* Fixes a regression in forwarding from #6115
Although removing the authentication header is good defense in depth,
for forwarding mechanisms that use the raw request, we never add it
back. This caused perf standby tests to throw errors. Instead, once
we're past the point at which we would do any raw forwarding, but before
routing the request, remove the header.
To speed this up, a flag is set in the logical.Request to indicate where
the token is sourced from. That way we don't iterate through maps
unnecessarily.
* Add helper for checking if an error is a fatal error
The double-double negative was really confusing, and this pattern is used a few places in Vault. This negates the double negative, making the devx a bit easier to follow.
* Check return value of UnsealWithStoredKeys in sys/init
* Return proper error types when attempting unseal with stored key
Prior to this commit, "nil" could have meant unsupported auto-unseal, a transient error, or success. This updates the function to return the correct error type, signaling to the caller whether they should retry or fail.
* Continuously attempt to unseal if sealed keys are supported
This fixes a bug that occurs on bootstrapping an initial cluster. Given a collection of Vault nodes and an initialized storage backend, they will all go into standby waiting for initialization. After one node is initialized, the other nodes had no mechanism by which they "re-check" to see if unseal keys are present. This adds a goroutine to the server command which continually waits for unseal keys to exist. It exits in the following conditions:
- the node is unsealed
- the node does not support stored keys
- a fatal error occurs (as defined by Vault)
- the server is shutting down
In all other situations, the routine wakes up at the specified interval and attempts to unseal with the stored keys.
The result will still pass gofmtcheck and won't trigger additional
changes if someone isn't using goimports, but it will avoid the
piecemeal imports changes we've been seeing.
* Refactor mount tune to support upsert options values and unset options.
* Do not allow unsetting options map
* add secret tune version regression test
* Only accept valid options version
* s/meVersion/optVersion/
* Support Authorization Bearer as token header
* add requestAuth test
* remove spew debug output in test
* Add Authorization in CORS Allowed headers
* use const where applicable
* use less allocations in bearer token checking
* address PR comments on tests and apply last commit
* reorder error checking in a TestHandler_requestAuth
* Initial implemntation of returning 529 for rate limits
- bump aws iam and sts packages to v1.14.31 to get mocking interface
- promote the iam and sts clients to the aws backend struct, for mocking in tests
- this also promotes some functions to methods on the Backend struct, so
that we can use the injected client
Generating creds requires reading config/root for credentials to contact
IAM. Here we make pathConfigRoot a method on aws/backend so we can clear
the clients on successful update of config/root path. Adds a mutex to
safely clear the clients
* refactor locking and unlocking into methods on *backend
* refactor/simply the locking
* check client after grabbing lock
We support this in the API as of 0.10.2 so read should support it too.
Trivially tested with some log info:
`core: data: data="map[string]interface {}{"zip":[]string{"zap", "zap2"}}"`
* Add request timeouts in normal request path and to expirations
* Add ability to adjust default max request duration
* Some test fixes
* Ensure tests have defaults set for max request duration
* Add context cancel checking to inmem/file
* Fix tests
* Fix tests
* Set default max request duration to basically infinity for this release for BC
* Address feedback
* Tackle #4929 a different way
This turns c.sealed into an atomic, which allows us to call sealInternal
without a lock. By doing so we can better control lock grabbing when a
condition causing the standby loop to get out of active happens. This
encapsulates that logic into two distinct pieces (although they could
be combined into one), and makes lock guarding more understandable.
* Re-add context canceling to the non-HA version of sealInternal
* Return explicitly after stopCh triggered
This change makes it so that if a lease is revoked through user action,
we set the expiration time to now and update pending, just as we do with
tokens. This allows the normal retry logic to apply in these cases as
well, instead of just erroring out immediately. The idea being that once
you tell Vault to revoke something it should keep doing its darndest to
actually make that happen.