fleet/tools/test-orbit-mtls
Victor Lyuboslavsky 4416a68496
Fixing SSL certificates to make them valid. (#16359)
SSL certificates have a maximum lifetime of 398 days right now (13
months).

It took me a while to figure out why these were not working via the
macOS keychain (specifically curl and Safari).
It appears the CA certificate can have a longer lifetime, but the SSL
certificates it issues must have a limited lifetime.
2024-01-31 12:00:59 -06:00
..
client-ca.crt Add mTLS support to fleetd (#11319) 2023-04-27 08:44:39 -03:00
client-ca.key Add mTLS support to fleetd (#11319) 2023-04-27 08:44:39 -03:00
client.crt Add mTLS support to fleetd (#11319) 2023-04-27 08:44:39 -03:00
client.key Add mTLS support to fleetd (#11319) 2023-04-27 08:44:39 -03:00
docker-compose.yml Add mTLS support to fleetd (#11319) 2023-04-27 08:44:39 -03:00
gen.sh Fixing SSL certificates to make them valid. (#16359) 2024-01-31 12:00:59 -06:00
nginx.conf Add mTLS support to fleetd (#11319) 2023-04-27 08:44:39 -03:00
README.md Add mTLS support to fleetd (#11319) 2023-04-27 08:44:39 -03:00

Test Orbit mTLS

WARNING: All of these scripts are for testing only, they are not safe for production use.

Following is a guide to help you run and test Orbit with TLS client certificate authentication.

All commands are executed in the repository's root directory. All commands were tested on an Intel macOS.

Diagram of components

graph LR;
    tuf[TUF file server<br>http://host.docker.internal:8081];
    fleet_server[Fleet Server<br>https://host.docker.internal:8080];
    subgraph nginx[<b>nginx</b> https://host.docker.internal:8888]
        client_ca[client_ca.crt];
        server_certificate_nginx[fleet.pem];
    end
    nginx -- TLS Fleet --> fleet_server;
    nginx -- HTTP /tuf --> tuf;

    subgraph fleetd
        subgraph orbit
            fleet_client_certificate_orbit[fleet_client.crt<br>fleet_client.key];
            update_client_certificate_orbit[update_client.crt<br>update_client.key];
            fleet_server_certificate_orbit[fleet.pem];
            update_server_certificate_orbit[update.pem];
        end
        subgraph desktop [Fleet Desktop]
            client_certificate_desktop["(from env)<br>fleet_client.crt<br>fleet_client.key"];
            server_certificate_desktop["(from env)<br>fleet.pem"];
        end
        subgraph osquery[osquery];
            client_certificate_osquery[--tls_client_cert=fleet_client.crt<br>--tls_client_key=fleet_client.key];
            server_certificate_osquery[--tls_server_certs=fleet.pem];
        end

        desktop_browser[Fleet Desktop<br> from Browser];
    end

    orbit -- "Fleet Orbit API (TLS)" --> nginx;
    desktop -- "Fleet Desktop API (TLS)" --> nginx;
    osquery -- "osquery<br>remote API (TLS)" --> nginx;
    desktop_browser -- "My Device URL (TLS)" --> fleet_server;

    orbit -- TUF TLS --> nginx;

    subgraph fleetctl[fleetctl package command]
        update_client_certificate_fleetctl[update_client.crt<br>update_client.key];
    end
    fleetctl -- TUF TLS --> nginx;

The nginx proxy is configured to authenticate all TLS requests with the provided client_ca.crt.

1. Setup

This guide assumes the following Local TUF setup.

2. Start nginx proxy with client certificate verification

docker compose -f ./tools/test-orbit-mtls/docker-compose.yml up

The proxy will listen to port 8888 and use TLS client certificates for authentication.

3. Generate Orbit installers with custom flags

rm -rf test_tuf

SYSTEMS="macos windows linux" \
PKG_FLEET_URL=https://host.docker.internal:8888 \
PKG_TUF_URL=https://host.docker.internal:8888/tuf \
DEB_FLEET_URL=https://host.docker.internal:8888 \
DEB_TUF_URL=https://host.docker.internal:8888/tuf \
RPM_FLEET_URL=https://host.docker.internal:8888 \
RPM_TUF_URL=https://host.docker.internal:8888/tuf \
MSI_FLEET_URL=https://host.docker.internal:8888 \
MSI_TUF_URL=https://host.docker.internal:8888/tuf \
GENERATE_PKG=1 \
GENERATE_DEB=1 \
GENERATE_RPM=1 \
GENERATE_MSI=1 \
ENROLL_SECRET=OokY/M85nibwa3WjDtC091QzXqkoVCwX \
FLEET_DESKTOP=1 \
USE_FLEET_SERVER_CERTIFICATE=1 \
USE_FLEET_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE=1 \
USE_UPDATE_SERVER_CERTIFICATE=1 \
USE_UPDATE_CLIENT_CERTIFICATE=1 \
FLEET_DESKTOP_ALTERNATIVE_BROWSER_HOST=host.docker.internal:8080 \
./tools/tuf/test/main.sh

We need to define FLEET_DESKTOP_ALTERNATIVE_BROWSER_HOST because we are not expecting users to configure client certificates on their browser.

Once the packages are generated, they are ready to be installed on devices for testing.