The AuthenticationService has a feature to "smart order" the realm
chain so that whicherver realm was the last one to successfully
authenticate a given user will be tried first when that user tries to
authenticate again.
There was a bug where the building of this realm order would
incorrectly drop the first realm from the default chain unless that
realm was the "last successful" realm.
In most cases this didn't cause problems because the first realm is
the reserved realm and so it is unusual for a user that authenticated
against a different realm to later need to authenticate against the
resevered realm.
This commit fixes that bug and adds relevant asserts and tests.
Backport of: #49473
All the implementations of `EsBlobStoreTestCase` use the exact same
bootstrap code that is also used by their implementation of
`EsBlobStoreContainerTestCase`.
This means all tests might as well live under `EsBlobStoreContainerTestCase`
saving a lot of code duplication. Also, there was no HDFS implementation for
`EsBlobStoreTestCase` which is now automatically resolved by moving the tests over
since there is a HDFS implementation for the container tests.
This commit adds a deprecation warning when starting
a node where either of the server contexts
(xpack.security.transport.ssl and xpack.security.http.ssl)
meet either of these conditions:
1. The server lacks a certificate/key pair (i.e. neither
ssl.keystore.path not ssl.certificate are configured)
2. The server has some ssl configuration, but ssl.enabled is not
specified. This new validation does not care whether ssl.enabled is
true or false (though other validation might), it simply makes it
an error to configure server SSL without being explicit about
whether to enable that configuration.
Backport of: #45892
This commit changes the ThreadContext to just use a regular ThreadLocal
over the lucene CloseableThreadLocal. The CloseableThreadLocal solves
issues with ThreadLocals that are no longer needed during runtime but
in the case of the ThreadContext, we need it for the runtime of the
node and it is typically not closed until the node closes, so we miss
out on the benefits that this class provides.
Additionally by removing the close logic, we simplify code in other
places that deal with exceptions and tracking to see if it happens when
the node is closing.
Closes#42577
Ensures that methods that are called from different threads ( i.e.
from the callbacks of org.apache.http.concurrent.FutureCallback )
catch `Exception` instead of only the expected checked exceptions.
This resolves a bug where OpenIdConnectAuthenticator#mergeObjects
would throw an IllegalStateException that was never caught causing
the thread to hang and the listener to never be called. This would
in turn cause Kibana requests to authenticate with OpenID Connect
to timeout and fail without even logging anything relevant.
This also guards against unexpected Exceptions that might be thrown
by invoked library methods while performing the necessary operations
in these callbacks.
Backport of #48849. Update `.editorconfig` to make the Java settings the
default for all files, and then apply a 2-space indent to all `*.gradle`
files. Then reformat all the files.
This commit introduces a consistent, and type-safe manner for handling
global build parameters through out our build logic. Primarily this
replaces the existing usages of extra properties with static accessors.
It also introduces and explicit API for initialization and mutation of
any such parameters, as well as better error handling for uninitialized
or eager access of parameter values.
Closes#42042
Previous behavior while copying HTTP headers to the ThreadContext,
would allow multiple HTTP headers with the same name, handling only
the first occurrence and disregarding the rest of the values. This
can be confusing when dealing with multiple Headers as it is not
obvious which value is read and which ones are silently dropped.
According to RFC-7230, a client must not send multiple header fields
with the same field name in a HTTP message, unless the entire field
value for this header is defined as a comma separated list or this
specific header is a well-known exception.
This commits changes the behavior in order to be more compliant to
the aforementioned RFC by requiring the classes that implement
ActionPlugin to declare if a header can be multi-valued or not when
registering this header to be copied over to the ThreadContext in
ActionPlugin#getRestHeaders.
If the header is allowed to be multivalued, then all such headers
are read from the HTTP request and their values get concatenated in
a comma-separated string.
If the header is not allowed to be multivalued, and the HTTP
request contains multiple such Headers with different values, the
request is rejected with a 400 status.
When we load a JSON Web Key (JWKSet) from the specified
file using JWKSet.load it internally uses IOUtils.readFileToString
but the opened FileInputStream is never closed after usage.
https://bitbucket.org/connect2id/nimbus-jose-jwt/issues/342
This commit reads the file and parses the JWKSet from the string.
