection to an arbitrary remote host to place SSH keys.
We now set a timeout of 1 minute for this connection.
It is strongly recommended consumers of this SSH secrets engine feature
migrate to the more secure, and otherwise equivalent, SSH certificates
method.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add changelog
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
This shows whether the specified key or issuer is default, along with
the private key type in the case of a LIST /keys (authenticated) call.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add CRL checking to chain building tests
This should ensure that, with our complex issuer setups, we can revoke
the issued certificates correctly and they'll show up on the correct
CRLs.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Fix related issuer detection in CRL building
When building our mapping of issuers, we incorrectly used the issuer's
RawIssuer field to construct the mapping, rather than the issuer's
RawSubject. This caused us to not correctly detect the cross-signed
issuers as having the same CRLs.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Address issues with revoke operations pre-migration of PKI issuers
- Leverage the legacyBundleShimID though out the path of CRL building
when legacy storage mode is active.
- Instead of having multiple locations without a lock checking for the
useLegacyBundleCaStorage flag is set, check it once and then use the
same issuerId everywhere
- Address some locking issues that might lead to a bad read/write when
switching from legacy to non-legacy mode on startup and post-migration
* Add test suite for PKI apis pre-migration to new issuer storage format
- Add tests that validate all apis work as expected in pre-migration mode
- Add tests for apis that we don't expect to work, they should return a
migration related error message
- Add some missing validations on various new apis.
* Refactor chain building test cases to be shared
This will allow us to execute these test cases and then benchmark just
the chain building, separate from the certificate creation (and without
the consistency tests).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Benchmark chain building code
Using the existing test cases (and a few special ones), generate some
simple chains and benchmark how long chain building takes. We switch
from generating a cluster (slow) to directly calling
createBackendWithStorage(), which improves test execution time too:
$ go test -count=1 -run=Test_CAChainBuilding github.com/hashicorp/vault/builtin/logical/pki
ok github.com/hashicorp/vault/builtin/logical/pki 0.764s
(previously it was 5-10 seconds, for fewer tests).
Additionally, we now have benchmarks:
$ go test -v -run=BenchmarkChainBuilding -bench=. github.com/hashicorp/vault/builtin/logical/pki
goos: linux
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/hashicorp/vault/builtin/logical/pki
cpu: Intel(R) Core(TM) i9-10885H CPU @ 2.40GHz
BenchmarkChainBuilding
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-0
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-0-16 616 1921783 ns/op
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-1
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-1-16 1191 998201 ns/op
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-2
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-2-16 547 2229810 ns/op
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-3
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-3-16 525 2264951 ns/op
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-4
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-4-16 1732 693686 ns/op
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-5
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-5-16 51700 23230 ns/op
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-6
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-6-16 9343 124523 ns/op
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-7
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-7-16 5106 234902 ns/op
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-8
BenchmarkChainBuilding/test-case-8-16 2334 494382 ns/op
PASS
ok github.com/hashicorp/vault/builtin/logical/pki 12.707s
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
- Do not grab a lock within the requestRebuildIfActiveNode function
to avoid issues being called from the invalidate function
- Leverage more atmoic operations, and only grab the lock if we are
going to perform the rebuild.
Previously we'd return the raw enum value, which the entity accessing
the API wouldn't have any easy way of translating back into string
values. Return the string value directly instead.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
- Leverage a Get lookup operation to see if our reference field is a UUID
instead of listing all key/issuers and iterating over the list.
- This should be faster and we get a cached lookup possibly if it was a
UUID entry that we previously loaded.
- Address some small feedback about migration wording as well.
* Return the ca_chain response from root issued cert api
* Fix parent selection in cert chain building
When building chains, we'd choose the next neighbor from Go's
unordered map. However, this doesn't necessarily result in the most
optimal path: we want to prefer to visit roots over other
intermediates, as this allows us to have a more consistent chain,
putting roots before their cross-signed equivalents rather than
potentially at the end.
We additionally now ensure chains are stable.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Steve Clark <steven.clark@hashicorp.com>
- Validate the key_type and key_bits arguments that were provided and
perform the same default processing of 0 as we used to do for the
generateRoot/generateIntermediate apis
- Add a test that validates the behaviour
- Update the field description blurbs.
* Move existing test helpers into a new test_helpers.go file within PKI
* Compare issuer certificates by cert, signature algo and signature
- Instead of comparing the strings of a certificate, instead leverage
the Go Raw attribute within a parsed certificate to compare. The Raw
attribute is a byte array of an ASN.1 DER containing the cert,
signature algo and signature.
