Extracted test cases from OAuth2Code flow tests to reuse in device flow
deviceHandler unit tests to test specific device endpoints
Include client secret as an optional parameter for standards compliance
Signed-off-by: justin-slowik <justin.slowik@thermofisher.com>
* Added /device/token handler with associated business logic and storage tests.
Perform user code exchange, flag the device code as complete.
Moved device handler code into its own file for cleanliness. Cleanup
* Removed PKCE code
* Rate limiting for /device/token endpoint based on ietf standards
* Configurable Device expiry
Signed-off-by: justin-slowik <justin.slowik@thermofisher.com>
* Added /device/token handler with associated business logic and storage tests.
* Use crypto rand for user code
Signed-off-by: justin-slowik <justin.slowik@thermofisher.com>
this failed on my machine due to the unexported 'loc' field of the time
structure - it was nil in one and set to a ton of tiemzone data in the
other. instead let's just compare the unix timestamp value and zero it
out for the struct comparison.
The previous test doesnt actually testing ListConnectors code. For
example the following pseudocode will pass the test:
```
ListConnectors() { return nil, nil }
```
Instead change to actually fetch and compare list of connectors,
ordering by name
Dex's Postgres client currently uses the `timestamp` datatype for
storing times. This lops of timezones with no conversion, causing
times to lose locality information.
We could convert all times to UTC before storing them, but this is
a backward incompatible change for upgrades, since the new version
of dex would still be reading times from the database with no
locality.
Because of this intrinsic issue that current Postgres users don't
save any timezone data, we chose to treat any existing installation
as corrupted and change the datatype used for times to `timestamptz`.
This is a breaking change, but it seems hard to offer an
alternative that's both correct and backward compatible.
Additionally, an internal flag has been added to SQL flavors,
`supportsTimezones`. This allows us to handle SQLite3, which doesn't
support timezones, while still storing timezones in other flavors.
Flavors that don't support timezones are explicitly converted to
UTC.