This also fixes an issue wherein if the underlying file changed,
for every change event it would add another file watcher. The
change is to only add the file watcher at the start.
Closes#44942
The 1MB IO-buffer size per transport thread is causing trouble in
some tests, albeit at a low rate. Reducing the number of transport
threads was not enough to fully fix this situation.
Allowing to configure the size of the buffer and reducing it by
more than an order of magnitude should fix these tests.
Closes#46803
Backport of #48452.
The SAML tests have large XML documents within which various parameters
are replaced. At present, if these test are auto-formatted, the XML
documents get strung out over many, many lines, and are basically
illegible.
Fix this by using named placeholders for variables, and indent the
multiline XML documents.
The tests in `SamlSpMetadataBuilderTests` deserve a special mention,
because they include a number of certificates in Base64. I extracted
these into variables, for additional legibility.
* Extract remote "sniffing" to connection strategy (#47253)
Currently the connection strategy used by the remote cluster service is
implemented as a multi-step sniffing process in the
RemoteClusterConnection. We intend to introduce a new connection strategy
that will operate in a different manner. This commit extracts the
sniffing logic to a dedicated strategy class. Additionally, it implements
dedicated tests for this class.
Additionally, in previous commits we moved away from a world where the
remote cluster connection was mutable. Instead, when setting updates are
made, the connection is torn down and rebuilt. We still had methods and
tests hanging around for the mutable behavior. This commit removes those.
* Introduce simple remote connection strategy (#47480)
This commit introduces a simple remote connection strategy which will
open remote connections to a configurable list of user supplied
addresses. These addresses can be remote Elasticsearch nodes or
intermediate proxies. We will perform normal clustername and version
validation, but otherwise rely on the remote cluster to route requests
to the appropriate remote node.
* Make remote setting updates support diff strategies (#47891)
Currently the entire remote cluster settings infrastructure is designed
around the sniff strategy. As we introduce an additional conneciton
strategy this infrastructure needs to be modified to support it. This
commit modifies the code so that the strategy implementations will tell
the service if the connection needs to be torn down and rebuilt.
As part of this commit, we will wait 10 seconds for new clusters to
connect when they are added through the "update" settings
infrastructure.
* Make remote setting updates support diff strategies (#47891)
Currently the entire remote cluster settings infrastructure is designed
around the sniff strategy. As we introduce an additional conneciton
strategy this infrastructure needs to be modified to support it. This
commit modifies the code so that the strategy implementations will tell
the service if the connection needs to be torn down and rebuilt.
As part of this commit, we will wait 10 seconds for new clusters to
connect when they are added through the "update" settings
infrastructure.
FIPS 140 bootstrap checks should not be bootstrap checks as they
are always enforced. This commit moves the validation logic within
the security plugin.
The FIPS140SecureSettingsBootstrapCheck was not applicable as the
keystore was being loaded on init, before the Bootstrap checks
were checked, so an elasticsearch keystore of version < 3 would
cause the node to fail in a FIPS 140 JVM before the bootstrap check
kicked in, and as such hasn't been migrated.
Resolves: #34772
This PR adds an origin for the Enrich feature, and modifies the background
maintenance task to use the origin when executing client operations.
Without this fix, the maintenance task fails to execute when security is
enabled.
All internal searches (triggered by APIs) across the .security index
must be performed while "under the security origin". Otherwise,
the search is performed in the context of the caller which most
likely does not have privileges to search .security (hopefully).
This commit fixes this in the case of two methods in the
TokenService and corrects an overly done such context switch
in the ApiKeyService.
In addition, this makes all tests from the client/rest-high-level
module execute as an all mighty administrator,
but not a literal superuser.
Closes#47151
Especially in the snapshot code there's a lot
of logic chaining `ActionRunnables` in tricky
ways now and the code is getting hard to follow.
This change introduces two convinience methods that
make it clear that a wrapped listener is invoked with
certainty in some trickier spots and shortens the code a bit.
Use case:
User with `create_doc` index privilege will be allowed to only index new documents
either via Index API or Bulk API.
There are two cases that we need to think:
- **User indexing a new document without specifying an Id.**
For this ES auto generates an Id and now ES version 7.5.0 onwards defaults to `op_type` `create` we just need to authorize on the `op_type`.