- Rework a bit of the importIssuers function as well to fail checks on the
inbound issuer earlier as well as load keys/issuers just before we need
them
* Prevent revocation of issuers using revokeCert
Similar to the existing behavior, we'll prevent the revocation of
existing issuer certificates from the existing /revoke/:serial endpoint
for now. This is because a serial number alone is not enough information
(in the worst case) to precisely identify an issuer (as intermediates
signed by two separate external (e.g., OpenSSL) CAs using incremental
serial numbers might have the same serial number).
Additionally, we fix revoking certs on performance secondary clusters,
when they've not yet been migrated.
In a separate change, we'll open up a separate code path to revoke
issuers, ensuring we know exactly which issuer is revoked (and which CRL
it should belong on at time of revocation).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add warning when revoking expired cert
This prevents confusion when a nil response (with no revocation info) is
returned; requesters are informed that the specified certificate has
already expired.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Starter PKI CA Storage API (#14796)
* Simple starting PKI storage api for CA rotation
* Add key and issuer storage apis
* Add listKeys and listIssuers storage implementations
* Add simple keys and issuers configuration storage api methods
* Handle resolving key, issuer references
The API context will usually have a user-specified reference to the key.
This is either the literal string "default" to select the default key,
an identifier of the key, or a slug name for the key. Here, we wish to
resolve this reference to an actual identifier that can be understood by
storage.
Also adds the missing Name field to keys.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add method to fetch an issuer's cert bundle
This adds a method to construct a certutil.CertBundle from the specified
issuer identifier, optionally loading its corresponding key for signing.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Refactor certutil PrivateKey PEM handling
This refactors the parsing of PrivateKeys from PEM blobs into shared
methods (ParsePEMKey, ParseDERKey) that can be reused by the existing
Bundle parsing logic (ParsePEMBundle) or independently in the new
issuers/key-based PKI storage code.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add importKey, importCert to PKI storage
importKey is generally preferable to the low-level writeKey for adding
new entries. This takes only the contents of the private key (as a
string -- so a PEM bundle or a managed key handle) and checks if it
already exists in the storage.
If it does, it returns the existing key instance.
Otherwise, we create a new one. In the process, we detect any issuers
using this key and link them back to the new key entry.
The same holds for importCert over importKey, with the note that keys
are not modified when importing certificates.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add tests for importing issuers, keys
This adds tests for importing keys and issuers into the new storage
layout, ensuring that identifiers are correctly inferred and linked.
Note that directly writing entries to storage (writeKey/writeissuer)
will take KeyID links from the parent entry and should not be used for
import; only existing entries should be updated with this info.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Implement PKI storage migration.
- Hook into the backend::initialize function, calling the migration on a primary only.
- Migrate an existing certificate bundle to the new issuers and key layout
* Make fetchCAInfo aware of new storage layout
This allows fetchCAInfo to fetch a specified issuer, via a reference
parameter provided by the user. We pass that into the storage layer and
have it return a cert bundle for us. Finally, we need to validate that
it truly has the key desired.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Begin /issuers API endpoints
This implements the fetch operations around issuers in the PKI Secrets
Engine. We implement the following operations:
- LIST /issuers - returns a list of known issuers' IDs and names.
- GET /issuer/:ref - returns a JSON blob with information about this
issuer.
- POST /issuer/:ref - allows configuring information about issuers,
presently just its name.
- DELETE /issuer/:ref - allows deleting the specified issuer.
- GET /issuer/:ref/{der,pem} - returns a raw API response with just
the DER (or PEM) of the issuer's certificate.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add import to PKI Issuers API
This adds the two core import code paths to the API:
/issuers/import/cert and /issuers/import/bundle. The former differs from
the latter in that the latter allows the import of keys. This allows
operators to restrict importing of keys to privileged roles, while
allowing more operators permission to import additional certificates
(not used for signing, but instead for path/chain building).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add /issuer/:ref/sign-intermediate endpoint
This endpoint allows existing issuers to be used to sign intermediate
CA certificates. In the process, we've updated the existing
/root/sign-intermediate endpoint to be equivalent to a call to
/issuer/default/sign-intermediate.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add /issuer/:ref/sign-self-issued endpoint
This endpoint allows existing issuers to be used to sign self-signed
certificates. In the process, we've updated the existing
/root/sign-self-issued endpoint to be equivalent to a call to
/issuer/default/sign-self-issued.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add /issuer/:ref/sign-verbatim endpoint
This endpoint allows existing issuers to be used to directly sign CSRs.
