The "at_hash" claim, which provides hash verification for the
"access_token," is a required claim for implicit and hybrid flow
requests. Previously we did not include it (against spec). This
PR implements the "at_hash" logic and adds the claim to all
responses.
As a cleanup, it also moves some JOSE signing logic out of the
storage package and into the server package.
For details see:
https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html#ImplicitIDToken
The server implements a strategy called "Refresh Token Rotation" to
ensure refresh tokens can only be claimed once.
ref: https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6819#section-5.2.2.3
Previously "refresh_token" values in token responses where just the
ID of the internal refresh object. To implement rotation, when a
client redeemed a refresh token, the object would be deleted, a new
one created, and the new ID returned as the new "refresh_token".
However, this means there was no consistent ID for refresh tokens
internally, making things like foreign keys very hard to implement.
This is problematic for revocation features like showing all the
refresh tokens a user or client has out.
This PR updates the "refresh_token" to be an encoded protobuf
message, which holds the internal ID and a nonce. When a refresh
token is used, the nonce is updated to prevent reuse, but the ID
remains the same. Additionally it adds the timestamp of each
token's last use.
Accept the following response_type for the implicit flow:
id_token
token id_token
And the following for hybrid flow
code id_token
code token
code token id_token
This corrects the previous behavior of the implicit flow, which
only accepted "token" (now correctly rejected).
Introducing glide-vc caused us to unknowingly removed our Go
protobuf compiler (since it's a main). Add flags to glide-vc usage
to remedy this.
Since we now require several glide and glide-vc flags, add a Makfile
target and tests to catch when PRs don't use the correct flags.
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.