- **User indexing a new document with an Id.**
This is problematic as we do not know whether a document with Id exists or not.
If the `op_type` is `create` then we can assume the user is trying to add a document, if it exists it is going to throw an error from the index engine.
Given these both cases, we can safely authorize based on the `op_type` value. If the value is `create` then the user with `create_doc` privilege is authorized to index new documents.
In the `AuthorizationService` when authorizing a bulk request, we check the implied action.
This code changes that to append the `:op_type/index` or `:op_type/create`
to indicate the implied index action.
This commit adds support to retrieve all API keys if the authenticated
user is authorized to do so.
This removes the restriction of specifying one of the
parameters (like id, name, username and/or realm name)
when the `owner` is set to `false`.
Closes#46887
When API key is invalidated we do two things first it tries to trigger `ExpiredApiKeysRemover` task
and second, we do index the invalidation for the API key. The index invalidation may happen
before the `ExpiredApiKeysRemover` task is run and in that case, the API key
invalidated will also get deleted. If the `ExpiredApiKeysRemover` runs before the
API key invalidation is indexed then the API key is not deleted and will be
deleted in the future run.
This behavior was not captured in the tests related to `ExpiredApiKeysRemover`
causing intermittent failures.
This commit fixes those tests by checking if the API key invalidated is reported
back when we get API keys after invalidation and perform the checks based on that.
Closes#41747
The changes introduced in #47179 made it so that we could try to
build an SSLContext with verification mode set to None, which is
not allowed in FIPS 140 JVMs. This commit address that
Fixes multiple Active Directory related tests that run against the
samba fixture. Some were failing since we changed the realm settings
format in 7.0 and a few were slightly broken in other ways.
We can move to cleanup the tests in a follow up but this work fits
better to be done with or after we move the tests from a Samba
based fixture to a real(-ish) Microsoft Active Directory based
fixture.
Resolves: #33425, #35738
Due to a regression bug the metadata Active Directory realm
setting is ignored (it works correctly for the LDAP realm type).
This commit redresses it.
Closes#45848
Fixes multiple Active Directory related tests that run against the
samba fixture. Some were failing since we changed the realm settings
format in 7.0 and a few were slightly broken in other ways.
We can move to cleanup the tests in a follow up but this work fits
better to be done with or after we move the tests from a Samba
based fixture to a real(-ish) Microsoft Active Directory based
fixture.
Resolves: #33425, #35738
- Build paths with PathUtils#get instead of hard-coding a string with
forward slashes.
- Do not try to match the whole message that includes paths. The
file separator is `\\` in windows but when we throw an Elasticsearch
Exception, the message is formatted with LoggerMessageFormat#format
which replaces `\\` with `\` in Path names. That means that in Windows
the Exception message will contain paths with single backslashes while
the expected string that comes from Path#toString on filename and
env.configFile will contain double backslashes. There is no point in
attempting to match the whole message string for the purpose of this test.
Resolves: #45598
When we added support for wildcard application names, we started to build
the prefix query along with the term query but we used 'filter' clause
instead of 'should', so this would not fetch the correct application
privilege descriptor thereby failing the _has_privilege checks.
This commit changes the clause to use should and with minimum_should_match
as 1.
Backport of #45794 to 7.x. Convert most `awaitBusy` calls to
`assertBusy`, and use asserts where possible. Follows on from #28548 by
@liketic.
There were a small number of places where it didn't make sense to me to
call `assertBusy`, so I kept the existing calls but renamed the method to
`waitUntil`. This was partly to better reflect its usage, and partly so
that anyone trying to add a new call to awaitBusy wouldn't be able to find
it.
I also didn't change the usage in `TransportStopRollupAction` as the
comments state that the local awaitBusy method is a temporary
copy-and-paste.
Other changes:
* Rework `waitForDocs` to scale its timeout. Instead of calling
`assertBusy` in a loop, work out a reasonable overall timeout and await
just once.
* Some tests failed after switching to `assertBusy` and had to be fixed.
* Correct the expect templates in AbstractUpgradeTestCase. The ES
Security team confirmed that they don't use templates any more, so
remove this from the expected templates. Also rewrite how the setup
code checks for templates, in order to give more information.
