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.
* 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()
* Add an idle timeout for the server
Because tidy operations can be long-running, this also changes all tidy
operations to behave the same operationally (kick off the process, get a
warning back, log errors to server log) and makes them all run in a
goroutine.
This could mean a sort of hard stop if Vault gets sealed because the
function won't have the read lock. This should generally be okay
(running tidy again should pick back up where it left off), but future
work could use cleanup funcs to trigger the functions to stop.
* Fix up tidy test
* Add deadline to cluster connections and an idle timeout to the cluster server, plus add readheader/read timeout to api server
This can be used when errors are happening early on to avoid them being
swallowed by logGate.
This also does a bit of cleanup of format env var checking --
helper/logging internally looks for this so it was totally unnecessary
since moving to hclog.
* adding UI handlers and UI header configuration
* forcing specific static headers
* properly getting UI config value from config/environment
* fixing formatting in stub UI text
* use http.Header
* case-insensitive X-Vault header check
* fixing var name
* wrap both stubbed and real UI in header handler
* adding test for >1 keys
* logbridge with hclog and identical output
* Initial search & replace
This compiles, but there is a fair amount of TODO
and commented out code, especially around the
plugin logclient/logserver code.
* strip logbridge
* fix majority of tests
* update logxi aliases
* WIP fixing tests
* more test fixes
* Update test to hclog
* Fix format
* Rename hclog -> log
* WIP making hclog and logxi love each other
* update logger_test.go
* clean up merged comments
* Replace RawLogger interface with a Logger
* Add some logger names
* Replace Trace with Debug
* update builtin logical logging patterns
* Fix build errors
* More log updates
* update log approach in command and builtin
* More log updates
* update helper, http, and logical directories
* Update loggers
* Log updates
* Update logging
* Update logging
* Update logging
* Update logging
* update logging in physical
* prefixing and lowercase
* Update logging
* Move phyisical logging name to server command
* Fix som tests
* address jims feedback so far
* incorporate brians feedback so far
* strip comments
* move vault.go to logging package
* update Debug to Trace
* Update go-plugin deps
* Update logging based on review comments
* Updates from review
* Unvendor logxi
* Remove null_logger.go
* Redo the API client quite a bit to make the behavior of NewClient more
predictable and add locking to make it safer to use with Clone() and if
multiple goroutines for some reason decide to change things.
Along the way I discovered that currently, the x/net/http2 package is
broke with the built-in h2 support in released Go. For those using
DefaultConfig (the vast majority of cases) this will be a non-event.
Others can manually call http2.ConfigureTransport as needed. We should
keep an eye on commits on that repo and consider more updates before
release. Alternately we could go back revisions but miss out on bug
fixes; my theory is that this is not a purposeful break and I'll be
following up on this in the Go issue tracker.
In a few tests that don't use NewTestCluster, either for legacy or other
reasons, ensure that http2.ConfigureTransport is called.
* Use tls config cloning
* Don't http2.ConfigureServer anymore as current Go seems to work properly without requiring the http2 package
* Address feedback
* disable raw endpoint by default
* adding docs
* config option raw -> raw_storage_endpoint
* docs updates
* adding listing on raw endpoint
* reworking tests for enabled raw endpoints
* root protecting base raw endpoint
* Add basic autocompletion
* Add autocomplete to some common commands
* Autocomplete the generate-root flags
* Add information about autocomplete to the docs
* Normalize "X arguments expected" messages
* Use "Vault" when referring to the product and "vault" when referring to an instance of the product
* Various minor tweaks to improve readability and/or provide clarity
Adds HUP support for audit log files to close and reopen. This makes it
much easier to deal with normal log rotation methods.
As part of testing this I noticed that HUP and other items that come out
of command/server.go are going to stderr, which is where our normal log
lines go. This isn't so much problematic with our normal output but as
we officially move to supporting other formats this can cause
interleaving issues, so I moved those to stdout instead.
* Provide base64 keys in addition to hex encoded.