In the process, we've updated the existing /sign-verbatim endpoint to be
equivalent to a call to /issuer/:ref/sign-verbatim.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Allow configuration of default issuers
Using the new updateDefaultIssuerId(...) from the storage migration PR
allows for easy implementation of configuring the default issuer. We
restrict callers from setting blank defaults and setting default to
default.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Fix fetching default issuers
After setting a default issuer, one should be able to use the old /ca,
/ca_chain, and /cert/{ca,ca_chain} endpoints to fetch the default issuer
(and its chain). Update the fetchCertBySerial helper to no longer
support fetching the ca and prefer fetchCAInfo for that instead (as
we've already updated that to support fetching the new issuer location).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add /issuer/:ref/{sign,issue}/:role
This updates the /sign and /issue endpoints, allowing them to take the
default issuer (if none is provided by a role) and adding
issuer-specific versions of them.
Note that at this point in time, the behavior isn't yet ideal (as
/sign/:role allows adding the ref=... parameter to override the default
issuer); a later change adding role-based issuer specification will fix
this incorrect behavior.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add support root issuer generation
* Add support for issuer generate intermediate end-point
* Update issuer and key arguments to consistent values
- Update all new API endpoints to use the new agreed upon argument names.
- issuer_ref & key_ref to refer to existing
- issuer_name & key_name for new definitions
- Update returned values to always user issuer_id and key_id
* Add utility methods to fetch common ref and name arguments
- Add utility methods to fetch the issuer_name, issuer_ref, key_name and key_ref arguments from data fields.
- Centralize the logic to clean up these inputs and apply various validations to all of them.
* Rename common PKI backend handlers
- Use the buildPath convention for the function name instead of common...
* Move setting PKI defaults from writeCaBundle to proper import{keys,issuer} methods
- PR feedback, move setting up the default configuration references within
the import methods instead of within the writeCaBundle method. This should
now cover all use cases of us setting up the defaults properly.
* Introduce constants for issuer_ref, rename isKeyDefaultSet...
* Fix legacy PKI sign-verbatim api path
- Addresses some test failures due to an incorrect refactoring of a legacy api
path /sign-verbatim within PKI
* Use import code to handle intermediate, config/ca
The existing bundle import code will satisfy the intermediate import;
use it instead of the old ca_bundle import logic. Additionally, update
/config/ca to use the new import code as well.
While testing, a panic was discovered:
> reflect.Value.SetMapIndex: value of type string is not assignable to type pki.keyId
This was caused by returning a map with type issuerId->keyId; instead
switch to returning string->string maps so the audit log can properly
HMAC them.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Clarify error message on missing defaults
When the default issuer and key are missing (and haven't yet been
specified), we should clarify that error message.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Update test semantics for new changes
This makes two minor changes to the existing test suite:
1. Importing partial bundles should now succeed, where they'd
previously error.
2. fetchCertBySerial no longer handles CA certificates.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add support for deleting all keys, issuers
The old DELETE /root code must now delete all keys and issuers for
backwards compatibility. We strongly suggest calling individual delete
methods (DELETE /key/:key_ref or DELETE /issuer/:issuer_ref) instead,
for finer control.
In the process, we detect whether the deleted key/issuers was set as the
default. This will allow us to warn (from the single key/deletion issuer
code) whether or not the default was deleted (while allowing the
operation to succeed).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Introduce defaultRef constant within PKI
- Replace hardcoded "default" references with a constant to easily identify various usages.
- Use the addIssuerRefField function instead of redefining the field in various locations.
* Rework PKI test TestBackend_Root_Idempotency
- Validate that generate/root calls are no longer idempotent, but the bundle importing
does not generate new keys/issuers
- As before make sure that the delete root api resets everything
- Address a bug within the storage that we bombed when we had multiple different
key types within storage.
* Assign Name=current to migrated key and issuer
- Detail I missed from the RFC was to assign the Name field as "current" for migrated key and issuer.
* Build CRL upon PKI intermediary set-signed api called
- Add a call to buildCRL if we created an issuer within pathImportIssuers
- Augment existing FullCAChain to verify we have a proper CRL post set-signed api call
- Remove a code block writing out "ca" storage entry that is no longer used.