* Remove an expected ML template from XPackRestTestConstants The ML team
advised that the ML tests shouldn't be waiting for any
`.ml-notifications*` templates, since such checks should happen in the
production code instead.
* Also rework the template checking code in `XPackRestTestHelper` to give
more helpful failure messages.
* Fix issue in `DataFrameSurvivesUpgradeIT` when upgrading from < 7.4
In the current implementation, the validation of the role query
occurs at runtime when the query is being executed.
This commit adds validation for the role query when creating a role
but not for the template query as we do not have the runtime
information required for evaluating the template query (eg. authenticated user's
information). This is similar to the scripts that we
store but do not evaluate or parse if they are valid queries or not.
For validation, the query is evaluated (if not a template), parsed to build the
QueryBuilder and verify if the query type is allowed.
Closes#34252
This change merges the `ShardSearchTransportRequest` and `ShardSearchLocalRequest`
into a single `ShardSearchRequest` that can be used to create a SearchContext.
Relates #46523
This change allows for the caller of the `saml/prepare` API to pass
a `relay_state` parameter that will then be part of the redirect
URL in the response as the `RelayState` query parameter.
The SAML IdP is required to reflect back the value of that relay
state when sending a SAML Response. The caller of the APIs can
then, when receiving the SAML Response, read and consume the value
as it see fit.
When we rewrite alias requests, after filtering down to only those that
the user is authorized to see, it can be that there are no aliases
remaining in the request. However, core Elasticsearch interprets this as
_all so the user would see more than they are authorized for. To address
this, we previously rewrote all such requests to have aliases `"*"`,
`"-*"`, which would be interpreted when aliases are resolved as
nome. Yet, this is only needed for get aliases requests and we were
applying it to all alias requests, including remove index requests. If
such a request was sent to a coordinating node that is not the master
node, the request would be rewritten to include `"*"` and `"-*"`, and
then the master would authorize the user for these. If the user had
limited permissions, the request would fail, even if they were
authorized on the index that the remove index action was over. This
commit addresses this by rewriting for get aliases and remove
aliases request types but not for the remove index.
Co-authored-by: Albert Zaharovits <albert.zaharovits@elastic.co>
Co-authored-by: Tim Vernum <tim@adjective.org>
This change works around JDK-8213202, which is a bug related to TLSv1.3
session resumption before JDK 11.0.3 that occurs when there are
multiple concurrent sessions being established. Nodes connecting to
each other will trigger this bug when client authentication is
disabled, which is the case for SSLClientAuthTests.
Backport of #46680
When using auto-generated IDs + the ingest drop processor (which looks to be used by filebeat
as well) + coordinating nodes that do not have the ingest processor functionality, this can lead
to a NullPointerException.
The issue is that markCurrentItemAsDropped() is creating an UpdateResponse with no id when
the request contains auto-generated IDs. The response serialization is lenient for our
REST/XContent format (i.e. we will send "id" : null) but the internal transport format (used for
communication between nodes) assumes for this field to be non-null, which means that it can't
be serialized between nodes. Bulk requests with ingest functionality are processed on the
coordinating node if the node has the ingest capability, and only otherwise sent to a different
node. This means that, in order to reproduce this, one needs two nodes, with the coordinating
node not having the ingest functionality.
Closes#46678
The fact that this test randomly uses a relatively large number
of nodes and hence Netty worker threads created a problem with
running out of direct memory on CI.
Tests run with 512M heap (and hence 512M direct memory) by default.
On a CI worker with 16 cores, this means Netty will by default set
up 32 transport workers. If we get unlucky and a lot of them
actually do work (and thus instantiate a `CopyBytesSocketChannel`
which costs 1M per thread for the thread-local IO buffer) we
would run out of memory.
This specific failure was only seen with `NativeRealmIntegTests` so I
only added the constraint on the Netty worker count here.
We can add it to other tests (or `SecurityIntegTestCase`) if need be
but for now it doesn't seem necessary so I opted for least impact.
Closes#46803
We depend on file realms being unique in a number of places. Pre
7.0 this was enforced by the fact that the multiple realm types
with different name would mean identical configuration keys and
cause configuration parsing errors. Since we intoduced affix
settings for realms this is not the case any more as the realm type
is part of the configuration key.
