Previously a Go package attempting to import Fleet packages would run
into an error like "server/kolide/emails.go:93:23: undefined: Asset".
This commit refactors bindata asset handling to allow importing Fleet as
a library without changing the typical developer experience.
- Add toggle to disable live queries in advanced settings
- Add new live query status endpoint (checks for disabled via config and Redis health)
- Update QueryPage UI to use new live query status endpoint
Implements #2140
- Add the server_url_prefix flag for configuring this functionality
- Add prefix handling to the server routes
- Refactor JS to use appropriate paths from modules
- Use JS template to get URL prefix into JS environment
- Update webpack config to support prefixing
Thanks to securityonion.net for sponsoring the development of this feature.
Closes#1661
This change allows the images in Fleet emails to load properly from any
device with connectivity to github.com. Previously, emails might try to
load resources from a Kolide server not accessible from the email
client.
The asset URL will be based on the most recent git tag to accomodate
backwards-compatibility if the assets in the repo change.
Closes#1471
Almost two years ago, we began referring to the project as Fleet, but there are
many occurences of the term "Kolide" throughout the UI and documentation. This
PR attempts to clear up those uses where it is easily achievable.
The term "Kolide" is used throughout the code as well, but modifying this would
be more likely to introduce bugs.
This PR adds support for the SMTP LOGIN authentication method. Office 365 Exchange removed support for PLAIN authentication some time ago, and only supports LOGIN and an OAuth2 authentication method. This patch has been tested with a licensed O365 account. This method should also be usable with any other email server that advertises LOGIN in its 250-AUTH response.
Note: If using this with O365, the account used must not have MFA enabled.
Closes#1663
This PR partially addresses #1456, providing SSO SAML support. The flow of the code is as follows.
A Kolide user attempts to access a protected resource and is directed to log in.
If SSO identity providers (IDP) have been configured by an admin, the user is presented with SSO log in.
The user selects SSO, which invokes a call the InitiateSSO passing the URL of the protected resource that the user was originally trying access. Kolide server loads the IDP metadata and caches it along with the URL. We then build an auth request URL for the IDP which is returned to the front end.
The IDP calls the server, invoking CallbackSSO with the auth response.
We extract the original request id from the response and use it to fetch the cached metadata and the URL. We check the signature of the response, and validate the timestamps. If everything passes we get the user id from the IDP response and use it to create a login session. We then build a page which executes some javascript that will write the token to web local storage, and redirect to the original URL.
I've created a test web page in tools/app/authtest.html that can be used to test and debug new IDP's which also illustrates how a front end would interact with the IDP and the server. This page can be loaded by starting Kolide with the environment variable KOLIDE_TEST_PAGE_PATH to the full path of the page and then accessed at https://localhost:8080/test
Notable refactoring:
- Use stdlib "context" in place of "golang.org/x/net/context"
- Go-kit no longer wraps errors, so we remove the unwrap in transport_error.go
- Use MakeHandler when setting up endpoint tests (fixes test bug caught during
this refactoring)
Closes#1411.
* Simplifying SMTP Logic
This commit breaks the test email sending into it's own service method
(thus removing the capability from the API- if we want it back, we can
wire up another endpoint for just that). Additionally, error wrapping is
used through the new ModifyAppConfig service method to ensure that an
error or failed email will always result in an error while ensuring that
the submitted record always get committed (unless a serious error
happens).
* never wrap a nil error
* use err instead of individual errors
* add a js validator that makes smtp server port required
* specifying that the InputField should be a number. this doesn't work, but i think that it should.
* casting the port as an int as a stop-gap fix
* email doesn't already have to be enabled to be enabled
* don't return the smtp password from the API
* show a fake placeholder password if the username is also set
* error type for @groob