- When using multiple providers, claim-based providers are not allowed. All
providers must use role policies.
- Update markdown config to allow `details` HTML element
- This allows site-replication to be configured when using OpenID or the
internal IDentity Provider.
- Internal IDP IAM users and groups will now be replicated to all members of the
set of replicated sites.
- When using OpenID as the external identity provider, STS and service accounts
are replicated.
- Currently this change dis-allows root service accounts from being
replicated (TODO: discuss security implications).
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.
- Allows setting a role policy parameter when configuring OIDC provider
- When role policy is set, the server prints a role ARN usable in STS API requests
- The given role policy is applied to STS API requests when the roleARN parameter is provided.
- Service accounts for role policy are also possible and work as expected.
- New sub-system has "region" and "name" fields.
- `region` subsystem is marked as deprecated, however still works, unless the
new region parameter under `site` is set - in this case, the region subsystem is
ignored. `region` subsystem is hidden from top-level help (i.e. from `mc admin
config set myminio`), but appears when specifically requested (i.e. with `mc
admin config set myminio region`).
- MINIO_REGION, MINIO_REGION_NAME are supported as legacy environment variables for server region.
- Adds MINIO_SITE_REGION as the current environment variable to configure the
server region and MINIO_SITE_NAME for the site name.
This commit makes the MinIO server behavior more consistent
w.r.t. key usage verification.
When MinIO verifies the client certificates it also checks
that the client certificate is valid of client authentication
(or any (i.e. wildcard) usage).
However, the MinIO server used to not verify the client key usage
when client certificate verification was disabled.
Now, the MinIO server verifies the client key usage even when
client certificate verification has been disabled. This makes
the MinIO behavior more consistent from a client's perspective.
Now, a client certificate has to be valid for client authentication
in all cases.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <hi@aead.dev>
As we use etcd's watch interface, we do not need the
network notifications as they are no-ops anyway.
Bonus: Remove globalEtcdClient global usage in IAM
* fix: disallow invalid x-amz-security-token for root credentials
fixes#13335
This was a regression added in #12947 when this part of the
code was refactored to avoid privilege issues with service
accounts with session policy.
Bonus:
- fix: AssumeRoleWithCertificate policy mapping and reload
AssumeRoleWithCertificate was not mapping to correct
policies even after successfully generating keys, since
the claims associated with this API were never looked up
properly. Ensure that policies are set appropriately.
- GetUser() API was not loading policies correctly based
on AccessKey based mapping which is true with OpenID
and AssumeRoleWithCertificate API.
This change allows a set of MinIO sites (clusters) to be configured
for mutual replication of all buckets (including bucket policies, tags,
object-lock configuration and bucket encryption), IAM policies,
LDAP service accounts and LDAP STS accounts.
This commit fixes an issue in the `AssumeRoleWithCertificate`
handler.
Before clients received an error when they send
a chain of X.509 certificates (their client certificate as
well as intermediate / root CAs).
Now, client can send a certificate chain and the server
will only consider non-CA / leaf certificates as possible
client certificate candidates. However, the client still
can only send one certificate.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <hi@aead.dev>
Some identity providers like GitLab do not provide
information about group membership as part of the
identity token claims. They only expose it via OIDC compatible
'/oauth/userinfo' endpoint, as described in the OpenID
Connect 1.0 sepcification.
But this of course requires application to make sure to add
additional accessToken, since idToken cannot be re-used to
perform the same 'userinfo' call. This is why this is specialized
requirement. Gitlab seems to be the only OpenID vendor that requires
this support for the time being.
fixes#12367
This commit adds a new STS API for X.509 certificate
authentication.
A client can make an HTTP POST request over a TLS connection
and MinIO will verify the provided client certificate, map it to an
S3 policy and return temp. S3 credentials to the client.
So, this STS API allows clients to authenticate with X.509
certificates over TLS and obtain temp. S3 credentials.
For more details and examples refer to the docs/sts/tls.md
documentation.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <hi@aead.dev>
Some incorrect setups might have multiple audiences
where they are trying to use a single authentication
endpoint for multiple services.
Nevertheless OpenID spec allows it to make it
even more confusin for no good reason.
> It MUST contain the OAuth 2.0 client_id of the
> Relying Party as an audience value. It MAY also
> contain identifiers for other audiences. In the
> general case, the aud value is an array of case
> sensitive strings. In the common special case
> when there is one audience, the aud value MAY
> be a single case sensitive string.
fixes#12809
- ParentUser for OIDC auth changed to `openid:`
instead of `jwt:` to avoid clashes with variable
substitution
- Do not pass in random parents into IsAllowed()
policy evaluation as it can change the behavior
of looking for correct policies underneath.
fixes#12676fixes#12680
Additional support for vendor-specific admin API
integrations for OpenID, to ensure validity of
credentials on MinIO.
Every 5minutes check for validity of credentials
on MinIO with vendor specific IDP.
This is to ensure that there are no projects
that try to import `minio/minio/pkg` into
their own repo. Any such common packages should
go to `https://github.com/minio/pkg`
LDAPusername is the simpler form of LDAPUser (userDN),
using a simpler version is convenient from policy
conditions point of view, since these are unique id's
used for LDAP login.
OpenID connect generated service accounts do not work
properly after console logout, since the parentUser state
is lost - instead use sub+iss claims for parentUser, according
to OIDC spec both the claims provide the necessary stability
across logins etc.
Fixes support for using multiple base DNs for user search in the LDAP directory
allowing users from different subtrees in the LDAP hierarchy to request
credentials.
- The username in the produced credentials is now the full DN of the LDAP user
to disambiguate users in different base DNs.
Bonus also fix a bug where we did not purge relevant
service accounts generated by rotating credentials
appropriately, service accounts should become invalid
as soon as its corresponding parent user becomes invalid.
Since service account themselves carry parent claim always
we would never reach this problem, as the access get
rejected at IAM policy layer.
not all claims need to be present for
the JWT claim, let the policies not
exist and only apply which are present
when generating the credentials
once credentials are generated then
those policies should exist, otherwise
the request will fail.