This change adds a check when building realms which will explicitly
fail if multiple realms are defined with the same name.
Backport of #46253
This changes API-Key authentication to always fallback to the realm
chain if the API key is not valid. The previous behaviour was
inconsistent and would terminate on some failures, but continue to the
realm chain for others.
Backport of: #46538
This commit initializes DocumentSubsetBitsetCache even if DLS
is disabled. Previously it would throw null pointer when querying
usage stats if we explicitly disabled DLS as there would be no instance of DocumentSubsetBitsetCache to query. It is okay to initialize
DocumentSubsetBitsetCache which will be empty as the license enforcement
would prevent usage of DLS feature and it will not fail when accessing usage stats.
Closes#45147
As per #45852 comment we no longer need to log stack-traces in
SecurityTransportExceptionHandler and SecurityHttpExceptionHandler even
if trace logging is enabled.
(cherry picked from commit c99224a32d26db985053b7b36e2049036e438f97)
The existing privilege model for API keys with privileges like
`manage_api_key`, `manage_security` etc. are too permissive and
we would want finer-grained control over the cluster privileges
for API keys. Previously APIs created would also need these
privileges to get its own information.
This commit adds support for `manage_own_api_key` cluster privilege
which only allows api key cluster actions on API keys owned by the
currently authenticated user. Also adds support for retrieval of
the API key self-information when authenticating via API key
without the need for the additional API key privileges.
To support this privilege, we are introducing additional
authentication context along with the request context such that
it can be used to authorize cluster actions based on the current
user authentication.
The API key get and invalidate APIs introduce an `owner` flag
that can be set to true if the API key request (Get or Invalidate)
is for the API keys owned by the currently authenticated user only.
In that case, `realm` and `username` cannot be set as they are
assumed to be the currently authenticated ones.
The changes cover HLRC changes, documentation for the API changes.
Closes#40031
This commit introduces PKI realm delegation. This feature
supports the PKI authentication feature in Kibana.
In essence, this creates a new API endpoint which Kibana must
call to authenticate clients that use certificates in their TLS
connection to Kibana. The API call passes to Elasticsearch the client's
certificate chain. The response contains an access token to be further
used to authenticate as the client. The client's certificates are validated
by the PKI realms that have been explicitly configured to permit
certificates from the proxy (Kibana). The user calling the delegation
API must have the delegate_pki privilege.
Closes#34396
This commit allows the Transport Actions for the SSO realms to
indicate the realm that should be used to authenticate the
constructed AuthenticationToken. This is useful in the case that
many authentication realms of the same type have been configured
and where the caller of the API(Kibana or a custom web app) already
know which realm should be used so there is no need to iterate all
the realms of the same type.
The realm parameter is added in the relevant REST APIs as optional
so as not to introduce any breaking change.
Most of our CLI tools use the Terminal class, which previously did not provide methods for writing to standard output. When all output goes to standard out, there are two basic problems. First, errors and warnings are "swallowed" in pipelines, making it hard for a user to know when something's gone wrong. Second, errors and warnings are intermingled with legitimate output, making it difficult to pass the results of interactive scripts to other tools.
This commit adds a second set of print commands to Terminal for printing to standard error, with errorPrint corresponding to print and errorPrintln corresponding to println. This leaves it to developers to decide which output should go where. It also adjusts existing commands to send errors and warnings to stderr.
Usage is printed to standard output when it's correctly requested (e.g., bin/elasticsearch-keystore --help) but goes to standard error when a command is invoked incorrectly (e.g. bin/elasticsearch-keystore list-with-a-typo | sort).
The current implementations make it difficult for
adding new privileges (example: a cluster privilege which is
more than cluster action-based and not exposed to the security
administrator). On the high level, we would like our cluster privilege
either:
- a named cluster privilege
This corresponds to `cluster` field from the role descriptor
- or a configurable cluster privilege
This corresponds to the `global` field from the role-descriptor and
allows a security administrator to configure them.
Some of the responsibilities like the merging of action based cluster privileges
are now pushed at cluster permission level. How to implement the predicate
(using Automaton) is being now enforced by cluster permission.
`ClusterPermission` helps in enforcing the cluster level access either by
performing checks against cluster action and optionally against a request.
