* Add /sys/config/audited-headers endpoint for configuring the headers that will be audited
* Remove some debug lines
* Add a persistant layer and refactor a bit
* update the api endpoints to be more restful
* Add comments and clean up a few functions
* Remove unneeded hash structure functionaility
* Fix existing tests
* Add tests
* Add test for Applying the header config
* Add Benchmark for the ApplyConfig method
* ResetTimer on the benchmark:
* Update the headers comment
* Add test for audit broker
* Use hyphens instead of camel case
* Add size paramater to the allocation of the result map
* Fix the tests for the audit broker
* PR feedback
* update the path and permissions on config/* paths
* Add docs file
* Fix TestSystemBackend_RootPaths test
* Request/Response field extension
* Parsing of header into request object
* Handling of duration/mount point within router
* Tests of router WrapDuration handling
This commit splits ACL policies into more fine-grained capabilities.
This both drastically simplifies the checking code and makes it possible
to support needed workflows that are not possible with the previous
method. It is backwards compatible; policies containing a "policy"
string are simply converted to a set of capabilities matching previous
behavior.
Fixes#724 (and others).
/cc @armon - This is a reasonably major refactor that I think cleans up
a lot of the logic with secrets in responses. The reason for the
refactor is that while implementing Renew/Revoke in logical/framework I
found the existing API to be really awkward to work with.
Primarily, we needed a way to send down internal data for Vault core to
store since not all the data you need to revoke a key is always sent
down to the user (for example the user than AWS key belongs to).
At first, I was doing this manually in logical/framework with
req.Storage, but this is going to be such a common event that I think
its something core should assist with. Additionally, I think the added
context for secrets will be useful in the future when we have a Vault
API for returning orphaned out keys: we can also return the internal
data that might help an operator.
So this leads me to this refactor. I've removed most of the fields in
`logical.Response` and replaced it with a single `*Secret` pointer. If
this is non-nil, then the response represents a secret. The Secret
struct encapsulates all the lease info and such.
It also has some fields on it that are only populated at _request_ time
for Revoke/Renew operations. There is precedent for this sort of
behavior in the Go stdlib where http.Request/http.Response have fields
that differ based on client/server. I copied this style.
All core unit tests pass. The APIs fail for obvious reasons but I'll fix
that up in the next commit.