* Refactor PG container creation.
* Rework rotation tests to use shorter sleeps.
* Refactor rotation tests.
* Add a static role rotation test for MongoDB Atlas.
* Don't use string formatting to prepare queries.
We should, when possible, use the built-in params and ? format when
preparing and executing a query. This is done to prevent SQL Injection
attacks.
* Revert some changes due to failing tests, update mssql go driver
* Add docker container startup for some MSSQL tests
* Remove acceptance test flagging, add more SQL injection protection
* Refactor MSSQL prepareTestContainer to a test helper
Also, remove all ? references and convert them to @p*
* helpful errors: print not only CN but also exactly what we are comparing
* helpful errors: return different errors for non-existent and unknown keys
* helpful errors: print error about encrypted key instead of "private key not found"
* fix: rotate root credentials for database plugins using WAL
* test: adds a test for WAL rollback logic
* fix: progress on wal rollback
* docs: updates some comments
* docs: updates some comments
* test: adds additional test coverage for WAL rollback
* chore: remove unneeded log
* style: error handling, imports, signature line wraps
* fix: always close db plugin connection
* RSA3072 implementation in transit secrets engine
* moved new KeyType at the end of the list
So already stored keys still work properly
Co-authored-by: Jim Kalafut <jim@kalafut.net>
* adding support for TLS 1.3 for TCP listeners
* removed test as CI uses go 1.12
* removed Cassandra support, added deprecation notice
* re-added TestTCPListener_tls13
* Switch mongodb driver to mongo-driver
* Tidy mod
* Make writeConcern private
* Implement review feedback
* Add retry functionality
* Added backoff time
* go mod vendor
* Fix failing test
* goimport
If a CSR contains a SAN of type otherName, encoded in UTF-8, and the signing role specifies use_csr_sans, the otherName SAN will be included in the signed cert's SAN extension.
Allow single star in allowed_other_sans to match any OtherName. Update documentation to clarify globbing behaviour.
* secrets/aws: Support permissions boundaries on iam_user creds
This allows configuring Vault to attach a permissions boundary policy to
IAM users that it creates, configured on a per-Vault-role basis.
* Fix indentation of policy in docs
Use spaces instead of tabs
I probably left this cleanup commented out as part of debugging test
errors in #6789 and forgot to uncomment it, so actually cleaning up the
test user.
* secret/aws: Pass policy ARNs to AssumedRole and FederationToken roles
AWS now allows you to pass policy ARNs as well as, and in addition to,
policy documents for AssumeRole and GetFederationToken (see
https://aws.amazon.com/about-aws/whats-new/2019/05/session-permissions/).
Vault already collects policy ARNs for iam_user credential types; now it
will allow policy ARNs for assumed_role and federation_token credential
types and plumb them through to the appropriate AWS calls.
This brings along a minor breaking change. Vault roles of the
federation_token credential type are now required to have either a
policy_document or a policy_arns specified. This was implicit
previously; a missing policy_document would result in a validation error
from the AWS SDK when retrieving credentials. However, it would still
allow creating a role that didn't have a policy_document specified and
then later specifying it, after which retrieving the AWS credentials
would work. Similar workflows in which the Vault role didn't have a
policy_document specified for some period of time, such as deleting the
policy_document and then later adding it back, would also have worked
previously but will now be broken.
The reason for this breaking change is because a credential_type of
federation_token without either a policy_document or policy_arns
specified will return credentials that have equivalent permissions to
the credentials the Vault server itself is using. This is quite
dangerous (e.g., it could allow Vault clients access to retrieve
credentials that could modify Vault's underlying storage) and so should
be discouraged. This scenario is still possible when passing in an
appropriate policy_document or policy_arns parameter, but clients should
be explicitly aware of what they are doing and opt in to it by passing
in the appropriate role parameters.
* Error out on dangerous federation token retrieval
The AWS secrets role code now disallows creation of a dangerous role
configuration; however, pre-existing roles could have existed that would
trigger this now-dangerous code path, so also adding a check for this
configuration at credential retrieval time.
* Run makefmt
* Fix tests
* Fix comments/docs
This refactors role validation for the AWS secrets engine to be in a
separate method. Previously, all validation was interspersed with the
parsing of parameters when creating/updating a role, which led to a high
degree of complexity. Now, all validation is centralized which makes it
easier to understand and also easier to test (and so a number of test
cases have been added).
* Add maximum amount of random characters requested at any given time
* Readability changes
* Removing sys/tools/random from the default policy
* Setting the maxBytes value as const
* Declaring maxBytes in the package to use it everywhere
* Using maxBytes in the error message
* Implement SetCredentials for MongoDB, adding support for static accounts
* rework SetCredentials to split from CreateUser, and to parse the url for database
* Add integration test for mongodb static account rotation
* check the length of the password results to avoid out-of-bounds
* remove unused method
* use the pre-existing test helper for this. Add parse method to helper
* remove unused command