anything that is stuck on the disk today can cause latency
spikes for all incoming S3 I/O, we need to have this
de-coupled so that we can make sure that latency in loading
credentials are not reflected back to the S3 API calls.
The approach this PR takes is by checking if the calls were
updated just in case when the IAM load was in progress,
so that we can use merge instead of "replacement" to avoid
missing state.
this PR introduces a few changes such as
- sessionPolicyName is not reused in an extracted manner
to apply policies for incoming authenticated calls,
instead uses a different key to designate this
information for the callers.
- this differentiation is needed to ensure that service
account updates do not accidentally store JSON representation
instead of base64 equivalent on the disk.
- relax requirements for Deleting a service account, allow
deleting a service account that might be unreadable, i.e
a situation where the user might have removed session policy
which now carries a JSON representation, making it unparsable.
- introduce some constants to reuse instead of strings.
fixes#14784
space characters at the beginning or at the end can lead to
confusion under various UI elements in differentiating the
actual name of "policy, user or group" - to avoid this behavior
this PR onwards we shall reject such inputs for newer entries.
existing saved entries will behave as is and are going to be
operable until they are removed/renamed to something more
meaningful.
- When using multiple providers, claim-based providers are not allowed. All
providers must use role policies.
- Update markdown config to allow `details` HTML element
heal bucket metadata and IAM entries for
sites participating in site replication from
the site with the most updated entry.
Co-authored-by: Harshavardhana <harsha@minio.io>
Co-authored-by: Aditya Manthramurthy <aditya@minio.io>
In previous releases, mc admin user list would return the list of users
that have policies mapped in IAM database. However, this was removed but
this commit will bring it back until we revamp this.
changing root credentials makes service accounts
in-operable, this PR changes the way sessionToken
is generated for service accounts.
It changes service account behavior to generate
sessionToken claims from its own secret instead
of using global root credential.
Existing credentials will be supported by
falling back to verify using root credential.
fixes#14530
- Site replication was missing replicating users,
groups when an empty site was added.
- Add site replication for groups and users when they
are disabled and enabled.
- Add support for replicating bucket quota config.
The AddUser() API endpoint was accepting a policy field.
This API is used to update a user's secret key and account
status, and allows a regular user to update their own secret key.
The policy update is also applied though does not appear to
be used by any existing client-side functionality.
This fix changes the accepted request body type and removes
the ability to apply policy changes as that is possible via the
policy set API.
NOTE: Changing passwords can be disabled as a workaround
for this issue by adding an explicit "Deny" rule to disable the API
for users.
When STS credentials are created for a user, a unique (hopefully stable) parent
user value exists for the credential, which corresponds to the user for whom the
credentials are created. The access policy is mapped to this parent-user and is
persisted. This helps ensure that all STS credentials of a user have the same
policy assignment at all times.
Before this change, for an OIDC STS credential, when the policy claim changes in
the provider (when not using RoleARNs), the change would not take effect on
existing credentials, but only on new ones.
To support existing STS credentials without parent-user policy mappings, we
lookup the policy in the policy claim value. This behavior should be deprecated
when such support is no longer required, as it can still lead to stale
policy mappings.
Additionally this change also simplifies the implementation for all non-RoleARN
STS credentials. Specifically, for AssumeRole (internal IDP) STS credentials,
policies are picked up from the parent user's policies; for
AssumeRoleWithCertificate STS credentials, policies are picked up from the
parent user mapping created when the STS credential is generated.
AssumeRoleWithLDAP already picks up policies mapped to the virtual parent user.
- This introduces a new admin API with a query parameter (v=2) to return a
response with the timestamps
- Older API still works for compatibility/smooth transition in console
- deleting policies was deleting all LDAP
user mapping, this was a regression introduced
in #13567
- deleting of policies is properly sent across
all sites.
- remove unexpected errors instead embed the real
errors as part of the 500 error response.
- remove some duplicated code
- reported a bug, separately fixed in #13664
- using strings.ReplaceAll() when needed
- using filepath.ToSlash() use when needed
- remove all non-Go style comments from the codebase
Co-authored-by: Aditya Manthramurthy <donatello@users.noreply.github.com>
This reverts commit 091a7ae359.
- Ensure all actions accessing storage lock properly.
- Behavior change: policies can be deleted only when they
are not associated with any active credentials.
Also adds fix for accidental canned policy removal that was present in the
reverted version of the change.
- Ensure all actions accessing storage lock properly.
- Behavior change: policies can be deleted only when they
are not associated with any active credentials.