* 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
In addition to the specific permissions that are already mentioned, the project also needs the `iam.googleapis.com` API enabled, otherwise authenticating will fail with an error similar to:
```
Error authenticating: Error making API request.
URL: PUT https://localhost:8200/v1/auth/gcp/login
Code: 400. Errors:
* could not find service account key or Google Oauth cert with given 'kid' id
```
* allow passing a path for options so that it can be extracted from the model
* add cred type selector for the aws generate form
* style hint text on generate creds form
* add tests for aws-credential adapter
* allow for the case where we might have zero ttl
* show error for TTL picker if a non-number is entered for the duration part of the TTL
* fix positioning of tooltips
* fix ttl rendering with invalid input for initialValue
* allow for enterprise init attributes
* allow moving from init to auth in the init flow on the tutorial machine
* show loading spinner while cluster is unsealing
* use seal-status type to determine the init attrs
* add init acceptance tests
* stored_shares should always be 1
* fix lint
* format template
* remove explicity model attr from init controller
Specifying the `allowed_organiztaional_units` parameter to a cert auth
backend role will require client certificates to contain at least one of
a list of one or more "organizational units" (OU).
Example use cases:
Certificates are issued to entities in an organization arrangement by
organizational unit (OU). The OU may be a department, team, or any other logical
grouping of resources with similar roles. The entities within the OU
should be granted the same policies.
```
$ vault write auth/cert/certs/ou-engineering \
certificate=@ca.pem \
policies=engineering \
allowed_organiztaional_units=engineering
$ vault write auth/cert/certs/ou-engineering \
certificate=@ca.pem \
policies=engineering \
allowed_organiztaional_units=engineering,support
```
* logical/aws: Harden WAL entry creation
If AWS IAM user creation failed in any way, the WAL corresponding to the
IAM user would get left around and Vault would try to roll it back.
However, because the user never existed, the rollback failed. Thus, the
WAL would essentially get "stuck" and Vault would continually attempt to
roll it back, failing every time. A similar situation could arise if the
IAM user that Vault created got deleted out of band, or if Vault deleted
it but was unable to write the lease revocation back to storage (e.g., a
storage failure).
This attempts to harden it in two ways. One is by deleting the WAL log
entry if the IAM user creation fails. However, the WAL deletion could
still fail, and this wouldn't help where the user is deleted out of
band, so second, consider the user rolled back if the user just doesn't
exist, under certain circumstances.
Fixes#5190
* Fix segfault in expiration unit tests
TestExpiration_Tidy was passing in a leaseEntry that had a nil Secret,
which then caused a segfault as the changes to revokeEntry didn't check
whether Secret was nil; this is probably unlikely to occur in real life,
but good to be extra cautious.
* Fix potential segfault
Missed the else...
* Respond to PR feedback
The addition of CheckMigration to the server startup process means
that physical backends in this test need to be able to respond to Get() without error.
* auth/aws: Make identity alias configurable
This is inspired by #4178, though not quite exactly what is requested
there. Rather than just use RoleSessionName as the Identity alias, the
full ARN is uses as the Alias. This mitigates against concerns that an
AWS role with an insufficiently secured trust policy could allow an
attacker to generate arbitrary RoleSessionNames in AssumeRole calls to
impersonate anybody in the Identity store that had an alias set up.
By using the full ARN, the owner of the identity store has to explicitly
trust specific AWS roles in specific AWS accounts to generate an
appropriate RoleSessionName to map back to an identity.
Fixes#4178
* Respond to PR feedback
* Remove CreateOperation
Response to PR feedback