Prevent abuse of these endpoints with rate limiting backed by Redis. The
limits assigned should be appropriate for almost any Fleet deployment.
Closes#530
- Support both /api/v1/fleet and /api/v1/kolide routes in server.
- Add logging for use of deprecated routes.
- Rename routes in frontend JS.
- Rename routes and add notes in documentation.
- Add endpoints for osquery to register and continue a carve.
- Implement client functionality for retrieving carve details and contents in fleetctl.
- Add documentation on using file carving with Fleet.
Addresses kolide/fleet#1714
Getting a single host with `fleetctl get host foobar` will look up the
host with the matching hostname, uuid, osquery identifier, or node key,
and provide the full host details along with the labels the host is a
member of.
This commit takes advantage of the existing pagination APIs in the Fleet
server, and provides additional APIs to support pagination in the web
UI. Doing this dramatically reduces the response sizes for requests from
the UI, and limits the performance impact of UI clients on the Fleet and
MySQL servers.
This PR removes unused types, code, DB tables, and associated migrations that are unused since Fleet 2.0.
An existing migration was refactored, and should remain compatible with both existing and new Fleet installations.
- 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
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.
An incorrect authorization check allowed non-admin users to modify the details of other users. We now enforce the appropriate authorization so that unprivileged users can only modify their own details.
Thanks to 'Quikke' for the report.
Replaces the UI endpoints for creating and modifying labels. These were removed
in #1686 because we thought we were killing the UI.
Now labels can be created and edited in the UI again.
Replaces (and appropriately refactors) a number of endpoints that were removed long ago when we decided to kill the UI with the fleetctl release. We turned out not to do this, and now need to restore these missing endpoints.
This is not a straight up replacement of the existing code because of refactoring to the DB schemas that was also done in the migration.
Most of the replaced code was removed in #1670 and #1686.
Fixes#1811, fixes#1810
With the UI, deleting by ID made sense. With fleetctl, we now want to delete
by name. Transition only the methods used for spec related entities, as others
will be removed soon.
Previously decorators were stored in a separate table. Now they are stored
directly with the config so that they can be modified on a per-platform basis.
Delete now unused decorators code.
- Add new Apply spec methods for queries and packs
- Remove now extraneous datastore/service methods
- Remove import service (unused, and had many dependencies that this breaks)
- Refactor tests as appropriate
This PR adds support for file integrity monitoring. This is done by providing a simplified API that can be used to PATCH/GET FIM configurations. There is also code to build the FIM configuration to send back to osquery. Each PATCH request, if successful, replaces Fleet's existing FIM configuration. For example:
curl -X "PATCH" "https://localhost:8080/api/v1/kolide/fim" \
-H "Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzZXNzaW9uX2tleSI6IkVhaFhvZWswMGtWSEdaTTNCWndIMnhpYWxkNWZpcVFDR2hEcW1HK2UySmRNOGVFVE1DeTNTaUlFWmhZNUxhdW1ueFZDV2JiR1Bwdm5TKzdyK3NJUzNnPT0ifQ.SDCHAUA1vTuWGjXtcQds2GZLM27HAAiOUhR4WvgvTNY" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8" \
-d $'{
"interval": 500,
"file_paths": {
"etc": [
"/etc/%%"
],
"users": [
"/Users/%/Library/%%",
"/Users/%/Documents/%%"
],
"usr": [
"/usr/bin/%%"
]
}
}'
Closes issue #1456 This PR adds a single sign on option to the login form, exposes single sign on to the end user, and allows an admin user to set single sign on configuration options.
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
Closes issue #1388. The problem here is that previously, the reset button loaded a hard coded list of default options into the component state, instead of the proper behavior which is to reset the options to default values on the back end, and then load them back into the redux store. This PR adds a ResetOptions endpoint on the server, and wires up the UI so that it triggers the endpoint, then loads the default options from the backend server.
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.
Use the [SockJS Protocol](https://github.com/sockjs/sockjs-protocol) to handle
bidirectional communication instead of plain websockets. This allows
distributed queries to function in situations in which they previously failed
(Load balancers not supporting websockets, issues with Safari and self-signed
certs, etc.).
Also includes fixes to the JS message handling logic where slightly different
message delivery semantics (when using XHR) were exposing bugs.
Fixes#1241, #1327.