* re-add plugin name for backwards compat
* add plugin name to table for backwards compat
* conditionally set the plugin name
* Update command/auth_list.go
Co-Authored-By: tyrannosaurus-becks <beccapetrin@posteo.net>
* Update command/secrets_list.go
Co-Authored-By: tyrannosaurus-becks <beccapetrin@posteo.net>
* update auth and secrets list commands
* add comments regarding deprecation
* Support registering plugin with name only
* Make RegisterPlugin backwards compatible
* Add CLI backwards compat command to plugin info and deregister
* Add server-side deprecation warnings if old read/dereg API endpoints are called
* Address feedback
As the CLI client is initialized with a specific Vault address, is makes
sense to use the pooled HTTP client here. This will prevent setting up
new TCP sessions for each API call that the client needs to make.
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 'plugin list' command
* Add 'plugin register' command
* Add 'plugin deregister' command
* Use a shared plugin helper
* Add 'plugin read' command
* Rename to plugin info
* Add base plugin for help text
* Fix arg ordering
* Add docs
* Rearrange to alphabetize
* Fix arg ordering in example
* Don't use "sudo" in command description
* Add description flag to secrets and auth tune subcommands
* Allow empty description to be provided in secret and auth mount tune
* Use flagNameDescription
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.
* 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.
* Redo API client locking
This assigns local values when in critical paths, allowing a single API
client to much more quickly and safely pipeline requests.
Additionally, in order to take that paradigm all the way it changes how
timeouts are set. It now uses a context value set on the request instead
of configuring the timeout in the http client per request, which was
also potentially quite racy.
Trivially tested with
VAULT_CLIENT_TIMEOUT=2 vault write pki/root/generate/internal key_type=rsa key_bits=8192