Ensure the jwks expiresInTime is not zero and add a log indicating the new expiration time
Replace the configuration property only when the flag is being used
With this change we should be able to collect and expose the following histograms:
* `management.updatechannel.create.duration.ms` with `closed` boolean label
* `management.updatechannel.create.duration.micro` with `closed` boolean label
* `management.updatechannel.close.one.duration.ms`
* `management.updatechannel.close.one.duration.micro`
* `management.updatechannel.close.multiple.duration.ms`
* `management.updatechannel.close.multiple.duration.micro`
* `management.updatechannel.close.multiple.channels`
* `management.updatechannel.send.duration.ms` with `found` and `dropped` boolean labels
* `management.updatechannel.send.duration.micro` with `found` and `dropped` boolean labels
* `management.updatechannel.get.all.duration.ms`
* `management.updatechannel.get.all.duration.micro`
* `management.updatechannel.get.all.peers`
- dupword checks for duplicate words in the source code
- durationcheck checks for two durations multiplied together
- forbidigo forbids identifiers
- mirror reports wrong mirror patterns of bytes/strings usage
- misspell finds commonly misspelled English words in comments
- predeclared finds code that shadows one of Go's predeclared identifiers
- thelper detects Go test helpers without t.Helper() call and checks the consistency of test helpers
* Move StoreKind under own StoreConfig configuration parameter
* Rename StoreKind option to Engine
* Rename StoreKind internal methods and types to Engine
* Add template engine value test
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Co-authored-by: Maycon Santos <mlsmaycon@gmail.com>
Restructure data handling for improved performance and flexibility.
Introduce 'G'-prefixed fields to represent Gorm relations, simplifying resource management.
Eliminate complexity in lookup tables for enhanced query and write speed.
Enable independent operations on data structures, requiring adjustments in the Store interface and Account Manager.
Add a direct write to handle management.json write operation.
Remove empty configuration types to avoid unnecessary fields in the generated management.json file.
Implement user deletion across all IDP-ss. Expires all user peers
when the user is deleted. Users are permanently removed from a local
store, but in IDP, we remove Netbird attributes for the user
untilUserDeleteFromIDPEnabled setting is not enabled.
To test, an admin user should remove any additional users.
Until the UI incorporates this feature, use a curl DELETE request
targeting the /users/<USER_ID> management endpoint. Note that this
request only removes user attributes and doesn't trigger a delete
from the IDP.
To enable user removal from the IdP, set UserDeleteFromIDPEnabled
to true in account settings. Until we have a UI for this, make this
change directly in the store file.
Store the deleted email addresses in encrypted in activity store.
The ephemeral manager keep the inactive ephemeral peers in a linked list. The manager schedule a cleanup procedure to the head of the linked list (to the most deprecated peer). At the end of cleanup schedule the next cleanup to the new head.
If a device connect back to the server the manager will remote it from the peers list.
Enhance the user experience by enabling authentication to Netbird using Single Sign-On (SSO) with any Identity Provider (IDP) provider. Current client offers this capability through the Device Authorization Flow, however, is not widely supported by many IDPs, and even some that do support it do not provide a complete verification URL.
To address these challenges, this pull request enable Authorization Code Flow with Proof Key for Code Exchange (PKCE) for client logins, which is a more widely adopted and secure approach to facilitate SSO with various IDP providers.
Some IDP requires different scope requests and
issue access tokens for different purposes
This change allow for remote configurable scopes
and the use of ID token
Some IDP use different audience for different clients.
This update checks HTTP and Device authorization flow audience values.
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Co-authored-by: Givi Khojanashvili <gigovich@gmail.com>
This feature allows using the custom claim in the JWT token as a user ID.
Refactor claims extractor with options support
Add is_current to the user API response
This PR adds system activity tracking.
The management service records events like
add/remove peer, group, rule, route, etc.
The activity events are stored in the SQLite event store
and can be queried by the HTTP API.
Due to peer reconnects when restarting the Management service,
there are lots of SaveStore operations to update peer status.
Store.SavePeerStatus stores peer status separately and the
FileStore implementation stores it in memory.
Added DNS update protocol message
Added sync to clients
Update nameserver API with new fields
Added default NS groups
Added new dns-name flag for the management service append to peer DNS label
This PR simplifies Store and FileStore
by keeping just the Get and Save account methods.
The AccountManager operates mostly around
a single account, so it makes sense to fetch
the whole account object from the store.
This PR brings open-telemetry metrics to the
Management service.
The Management service exposes new HTTP endpoint
/metrics on 8081 port by default.
The port can be changed by specifying
--metrics-port PORT flag when starting the service.
This will help us understand usage on self-hosted deployments
The collection may be disabled by using the flag --disable-anonymous-metrics or
NETBIRD_DISABLE_ANONYMOUS_METRICS in setup.env
Support Generic OAuth 2.0 Device Authorization Grant
as per RFC specification https://www.rfc-editor.org/rfc/rfc8628.
The previous version supported only Auth0 as an IDP backend.
This implementation enables the Interactive SSO Login feature
for any IDP compatible with the specification, e.g., Keycloak.
When creating TLSConfig from provided certificate file, the HTTP/2 support is not enabled.
It works with Certmanager because it adds h2 support.
We enable it the same way when creating TLSConfig from files.
This PR is a part of an effort to use standard ports (443 or 80) that are usually allowed by default in most of the environments.
Right now Management Service runs the Let'sEncrypt manager on port 443, HTTP API server on port 33071,
and a gRPC server on port 33073. There are three separate listeners.
This PR combines these listeners into one.
With this change, the HTTP and gRPC server runs on either 443 with TLS or 80 without TLS
by default (no --port specified).
Let's Encrypt manager always runs on port 443 if enabled.
The backward compatibility server runs on port 33073 (with TLS or without).
HTTP port 33071 is obsolete and not used anymore.
Newly installed agents will connect to port 443 by default instead of port 33073 if not specified otherwise.
Right now Signal Service runs the Let'sEncrypt manager on port 80
and a gRPC server on port 10000. There are two separate listeners.
This PR combines these listeners into one with a cmux lib.
The gRPC server runs on either 443 with TLS or 80 without TLS.
Let's Encrypt manager always runs on port 80.
* rename wiretrustee-signal to netbird-signal
* Rename Signal repositories and source bin
* Adjust docker-compose with signal volume [skip ci]
Co-authored-by: mlsmaycon <mlsmaycon@gmail.com>