Third Party Resources (TPR) have been removed from Kubernetes for
roughly 2 years. This commit removes the support dex had for them.
Documentation has been updated to reflect this and to instruct users
on how to migrate from TPR-powered dex environment to a Custom Resource
Defintion (CRD) based one that dex > v2.17 will support
- adapted TestUnmarshalConfig to ensure the fields are read in
- added a test to see that at least MaxOpenConns works:
- this is only exposed through (*db).Stats() in go 1.11, so this test
has a build tag
- the other two configurables can't be read back, so we've got to
trust that the mechanism works given the one instance that's tested..
Signed-off-by: Stephan Renatus <srenatus@chef.io>
prior to this change, many of the functions in the ExecTx callback would
wrap the error before returning it. this made it impossible to check
for the error code.
instead, the error wrapping has been moved to be external to the
`ExecTx` callback, so that the error code can be checked and
serialization failures can be retried.
Use pq connection parameters instead of URLs for postgres connections
This enables the use of socket paths like /var/run/postgresql for the 'host' instead of requiring TCP. Also, we know allow using a non-default port.
otherwise it's impossible to use a Unix socket, as the path gets escaped
awkwardly.
Signed-off-by: Ciro S. Costa <cscosta@pivotal.io>
Signed-off-by: Alex Suraci <suraci.alex@gmail.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.
This patch adds etcd storage implementation. This should be useful in
environments where
- we dont want to depends on a separate, hard to maintain SQL cluster
- we dont want to incur the overhead of talking to kubernetes apiservers
- kubernetes is not available yet, or if kubernetes depends on dex
to perform authentication and the operator would like to remove any
circular dependency if possible.
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
If dex is configured with static passwords or clients, let the API
still add or modify objects in the backing storage, so long as
their IDs don't conflict with the static ones. List options now
aggregate resources from the static list and backing storage.
PR #815 fixed the Kubernetes storage implementation by correctly
returning storage.ErrAlreadyExists on POST conflicts. This caused a
regression in TPR creation (#822) when some, but not all, of the
resources already existed. E.g. for users upgrading from old
versions of dex.
Fixes#822
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
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.
ghodss/yaml converts from YAML to JSON before attempting to unmarshal.
This allows us to:
* Get the correct behavor when decoding base64'd []byte slices.
* Use *json.RawMessage.
* Not have to support extravagant YAML features.
* Let our structs use `json:` tags