The bcrypt hashing algorithm runtime grows exponentially with cost,
and might cause a timeout if the cost is too high. Notifying the user
of high cost and of long running calculations will help with tuning
and debugging.
Switch from using "text/template" to "html/template", which provides
basic XSS preventions. We haven't identified any particular place
where unsanitized user data is rendered to the frontend. This is
just a preventative step.
At the same time, make more templates take pure URL instead of
forming an URL themselves using an "authReqID" argument. This will
help us stop using the auth req ID in certain places, preventing
garbage collection from killing login flows that wait too long at
the login screen.
Also increase the login session window (time between initial
redirect and the user logging in) from 30 minutes to 24 hours,
and display a more helpful error message when the session expires.
How to test:
1. Spin up dex and example with examples/config-dev.yaml.
2. Login through both the password prompt and the direct redirect.
3. Edit examples/config-dev.yaml removing the "connectors" section.
4. Ensure you can still login with a password.
(email/password is "admin@example.com" and "password")
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).
This PR reworks the web layout so static files can be provided and
a "themes" directory to allow a certain degree of control over logos,
styles, etc.
This PR does NOT add general support for frontend customization,
only enough to allow us to start exploring theming internally.
The dex binary also must now be run from the root directory since
templates are no longer "compiled into" the binary.
The docker image has been updated with frontend assets.
Ensure compared times are within a second of one another instead of
rounding, which can flake if the two times are different enough to
do round to different values.
Tested using the golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stress tool.
The following set of commands fail without this patch:
$ go get golang.org/x/tools/cmd/stress
$ go test -o server.test github.com/coreos/dex/server
$ stress ./server.test -test.run=TestOAuth2CodeFlow
219 runs so far, 0 failures
425 runs so far, 0 failures
618 runs so far, 0 failures
802 runs so far, 0 failures
^C
Closes#699