* Remove username from UI code
* Remove username from tests
* Remove username from database
* Modify server endpoints for removing username
* Implement backend aspects of removing username
* Update API docs
* Add name to fleetctl
- Add policy.rego file defining authorization policies.
- Add Go integrations to evaluate Rego policies (via OPA).
- Add middleware to ensure requests without authorization check are rejected (guard against programmer error).
- Add authorization checks to most service endpoints.
- Move team-related service methods to `ee/server/service`.
- Instantiate different service on startup based on license key.
- Refactor service errors into separate package.
- Add support for running E2E tests in both Core and Basic tiers.
PR #9 unintentionally exposed the validation that prevented the @
character in usernames. We have decided there is no reason to block this
character.
Fixes#36
Closes#1502. This PR adds support for SSO to the new user creation process. An admin now has the option to select SSO when creating a new user. When the confirmation form is submitted, the user is automatically authenticated with the IDP, and if successful, is redirected to the Kolide home page. Password authentication, password change and password reset are not allowed for an SSO user.
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.
* Change email functionality
* Code review changes for @groob
* Name change per @groob
* Code review changes per @marpaia
Also added addition non-happy path tests to satisfy concerns by @groob