* Identify which certificate or key failed
When importing complex chains, we should identify in which certificate
or key the failure occurred.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* PKI migration writes out empty migration log entry
- Since the elements of the struct were not exported we serialized an empty
migration log to disk and would re-run the migration
* Add chain-building logic to PKI issuers path
With the one-entry-per-issuer approach, CA Chains become implicitly
constructed from the pool of issuers. This roughly matches the existing
expectations from /config/ca (wherein a chain could be provided) and
/intemediate/set-signed (where a chain may be provided). However, in
both of those cases, we simply accepted a chain. Here, we need to be
able to reconstruct the chain from parts on disk.
However, with potential rotation of roots, we need to be aware of
disparate chains. Simply concating together all issuers isn't
sufficient. Thus we need to be able to parse a certificate's Issuer and
Subject field and reconstruct valid (and potentially parallel)
parent<->child mappings.
This attempts to handle roots, intermediates, cross-signed
intermediates, cross-signed roots, and rotated keys (wherein one might
not have a valid signature due to changed key material with the same
subject).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Return CA Chain when fetching issuers
This returns the CA Chain attribute of an issuer, showing its computed
chain based on other issuers in the database, when fetching a specific
issuer.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add testing for chain building
Using the issuance infrastructure, we generate new certificates (either
roots or intermediates), positing that this is roughly equivalent to
importing an external bundle (minus error handling during partial
imports). This allows us to incrementally construct complex chains,
creating reissuance cliques and cross-signing cycles.
By using ECDSA certificates, we avoid high signature verification and
key generation times.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Allow manual construction of issuer chain
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Fix handling of duplicate names
With the new issuer field (manual_chain), we can no longer err when a
name already exists: we might be updating the existing issuer (with the
same name), but changing its manual_chain field. Detect this error and
correctly handle it.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add tests for manual chain building
We break the clique, instead building these chains manually, ensuring
that the remaining chains do not change and only the modified certs
change. We then reset them (back to implicit chain building) and ensure
we get the same results as earlier.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add stricter verification of issuers PEM format
This ensures each issuer is only a single certificate entry (as
validated by count and parsing) without any trailing data.
We further ensure that each certificate PEM has leading and trailing
spaces removed with only a single trailing new line remaining.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Fix full chain building
Don't set the legacy IssuingCA field on the certificate bundle, as we
prefer the CAChain field over it.
Additionally, building the full chain could result in duplicate
certificates when the CAChain included the leaf certificate itself. When
building the full chain, ensure we don't include the bundle's
certificate twice.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add stricter tests for full chain construction
We wish to ensure that each desired certificate in the chain is only
present once.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Rename PKI types to avoid constant variable name collisions
keyId -> keyID
issuerId -> issuerID
key -> keyEntry
issuer -> issuerEntry
keyConfig -> keyConfigEntry
issuerConfig -> issuerConfigEntry
* Update CRL handling for multiple issuers
When building CRLs, we've gotta make sure certs issued by that issuer
land up on that issuer's CRL and not some other CRL. If no CRL is
found (matching a cert), we'll place it on the default CRL.
However, in the event of equivalent issuers (those with the same subject
AND the same key material) -- perhaps due to reissuance -- we'll only
create a single (unified) CRL for them.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Allow fetching updated CRL locations
This updates fetchCertBySerial to support querying the default issuer's
CRL.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Remove legacy CRL storage location test case
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Update to CRLv2 Format to copy RawIssuer
When using the older Certificate.CreateCRL(...) call, Go's x509 library
copies the parsed pkix.Name version of the CRL Issuer's Subject field.
For certain constructed CAs, this fails since pkix.Name is not suitable
for round-tripping. This also builds a CRLv1 (per RFC 5280) CRL.
In updating to the newer x509.CreateRevocationList(...) call, we can
construct the CRL in the CRLv2 format and correctly copy the issuer's
name. However, this requires holding an additional field per-CRL, the
CRLNumber field, which is required in Go's implementation of CRLv2
(though OPTIONAL in the spec). We store this on the new
LocalCRLConfigEntry object, per-CRL.
