This can be seen via System(). In the PKI backend, if the CA is
reconfigured but not fully (e.g. an intermediate CSR is generated but no
corresponding cert set) and there are already leases (issued certs), the
CRL is unable to be built. As a result revocation fails. But in this
case we don't actually need revocation to be successful since the CRL is
useless after unmounting. By checking taint status we know if we can
simply fast-path out of revocation with a success in this case.
Fixes#946
The secretAccessKeysRevoke revoke function now asserts that it is
not dealing with STS keys by checking a new internal data flag. Defaults
to IAM when the flag is not found.
Factored out genUsername into its own function to share between STS and
IAM secret creation functions.
Fixed bad call to "WriteOperation" instead of "UpdateOperation" in
aws/backend_test
The new STS path allows for obtaining the same credentials that you would get
from the AWS "creds" path, except it will also provide a security token, and
will not have an annoyingly long propagation time before returning to the user.
* Move to one place for both code paths
* Assign ExtKeyUsageAny to CA certs to help with validation with the
Windows Crypto API and Go's validation logic
Fixes#846
- Allow an email address to be the common name of a cert even if email
protection isn't in the role if any name is set to true (this allows
certificates with a common name entry of an email address but used for
other purposes; here just for CA cert signing).
- Don't check the user part of an email against the hostname regex.
Emails can contain e.g. "+" and "_" and these should be allowed even
though they're not part of a valid hostname.
Also, fix a nil pointer issue.
no common_name parameter is given, role-controlled for non-CA CSRs).
Fix logic around the CA/CRL endpoints. Now settable when generating a
self-signed root or setting a CA cert into the backend; if not set,
these values are not set in issued certs. Not required when signing an
intermediate cert (and in fact it was wrong to do so in the first
place).