This change uses the updated ldap library in minio/pkg (bumped
up to v3). A new config parameter is added for LDAP configuration to
specify extra user attributes to load from the LDAP server and to store
them as additional claims for the user.
A test is added in sts_handlers.go that shows how to access the LDAP
attributes as a claim.
This is in preparation for adding SSH pubkey authentication to MinIO's SFTP
integration.
This commit adds support for MinKMS. Now, there are three KMS
implementations in `internal/kms`: Builtin, MinIO KES and MinIO KMS.
Adding another KMS integration required some cleanup. In particular:
- Various KMS APIs that haven't been and are not used have been
removed. A lot of the code was broken anyway.
- Metrics are now monitored by the `kms.KMS` itself. For basic
metrics this is simpler than collecting metrics for external
servers. In particular, each KES server returns its own metrics
and no cluster-level view.
- The builtin KMS now uses the same en/decryption implemented by
MinKMS and KES. It still supports decryption of the previous
ciphertext format. It's backwards compatible.
- Data encryption keys now include a master key version since MinKMS
supports multiple versions (~4 billion in total and 10000 concurrent)
per key name.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <github@aead.dev>
With this commit, MinIO generates root credentials automatically
and deterministically if:
- No root credentials have been set.
- A KMS (KES) is configured.
- API access for the root credentials is disabled (lockdown mode).
Before, MinIO defaults to `minioadmin` for both the access and
secret keys. Now, MinIO generates unique root credentials
automatically on startup using the KMS.
Therefore, it uses the KMS HMAC function to generate pseudo-random
values. These values never change as long as the KMS key remains
the same, and the KMS key must continue to exist since all IAM data
is encrypted with it.
Backward compatibility:
This commit should not cause existing deployments to break. It only
changes the root credentials of deployments that have a KMS configured
(KES, not a static key) but have not set any admin credentials. Such
implementations should be rare or not exist at all.
Even if the worst case would be updating root credentials in mc
or other clients used to administer the cluster. Root credentials
are anyway not intended for regular S3 operations.
Signed-off-by: Andreas Auernhammer <github@aead.dev>