Co-authored-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add comment regarding CRL non-assignment in GOTO
In previous versions of Vault, it was possible to sign an empty CRL
(when the CRL was disabled and a force-rebuild was requested). Add a
comment about this case.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Allow fetching the specified issuer's CRL
We add a new API endpoint to fetch the specified issuer's CRL directly
(rather than the default issuer's CRL at /crl and /certs/crl). We also
add a new test to validate the CRL in a multi-root scenario and ensure
it is signed with the correct keys.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add new PKI key prefix to seal wrapped storage (#15126)
* Refactor common backend initialization within backend_test
- Leverage an existing helper method within the PKI backend tests to setup a PKI backend with storage.
* Add ability to read legacy cert bundle if the migration has not occurred on secondaries.
- Track the migration state forbidding an issuer/key writing api call if we have not migrated
- For operations that just need to read the CA bundle, use the same tracking variable to
switch between reading the legacy bundle or use the new key/issuer storage.
- Add an invalidation function that will listen for updates to our log path to refresh the state
on secondary clusters.
* Always write migration entry to trigger secondary clusters to wake up
- Some PR feedback and handle a case in which the primary cluster does
not have a CA bundle within storage but somehow a secondary does.
* Update CA Chain to report entire chain
This merges the ca_chain JSON field (of the /certs/ca_chain path) with
the regular certificate field, returning the root of trust always. This
also affects the non-JSON (raw) endpoints as well.
We return the default issuer's chain here, rather than all known issuers
(as that may not form a strict chain).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Allow explicit issuer override on roles
When a role is used to generate a certificate (such as with the sign/
and issue/ legacy paths or the legacy sign-verbatim/ paths), we prefer
that issuer to the one on the request. This allows operators to set an
issuer (other than default) for requests to be issued against,
effectively making the change no different from the users' perspective
as it is "just" a different role name.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add tests for role-based issuer selection
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Expand NotAfter limit enforcement behavior
Vault previously strictly enforced NotAfter/ttl values on certificate
requests, erring if the requested TTL extended past the NotAfter date of
the issuer. In the event of issuing an intermediate, this behavior was
ignored, instead permitting the issuance.
Users generally do not think to check their issuer's NotAfter date when
requesting a certificate; thus this behavior was generally surprising.
Per RFC 5280 however, issuers need to maintain status information
throughout the life cycle of the issued cert. If this leaf cert were to
be issued for a longer duration than the parent issuer, the CA must
still maintain revocation information past its expiration.
Thus, we add an option to the issuer to change the desired behavior:
- err, to err out,
- permit, to permit the longer NotAfter date, or
- truncate, to silently truncate the expiration to the issuer's
NotAfter date.
Since expiration of certificates in the system's trust store are not
generally validated (when validating an arbitrary leaf, e.g., during TLS
validation), permit should generally only be used in that case. However,
browsers usually validate intermediate's validity periods, and thus
truncate should likely be used (as with permit, the leaf's chain will
not validate towards the end of the issuance period).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add tests for expanded issuance behaviors
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add warning on keyless default issuer (#15178)
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Update PKI to new Operations framework (#15180)
The backend Framework has updated Callbacks (used extensively in PKI) to
become deprecated; Operations takes their place and clarifies forwarding
of requests.
We switch to the new format everywhere, updating some bad assumptions
about forwarding along the way. Anywhere writes are handled (that should
be propagated to all nodes in all clusters), we choose to forward the
request all the way up to the performance primary cluster's primary
node. This holds for issuers/keys, roles, and configs (such as CRL
config, which is globally set for all clusters despite all clusters
having their own separate CRL).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Kitography/vault 5474 rebase (#15150)
* These parts work (put in signature so that backend wouldn't break, but missing fields, desc, etc.)
* Import and Generate API calls w/ needed additions to SDK.
* make fmt
* Add Help/Sync Text, fix some of internal/exported/kms code.
* Fix PEM/DER Encoding issue.
* make fmt
* Standardize keyIdParam, keyNameParam, keyTypeParam
* Add error response if key to be deleted is in use.
* replaces all instances of "default" in code with defaultRef
* Updates from Callbacks to Operations Function with explicit forwarding.
* Fixes a panic with names not being updated everywhere.
* add a logged error in addition to warning on deleting default key.
* Normalize whitespace upon importing keys.
Authored-by: Alexander Scheel <alexander.m.scheel@gmail.com>
* Fix isKeyInUse functionality.
* Fixes tests associated with newline at end of key pem.