Accept these at unseal/rekey time.
Also fix a bug where backup would not be honored when doing a rekey with
no operation currently ongoing.
Vault will now register itself with Consul. The active node can be found using `active.vault.service.consul`. All standby vaults are available via `standby.vault.service.consul`. All unsealed vaults are considered healthy and available via `vault.service.consul`. Change in status and registration is event driven and should happen at the speed of a write to Consul (~network RTT + ~1x fsync(2)).
Healthy/active:
```
curl -X GET 'http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/health/service/vault?pretty' && echo;
[
{
"Node": {
"Node": "vm1",
"Address": "127.0.0.1",
"TaggedAddresses": {
"wan": "127.0.0.1"
},
"CreateIndex": 3,
"ModifyIndex": 20
},
"Service": {
"ID": "vault:127.0.0.1:8200",
"Service": "vault",
"Tags": [
"active"
],
"Address": "127.0.0.1",
"Port": 8200,
"EnableTagOverride": false,
"CreateIndex": 17,
"ModifyIndex": 20
},
"Checks": [
{
"Node": "vm1",
"CheckID": "serfHealth",
"Name": "Serf Health Status",
"Status": "passing",
"Notes": "",
"Output": "Agent alive and reachable",
"ServiceID": "",
"ServiceName": "",
"CreateIndex": 3,
"ModifyIndex": 3
},
{
"Node": "vm1",
"CheckID": "vault-sealed-check",
"Name": "Vault Sealed Status",
"Status": "passing",
"Notes": "Vault service is healthy when Vault is in an unsealed status and can become an active Vault server",
"Output": "",
"ServiceID": "vault:127.0.0.1:8200",
"ServiceName": "vault",
"CreateIndex": 19,
"ModifyIndex": 19
}
]
}
]
```
Healthy/standby:
```
[snip]
"Service": {
"ID": "vault:127.0.0.2:8200",
"Service": "vault",
"Tags": [
"standby"
],
"Address": "127.0.0.2",
"Port": 8200,
"EnableTagOverride": false,
"CreateIndex": 17,
"ModifyIndex": 20
},
"Checks": [
{
"Node": "vm2",
"CheckID": "serfHealth",
"Name": "Serf Health Status",
"Status": "passing",
"Notes": "",
"Output": "Agent alive and reachable",
"ServiceID": "",
"ServiceName": "",
"CreateIndex": 3,
"ModifyIndex": 3
},
{
"Node": "vm2",
"CheckID": "vault-sealed-check",
"Name": "Vault Sealed Status",
"Status": "passing",
"Notes": "Vault service is healthy when Vault is in an unsealed status and can become an active Vault server",
"Output": "",
"ServiceID": "vault:127.0.0.2:8200",
"ServiceName": "vault",
"CreateIndex": 19,
"ModifyIndex": 19
}
]
}
]
```
Sealed:
```
"Checks": [
{
"Node": "vm2",
"CheckID": "serfHealth",
"Name": "Serf Health Status",
"Status": "passing",
"Notes": "",
"Output": "Agent alive and reachable",
"ServiceID": "",
"ServiceName": "",
"CreateIndex": 3,
"ModifyIndex": 3
},
{
"Node": "vm2",
"CheckID": "vault-sealed-check",
"Name": "Vault Sealed Status",
"Status": "critical",
"Notes": "Vault service is healthy when Vault is in an unsealed status and can become an active Vault server",
"Output": "Vault Sealed",
"ServiceID": "vault:127.0.0.2:8200",
"ServiceName": "vault",
"CreateIndex": 19,
"ModifyIndex": 38
}
]
```
No signal handler was setup to receive SIGINT. I didn't investigate to
see if signal(2) mask was setup (ala `SIG_IGN`) or if sigprocmask(2) is
being used, but in either case, the correct behavior is to capture and
treat SIGINT the same as SIGTERM. At some point in the future these two
signals may affect the running process differently, but we will clarify
that difference in the future.