It is a collection of one or more permission checks where if any of the checks
allow access then the permission allows access to a cluster action.
Implementations of cluster privilege must be able to provide information
regarding the predicates to the cluster permission so that can be enforced.
This is enforced by making implementations of cluster privilege aware of
cluster permission builder and provide a way to specify how the permission is
to be built for a given privilege.
This commit renames `ConditionalClusterPrivilege` to `ConfigurableClusterPrivilege`.
`ConfigurableClusterPrivilege` is a renderable cluster privilege exposed
as a `global` field in role descriptor.
Other than this there is a requirement where we would want to know if a cluster
permission is implied by another cluster-permission (`has-privileges`).
This is helpful in addressing queries related to privileges for a user.
This is not just simply checking of cluster permissions since we do not
have access to runtime information (like request object).
This refactoring does not try to address those scenarios.
Relates #44048
* Restrict which tasks can use testclusters
This PR fixes a problem between the interaction of test-clusters and
build cache.
Before this any task could have used a cluster without tracking it as
input.
With this change a new interface is introduced to track the tasks that
can use clusters and we do consider the cluster as input for all of
them.
When using the implicit flow in OpenID Connect, the
op.token_endpoint_url should not be mandatory as there is no need
to contact the token endpoint of the OP.
Uses JDK 11's per-socket configuration of TCP keepalive (supported on Linux and Mac), see
https://bugs.openjdk.java.net/browse/JDK-8194298, and exposes these as transport settings.
By default, these options are disabled for now (i.e. fall-back to OS behavior), but we would like
to explore whether we can enable them by default, in particular to force keepalive configurations
that are better tuned for running ES.
Currently in the transport-nio work we connect and bind channels on the
a thread before the channel is registered with a selector. Additionally,
it is at this point that we set all the socket options. This commit
moves these operations onto the event-loop after the channel has been
registered with a selector. It attempts to set the socket options for a
non-server channel at registration time. If that fails, it will attempt
to set the options after the channel is connected. This should fix
#41071.
This change improves the exception messages that are thrown when the
system cannot read TLS resources such as keystores, truststores,
certificates, keys or certificate-chains (CAs).
This change specifically handles:
- Files that do not exist
- Files that cannot be read due to file-system permissions
- Files that cannot be read due to the ES security-manager
Backport of: #44787
There are no realms that can be configured exclusively with secure
settings. Every realm that supports secure settings also requires one
or more non-secure settings.
However, sometimes a node will be configured with entries in the
keystore for which there is nothing in elasticsearch.yml - this may be
because the realm we removed from the yml, but not deleted from the
keystore, or it could be because there was a typo in the realm name
which has accidentially orphaned the keystore entry.
In these cases the realm building would fail, but the error would not
always be clear or point to the root cause (orphaned keystore
entries). RealmSettings would act as though the realm existed, but
then fail because an incorrect combination of settings was provided.
This change causes realm building to fail early, with an explicit
message about incorrect keystore entries.
Backport of: #44471
When we create API key we check if the API key with the name
already exists. It searches with scroll enabled and this causes
the request to fail when creating large number of API keys in
parallel as it hits the number of open scroll limit (default 500).
We do not need the search context to be created so this commit
removes the scroll parameter from the search request for duplicate
API key.
* We shouldn't be recreating wrapped REST handlers over and over for every request. We only use this hook in x-pack and the wrapper there does not have any per request state.
This is inefficient and could lead to some very unexpected memory behavior
=> I made the logic create the wrapper on handler registration and adjusted the x-pack wrapper implementation to correctly forward the circuit breaker and content stream flags
A mismatched configuration between the IdP and SP will often result in
SAML authentication attempts failing because the audience condition is
not met (because the IdP and SP disagree about the correct form of the
SP's Entity ID).
Previously the error message in this case did not provide sufficient
information to resolve the issue because the IdP's expected audience
would be truncated if it exceeeded 32 characters. Since the error did
not provide both IDs in full, it was not possible to determine the
correct fix (in detail) based on the error alone.
This change expands the message that is included in the thrown
exception, and also adds additional logging of every failed audience
condition, with diagnostics of the match failure.
Backport of: #44334
The existing equals check was broken, and would always be false.