* Add alternative proposal PKI aliased paths (#15211)
* Add aliased path for root/rotate/:exported
This adds a user-friendly path name for generating a rotated root. We
automatically choose the name "next" for the newly generated root at
this path if it doesn't already exist.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add aliased path for intermediate/cross-sign
This allows cross-signatures to work.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add path for replacing the current root
This updates default to point to the value of the issuer with name
"next" rather than its current value.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Remove plural issuers/ in signing paths
These paths use a single issuer and thus shouldn't include the plural
issuers/ as a path prefix, instead using the singular issuer/ path
prefix.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Only warn if default issuer was imported
When the default issuer was not (re-)imported, we'd fail to find it,
causing an extraneous warning about missing keys, even though this
issuer indeed had a key.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add missing issuer sign/issue paths
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Clean up various warnings within the PKI package (#15230)
* Rebuild CRLs on secondary performance clusters post migration and on new/updated issuers
- Hook into the backend invalidation function so that secondaries are notified of
new/updated issuer or migrations occuring on the primary cluster. Upon notification
schedule a CRL rebuild to take place upon the next process to read/update the CRL
or within the periodic function if no request comes in.
* Schedule rebuilding PKI CRLs on active nodes only
- Address an issue that we were scheduling the rebuilding of a CRL on standby
nodes, which would not be able to write to storage.
- Fix an issue with standby nodes not correctly determining that a migration previously
occurred.
* Return legacy CRL storage path when no migration has occurred.
* Handle issuer, keys locking (#15227)
* Handle locking of issuers during writes
We need a write lock around writes to ensure serialization of
modifications. We use a single lock for both issuer and key
updates, in part because certain operations (like deletion) will
potentially affect both.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add missing b.useLegacyBundleCaStorage guards
Several locations needed to guard against early usage of the new issuers
endpoint pre-migration.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Address PKI to properly support managed keys (#15256)
* Address codebase for managed key fixes
* Add proper public key comparison for better managed key support to importKeys
* Remove redundant public key fetching within PKI importKeys
* Correctly handle rebuilding remaining chains
When deleting a specific issuer, we might impact the chains. From a
consistency perspective, we need to ensure the remaining chains are
correct and don't refer to the since-deleted issuer, so trigger a full
rebuild here.
We don't need to call this in the delete-the-world (DELETE /root) code
path, as there shouldn't be any remaining issuers or chains to build.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Remove legacy CRL bundle on world deletion
When calling DELETE /root, we should remove the legacy CRL bundle, since
we're deleting the legacy CA issuer bundle as well.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Remove deleted issuers' CRL entries
Since CRLs are no longer resolvable after deletion (due to missing
issuer ID, which will cause resolution to fail regardless of if an ID or
a name/default reference was used), we should delete these CRLs from
storage to avoid leaking them.
In the event that this issuer comes back (with key material), we can
simply rebuild the CRL at that time (from the remaining revoked storage
entries).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add unauthed JSON fetching of CRLs, Issuers (#15253)
Default to fetching JSON CRL for consistency
This makes the bare issuer-specific CRL fetching endpoint return the
JSON-wrapped CRL by default, moving the DER CRL to a specific endpoint.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
Add JSON-specific endpoint for fetching issuers
Unlike the unqualified /issuer/:ref endpoint (which also returns JSON),
we have a separate /issuer/:ref/json endpoint to return _only_ the
PEM-encoded certificate and the chain, mirroring the existing /cert/ca
endpoint but for a specific issuer. This allows us to make the endpoint
unauthenticated, whereas the bare endpoint would remain authenticated
and usually privileged.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
Add tests for raw JSON endpoints
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add unauthenticated issuers endpoints to PKI table
This adds the unauthenticated issuers endpoints?
- LIST /issuers,
- Fetching _just_ the issuer certificates (in JSON/DER/PEM form), and
- Fetching the CRL of this issuer (in JSON/DER/PEM form).
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* Add issuer usage restrictions bitset
This allows issuers to have usage restrictions, limiting whether they
can be used to issue certificates or if they can generate CRLs. This
allows certain issuers to not generate a CRL (if the global config is
with the CRL enabled) or allows the issuer to not issue new certificates
(but potentially letting the CRL generation continue).
Setting both fields to false effectively forms a soft delete capability.
Signed-off-by: Alexander Scheel <alex.scheel@hashicorp.com>
* PKI Pod rotation Add Base Changelog (#15283)
* PKI Pod rotation changelog.
* Use feature release-note formatting of changelog.
