* Change ordering of user lookup vs. password hashing
This fixes a very minor information leak where someone could brute force
the existence of a username. It's not perfect as the underlying storage
plays a part but bcrypt's slowness puts that much more in the noise.
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
```
* 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
* 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
Update AWS Auth backend to use TypeHeader for iam request headers
- Remove parseIamRequestHeaders function and test, no longer needed with new TypeHeader
- Update AWS auth login docs
1) In backends, ensure they are now using TokenPolicies
2) Don't reassign auth.Policies until after expmgr registration as we
don't need them at that point
Fixes#4829
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.
* 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 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.
* Fix panic due to metadata being nil
* added a nil check
* Added a test
* ensure metadata is never nil
* Remove unnecessary allocation
* revert back to early initialization
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.