The correct behaviour is to return "Collections.emptyList()" whenever
the the active(licensed)-realms equals the configured-realms.
Backport of: #44399
We often start testing with early access versions of new Java
versions and this have caused minor issues in our tests
(i.e. #43141) because the version string that the JVM reports
cannot be parsed as it ends with the string -ea.
This commit changes how we parse and compare Java versions to
allow correct parsing and comparison of the output of java.version
system property that might include an additional alphanumeric
part after the version numbers
(see [JEP 223[(https://openjdk.java.net/jeps/223)). In short it
handles a version number part, like before, but additionally a
PRE part that matches ([a-zA-Z0-9]+).
It also changes a number of tests that would attempt to parse
java.specification.version in order to get the full version
of Java. java.specification.version only contains the major
version and is thus inappropriate when trying to compare against
a version that might contain a minor, patch or an early access
part. We know parse java.version that can be consistently
parsed.
Resolves#43141
Registering a channel with a selector is a required operation for the
channel to be handled properly. Currently, we mix the registeration with
other setup operations (ip filtering, SSL initiation, etc). However, a
fail to register is fatal. This PR modifies how registeration occurs to
immediately close the channel if it fails.
There are still two clear loopholes for how a user can interact with a
channel even if registration fails. 1. through the exception handler.
2. through the channel accepted callback. These can perhaps be improved
in the future. For now, this PR prevents writes from proceeding if the
channel is not registered.
This commit converts all the StreamableResponseActionType security
classes in xpack core to ActionType, implementing Writeable for their
response classes.
relates #34389
When getting authentication info from the thread context, it might be
that we encounter an I/O exception. Today we swallow this exception and
return a null authentication info to the caller. Yet, this could be
hiding bugs or errors. This commits adjusts this behavior so that we no
longer swallow the exception.
Test clusters currently has its own set of logic for dealing with
finding different versions of Elasticsearch, downloading them, and
extracting them. This commit converts testclusters to use the
DistributionDownloadPlugin.
This commit moves the Supplier variant of HandledTransportAction to have
a different ordering than the Writeable.Reader variant. The Supplier
version is used for the legacy Streamable, and currently having the
location of the Writeable.Reader vs Supplier in the same place forces
using casts of Writeable.Reader to select the correct super constructor.
This change in ordering allows easier migration to Writeable.Reader.
relates #34389
Fixes a bug in the PKI authentication. This manifests when there
are multiple PKI realms configured in the chain, with different
principal parse patterns. There are a few configuration scenarios
where one PKI realm might parse the principal from the Subject
DN (according to the `username_pattern` realm setting) but
another one might do the truststore validation (according to
the truststore.* realm settings).
This is caused by the two passes through the realm chain, first to
build the authentication token and secondly to authenticate it, and
that the X509AuthenticationToken sets the principal during
construction.
Simplifies AbstractSimpleTransportTestCase to use JVM-local ports and also adds an assertion so
that cases like #44134 can be more easily debugged. The likely reason for that one is that a test,
which was repeated again and again while always spawning a fresh Gradle worker (due to Gradle
daemon) kept increasing Gradle worker IDs, causing an overflow at some point.
The base classes for transport requests and responses currently
implement Streamable and Writeable. The writeTo method on these base
classes is implemented with an empty implementation. Not only does this
complicate subclasses to think they need to call super.writeTo, but it
also can lead to not implementing writeTo when it should have been
implemented, or extendiong one of these classes when not necessary,
since there is nothing to actually implement.
This commit removes the empty writeTo from these base classes, and fixes
subclasses to not call super and in some cases implement an empty
writeTo themselves.
relates #34389
This commit converts the ConnectionManager's openConnection and connectToNode methods to
async-style. This will allow us to not block threads anymore when opening connections. This PR also
adapts the cluster coordination subsystem to make use of the new async APIs, allowing to remove
some hacks in the test infrastructure that had to account for the previous synchronous nature of the
connection APIs.
This commit deprecates the `transport.profiles.*.xpack.security.type`
setting. This setting is used to configure a profile that would only
allow client actions. With the upcoming removal of the transport client
the setting should also be deprecated so that it may be removed in
a future version.
All valid licenses permit security, and the only license state where
we don't support security is when there is a missing license.