Co-authored-by: Steven Clark <steven.clark@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: Kit Haines <kit.haines@hashicorp.com>
Co-authored-by: kitography <khaines@mit.edu>
* add wrapping key endpoint
* change how wrapping key is stored
* move wrapping key func to backend
* refactor wrapping key generation
* Initial unit tests for Transit wrapping key endpoint
* Wire up wrapping key unit tests to actual implementation.
* Clean up Transit BYOK wrapping key tests and imports.
* Fix Transit wrapping key endpoint formatting.
* Update transit wrapping key to use lock manager for safe concurrent use.
* Rename some Transit wrapping key variables. Ensure the Transit wrapping key is correctly typed and formatted in a unit test.
* Fix spacing issue in Transit wrapping key endpoint help string.
Co-authored-by: rculpepper <rculpepper@hashicorp.com>
* Allow callers to choose the entropy source for the random endpoints
* Put source in the URL for sys as well
* changelog
* docs
* Fix unit tests, and add coverage
* refactor to use a single common implementation
* Update documentation
* one more tweak
* more cleanup
* Readd lost test expected code
* fmt
VAULT-5827 Don't prepare SQL queries before executing them
We don't support proper prepared statements, i.e., preparing once and
executing many times since we do our own templating. So preparing our
queries does not really accomplish anything, and can have severe
performance impacts (see
https://github.com/hashicorp/vault-plugin-database-snowflake/issues/13
for example).
This behavior seems to have been copy-pasted for many years but not for
any particular reason that we have been able to find. First use was in
https://github.com/hashicorp/vault/pull/15
So here we switch to new methods suffixed with `Direct` to indicate
that they don't `Prepare` before running `Exec`, and switch everything
here to use those. We maintain the older methods with the existing
behavior (with `Prepare`) for backwards compatibility.
* Bootstrap Nomad ACL system if no token is given
Similar to the [Bootstrap the Consul ACL system if no token is given][boostrap-consul]
it would be very useful to bootstrap Nomads ACL system and manage it in
Vault.
[boostrap-consul]:https://github.com/hashicorp/vault/pull/10751
* Add changelog entry
* Remove debug log line
* Remove redundant else
* Rename Nomad acl bootstrap param
* Replace sleep with attempt to list nomad leader, setup will retry until successful
* fmt
- As part of the PKI rotation project we need to hook into some of the functions
that were factored out for managed keys in regards to key handling within the
CA bundles.
- Refactor the codebase so that we only extract managed key stuff from oss/ent
and not additional business logic.
VAULT-5827 Update mongodb, brotli
Closes https://github.com/hashicorp/vault-plugin-secrets-mongodbatlas/issues/11
* `brotli` 1.0.1 was withdrawn
* `go-client-mongodb-atlas` has an old dependency on a renamed repo, and
has been renamed twice. This caused issues in
https://github.com/hashicorp/vault-plugin-secrets-mongodbatlas/issues/11
for example.
* VAULT-5827 Set unwrap token during database tests
The unwrap token is necessary for the plugins to start correctly when
running when running acceptance tests locally, e.g.,
```
$ VAULT_MONGODBATLAS_PROJECT_ID=... VAULT_MONGODBATLAS_PRIVATE_KEY=... VAULT_MONGODBATLAS_PUBLIC_KEY=... TEST='-run TestBackend_StaticRole_Rotations_MongoDBAtlas github.com/hashicorp/vault/builtin/logical/database' make test
--- FAIL: TestBackend_StaticRole_Rotations_MongoDBAtlas (5.33s)
rotation_test.go:818: err:%!s(<nil>) resp:&logical.Response{Secret:<nil>, Auth:<nil>, Data:map[string]interface {}{"error":"error creating database object: invalid database version: 2 errors occurred:\n\t* Unrecognized remote plugin message: PASS\n\nThis usually means that the plugin is either invalid or simply\nneeds to be recompiled to support the latest protocol.\n\t* Incompatible API version with plugin. Plugin version: 5, Client versions: [3 4]\n\n"}, Redirect:"", Warnings:[]string(nil), WrapInfo:(*wrapping.ResponseWrapInfo)(nil), Headers:map[string][]string(nil)}
```
Note the `PASS` message there, which indicates that the plugin exited
before starting the RPC server.
* Warnings indicating ignored and replaced parameters
* Avoid additional var creation
* Add warnings only if the response is non-nil
* Return the response even when error is non-nil
* Fix tests
* Rearrange comments
* Print warning in the log
* Fix another test
* Add CL