* 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.
If we get to respondStandby but we're actually not in an HA cluster, we
should instead indicate the correct status to the user. Although it
might be better to change any such behavior upstream, if any upstream
code manages this state we should still handle it correctly.
Fixes#4873
* Allow max request size to be user-specified
This turned out to be way more impactful than I'd expected because I
felt like the right granularity was per-listener, since an org may want
to treat external clients differently from internal clients. It's pretty
straightforward though.
This also introduces actually using request contexts for values, which
so far we have not done (using our own logical.Request struct instead),
but this allows non-logical methods to still get this benefit.
* Switch to ioutil.ReadAll()
* This changes the way policies are reported in audit logs.
Previously, only policies tied to tokens would be reported. This could
make it difficult to perform after-the-fact analysis based on both the
initial response entry and further requests. Now, the full set of
applicable policies from both the token and any derived policies from
Identity are reported.
To keep things consistent, token authentications now also return the
full set of policies in api.Secret.Auth responses, so this both makes it
easier for users to understand their actual full set, and it matches
what the audit logs now report.
Taking inspiration from
https://github.com/golang/go/issues/17604#issuecomment-256384471
suggests that taking the address of a stack variable for use in atomics
works (at least, the race detector doesn't complain) but is doing it
wrong.
The only other change is a change in Leader() detecting if HA is enabled
to fast-path out. This value never changes after NewCore, so we don't
need to grab the read lock to check it.
This takes place in two parts, since working on this exposed an issue
with response wrapping when there is a raw body set. The changes are (in
diff order):
* A CurrentWrappingLookupFunc has been added to return the current
value. This is necessary for the lookahead call since we don't want the
lookahead call to be wrapped.
* Support for unwrapping < 0.6.2 tokens via the API/CLI has been
removed, because we now have backends returning 404s with data and can't
rely on the 404 trick. These can still be read manually via
cubbyhole/response.
* KV preflight version request now ensures that its calls is not
wrapped, and restores any given function after.
* When responding with a raw body, instead of always base64-decoding a
string value and erroring on failure, on failure we assume that it
simply wasn't a base64-encoded value and use it as is.
* A test that fails on master and works now that ensures that raw body
responses that are wrapped and then unwrapped return the expected
values.
* A flag for response data that indicates to the wrapping handling that
the data contained therein is already JSON decoded (more later).
* RespondWithStatusCode now defaults to a string so that the value is
HMAC'd during audit. The function always JSON encodes the body, so
before now it was always returning []byte which would skip HMACing. We
don't know what's in the data, so this is a "better safe than sorry"
issue. If different behavior is needed, backends can always manually
populate the data instead of relying on the helper function.
* We now check unwrapped data after unwrapping to see if there were raw
flags. If so, we try to detect whether the value can be unbase64'd. The
reason is that if it can it was probably originally a []byte and
shouldn't be audit HMAC'd; if not, it was probably originally a string
and should be. In either case, we then set the value as the raw body and
hit the flag indicating that it's already been JSON decoded so not to
try again before auditing. Doing it this way ensures the right typing.
* There is now a check to see if the data coming from unwrapping is
already JSON decoded and if so the decoding is skipped before setting
the audit response.
* Update kv command to use a preflight check
* Make the existing ui endpoint return the allowed mounts
* Add kv subcommand tests
* Enable `-field` in `vault kv get/put` (#4426)
* Enable `-field` in `vault kv get/put`
Fixes#4424
* Unify nil value handling
* Use preflight helper
* Update vkv plugin
* Add all the mount info when authenticated
* Add fix the error message on put
* add metadata test
* No need to sort the capabilities
* Remove the kv client header
* kv patch command (#4432)
* Fix test
* Fix tests
* Use permission denied instead of entity disabled