However, for safety we should attach the system (or xpack/security)
user to internally originated actions even if the license is missing
(or, more strictly, doesn't support security).
This allows all nodes to communicate and send internal actions (shard
state, handshake/pings, etc) even if a license is transitioning
between a broken state and a valid state.
Relates: #42215
Backport of: #43468
Document level security was depending on the shared
"BitsetFilterCache" which (by design) never expires its entries.
However, when using DLS queries - particularly templated ones - the
number (and memory usage) of generated bitsets can be significant.
This change introduces a new cache specifically for BitSets used in
DLS queries, that has memory usage constraints and access time expiry.
The whole cache is automatically cleared if the role cache is cleared.
Individual bitsets are cleared when the corresponding lucene index
reader is closed.
The cache defaults to 50MB, and entries expire if unused for 7 days.
Backport of: #43669
If an item in the bulk request fails, that could be for a variety of
reasons - it may be that the underlying behaviour of security has
changed, or it may just be a transient failure during testing.
Simply asserting a `true`/`false` value produces failure messages that
are difficult to diagnose and debug. Using hamcert (`assertThat`) will
make it easier to understand the causes of failures in this test.
Backport of: #43725
This adds a new cluster privilege for manage_api_key. Users with this
privilege are able to create new API keys (as a child of their own
user identity) and may also get and invalidate any/all API keys
(including those owned by other users).
Backport of: #43728
As defined in https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749#section-2.3.1
both client id and client secret need to be encoded with the
application/x-www-form-urlencoded encoding algorithm when used as
credentials for HTTP Basic Authentication in requests to the OP.
Resolves#43709
This is an odd backport of #41774
UserRoleMapper.UserData is constructed by each realm and it is used to
"match" role mapping expressions that eventually supply the role names
of the principal.
This PR filters out `null` collection values (lists and maps), for the groups
and metadata, which get to take part in the role mapping, in preparation
for using Java 9 collection APIs. It filters them as soon as possible, during
the construction.
Action is a class that encapsulates meta information about an action
that allows it to be called remotely, specifically the action name and
response type. With recent refactoring, the action class can now be
constructed as a static constant, instead of needing to create a
subclass. This makes the old pattern of creating a singleton INSTANCE
both misnamed and lacking a common placement.
This commit renames Action to ActionType, thus allowing the old INSTANCE
naming pattern to be TYPE on the transport action itself. ActionType
also conveys that this class is also not the action itself, although
this change does not rename any concrete classes as those will be
removed organically as they are converted to TYPE constants.
relates #34389
This change removes the ability to wrap an IndexSearcher in plugins. The IndexSearcherWrapper is replaced by an IndexReaderWrapper and allows to wrap the DirectoryReader only. This simplifies the creation of the context IndexSearcher that is used on a per request basis. This change also moves the optimization that was implemented in the security index searcher wrapper to the ContextIndexSearcher that now checks the live docs to determine how the search should be executed. If the underlying live docs is a sparse bit set the searcher will compute the intersection
betweeen the query and the live docs instead of checking the live docs on every document that match the query.
TransportNodesAction provides a mechanism to easily broadcast a request
to many nodes, and collect the respones into a high level response. Each
node has its own request type, with a base class of BaseNodeRequest.
This base request requires passing the nodeId to which the request will
be sent. However, that nodeId is not used anywhere. It is private to the
base class, yet serialized to each node, where the node could just as
easily find the nodeId of the node it is on locally.
This commit removes passing the nodeId through to the node request
creation, and guards its serialization so that we can remove the base
request class altogether in the future.
* Use atomic boolean to guard wakeups
* Don't trigger wakeups from the select loops thread itself for registering and closing channels
* Don't needlessly queue writes
Co-authored-by: Tim Brooks <tim@uncontended.net>
Currently nio implements ip filtering at the channel context level. This
is kind of a hack as the application logic should be implemented at the
handler level. This commit moves the ip filtering into a channel
handler. This requires adding an indicator to the channel handler to
show when a channel should be closed.
This replaces the use of char[] in the password length validation
code, with the use of SecureString
Although the use of char[] is not in itself problematic, using a
SecureString encourages callers to think about the lifetime of the
password object and to clear it after use.
Backport of: #42884