* Add logging for slow SQL queries in SaveAccount and GetAccount
* Add resource count log for large accounts
* Refactor metrics middleware to simplify counters and histograms
* Update log levels and remove redundant resource count check
This PR implements the following posture checks:
* Agent minimum version allowed
* OS minimum version allowed
* Geo-location based on connection IP
For the geo-based location, we rely on GeoLite2 databases which are free IP geolocation databases. MaxMind was tested and we provide a script that easily allows to download of all necessary files, see infrastructure_files/download-geolite2.sh.
The OpenAPI spec should extensively cover the life cycle of current version posture checks.
* Added function to check user access by JWT groups in the account management mock server and account manager
* Refactor auth middleware for group-based JWT access control
* Add group-based JWT access control on adding new peer with JWT
* Remove mapping error as the token validation error is already present in grpc error codes
* use GetAccountFromToken to prevent single mode issues
* handle foreground login message
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Co-authored-by: Maycon Santos <mlsmaycon@gmail.com>
* Extend management API to support list of allowed JWT groups (#1366)
* Add JWTAllowGroups settings to account management
* Return an empty group list if jwt allow groups is not set
* Add JwtAllowGroups to account settings in handler test
* Add JWT group-based user authorization (#1373)
* Add JWTAllowGroups settings to account management
* Return an empty group list if jwt allow groups is not set
* Add JwtAllowGroups to account settings in handler test
* Implement user access validation authentication based on JWT groups
* Remove the slices package import due to compatibility issues with the gitHub workflow(s) Go version
* Refactor auth middleware and test for extracted claim handling
* Optimize JWT group check in auth middleware to cover nil and empty allowed groups
Adding support to account owners to delete an account
This will remove all users from local, and if --user-delete-from-idp is set it will remove from the remote IDP
The API authentication with PATs was not considering different userIDClaim
that some of the IdPs are using.
In this PR we read the userIDClaim from the config file
instead of using the fixed default and only keep
it as a fallback if none in defined.
The new functionality allows blocking a user in the Management service.
Blocked users lose access to the Dashboard, aren't able to modify the network map,
and all of their connected devices disconnect and are set to the "login expired" state.
Technically all above was achieved with the updated PUT /api/users endpoint,
that was extended with the is_blocked field.
Extend HTTP API with Account endpoints to configure global peer login expiration.
GET /api/accounts
PUT /api/account/{id}/
The GET endpoint returns an array of accounts with
always one account in the list. No exceptions.
The PUT endpoint updates account settings:
PeerLoginExpiration and PeerLoginExpirationEnabled.
PeerLoginExpiration is a duration in seconds after which peers' logins will expire.
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.
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 PR brings user invites logic to the Management service
via HTTP API.
The POST /users/ API endpoint creates a new user in the Idp
and then in the local storage.
Once the invited user signs ups, the account invitation is redeemed.
There are a few limitations.
This works only with an enabled IdP manager.
Users that already have a registered account can't be invited.
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.