When importing access keys (i.e. service accounts) for LDAP accounts,
we are requiring groups to exist under one of the configured group base
DNs. This is not correct. This change fixes this by only checking for
existence and storing the normalized form of the group DN - we do not
return an error if the group is not under a base DN.
Test is updated to illustrate an import failure that would happen
without this change.
When LDAP is enabled, previously we were:
- rejecting creation of users and groups via the IAM import functionality
- throwing a `not a valid DN` error when non-LDAP group mappings are present
This change allows for these cases as we need to support situations
where the MinIO server contains users, groups and policy mappings
created before LDAP was enabled.
This is a change to IAM export/import functionality. For LDAP enabled
setups, it performs additional validations:
- for policy mappings on LDAP users and groups, it ensures that the
corresponding user or group DN exists and if so uses a normalized form
of these DNs for storage
- for access keys (service accounts), it updates (i.e. validates
existence and normalizes) the internally stored parent user DN and group
DNs.
This allows for a migration path for setups in which LDAP mappings have
been stored in previous versions of the server, where the name of the
mapping file stored on drives is not in a normalized form.
An administrator needs to execute:
`mc admin iam export ALIAS`
followed by
`mc admin iam import ALIAS /path/to/export/file`
The validations are more strict and returns errors when multiple
mappings are found for the same user/group DN. This is to ensure the
mappings stored by the server are unambiguous and to reduce the
potential for confusion.
Bonus **bug fix**: IAM export of access keys (service accounts) did not
export key name, description and expiration. This is fixed in this
change too.
Create new code paths for multiple subsystems in the code. This will
make maintaing this easier later.
Also introduce bugLogIf() for errors that should not happen in the first
place.
Fix races in IAM cache
Fixes#19344
On the top level we only grab a read lock, but we write to the cache if we manage to fetch it.
a03dac41eb/cmd/iam-store.go (L446) is also flipped to what it should be AFAICT.
Change the internal cache structure to a concurrency safe implementation.
Bonus: Also switch grid implementation.
* Remove lock for cached operations.
* Rename "Relax" to `ReturnLastGood`.
* Add `CacheError` to allow caching values even on errors.
* Add NoWait that will return current value with async fetching if within 2xTTL.
* Make benchmark somewhat representative.
```
Before: BenchmarkCache-12 16408370 63.12 ns/op 0 B/op
After: BenchmarkCache-12 428282187 2.789 ns/op 0 B/op
```
* Remove `storageRESTClient.scanning`. Nonsensical - RPC clients will not have any idea about scanning.
* Always fetch remote diskinfo metrics and cache them. Seems most calls are requesting metrics.
* Do async fetching of usage caches.
With this change, only a user with `UpdateServiceAccountAdminAction`
permission is able to edit access keys.
We would like to let a user edit their own access keys, however the
feature needs to be re-designed for better security and integration with
external systems like AD/LDAP and OpenID.
This change prevents privilege escalation via service accounts.
AccountInfo is quite frequently called by the Console UI
login attempts, when many users are logging in it is important
that we provide them with better responsiveness.
- ListBuckets information is cached every second
- Bucket usage info is cached for up to 10 seconds
- Prefix usage (optional) info is cached for up to 10 secs
Failure to update after cache expiration, would still
allow login which would end up providing information
previously cached.
This allows for seamless responsiveness for the Console UI
logins, and overall responsiveness on a heavily loaded
system.
A new middleware function is added for admin handlers, including options
for modifying certain behaviors. This admin middleware:
- sets the handler context via reflection in the request and sends AuditLog
- checks for object API availability (skipping it if a flag is passed)
- enables gzip compression (skipping it if a flag is passed)
- enables header tracing (adding body tracing if a flag is passed)
While the new function is a middleware, due to the flags used for
conditional behavior modification, which is used in each route registration
call.
To try to ensure that no regressions are introduced, the following
changes were done mechanically mostly with `sed` and regexp:
- Remove defer logger.AuditLog in admin handlers
- Replace newContext() calls with r.Context()
- Update admin routes registration calls
Bonus: remove unused NetSpeedtestHandler
Since the new adminMiddleware function checks for object layer presence
by default, we need to pass the `noObjLayerFlag` explicitly to admin
handlers that should work even when it is not available. The following
admin handlers do not require it:
- ServerInfoHandler
- StartProfilingHandler
- DownloadProfilingHandler
- ProfileHandler
- SiteReplicationDevNull
- SiteReplicationNetPerf
- TraceHandler
For these handlers adminMiddleware does not check for the object layer
presence (disabled by passing the `noObjLayerFlag`), and for all other
handlers, the pre-check ensures that the handler is not called when the
object layer is not available - the client would get a
ErrServerNotInitialized and can retry later.
This `noObjLayerFlag` is added based on existing behavior for these
handlers only.
This would better to record the correct API name so that
any verification around audit logs to figure out if required
APIs are called required no of times, would be correct.
Here in this case of policy attached, API `AttachDetachPolicyBuiltin`
would be called with `requestPath` as `/minio/admin/v3/idp/builtin/policy/attach`
and in case of detach policy the value would be `/minio/admin/v3/idp/builtin/policy/detach`
Signed-off-by: Shubhendu Ram Tripathi <shubhendu@minio.io>
For policy attach/detach API to work correctly the server should hold a
lock before reading existing policy mapping and until after writing the
updated policy mapping. This is fixed in this change.
A site replication bug, where LDAP policy attach/detach were not
correctly propagated is also fixed in this change.
Bonus: Additionally, the server responds with the actual (or net)
changes performed in the attach/detach API call. For e.g. if a user
already has policy A applied, and a call to attach policies A and B is
performed, the server will respond that B was attached successfully.