freeipa/ipalib/session.py

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add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
# Authors: John Dennis <jdennis@redhat.com>
#
# Copyright (C) 2011 Red Hat
# see file 'COPYING' for use and warranty information
#
# This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
# it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
# the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or
# (at your option) any later version.
#
# This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
# but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
# MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
# GNU General Public License for more details.
#
# You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
# along with this program. If not, see <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>.
import memcache
import random
import errors
import os
import re
import time
Compliant client side session cookie behavior In summary this patch does: * Follow the defined rules for cookies when: - receiving a cookie (process the attributes) - storing a cookie (store cookie + attributes) - sending a cookie + validate the cookie domain against the request URL + validate the cookie path against the request URL + validate the cookie expiration + if valid then send only the cookie, no attribtues * Modifies how a request URL is stored during a XMLRPC request/response sequence. * Refactors a bit of the request/response logic to allow for making the decision whether to send a session cookie instead of full Kerberous auth easier. * The server now includes expiration information in the session cookie it sends to the client. The server always had the information available to prevent using an expired session cookie. Now that expiration timestamp is returned to the client as well and now the client will not send an expired session cookie back to the server. * Adds a new module and unit test for cookies (see below) Formerly we were always returning the session cookie no matter what the domain or path was in the URL. We were also sending the cookie attributes which are for the client only (used to determine if to return a cookie). The attributes are not meant to be sent to the server and the previous behavior was a protocol violation. We also were not checking the cookie expiration. Cookie library issues: We need a library to create, parse, manipulate and format cookies both in a client context and a server context. Core Python has two cookie libraries, Cookie.py and cookielib.py. Why did we add a new cookie module instead of using either of these two core Python libaries? Cookie.py is designed for server side generation but can be used to parse cookies on the client. It's the library we were using in the server. However when I tried to use it in the client I discovered it has some serious bugs. There are 7 defined cookie elements, it fails to correctly parse 3 of the 7 elements which makes it unusable because we depend on those elements. Since Cookie.py was designed for server side cookie processing it's not hard to understand how fails to correctly parse a cookie because that's a client side need. (Cookie.py also has an awkward baroque API and is missing some useful functionality we would have to build on top of it). cookielib.py is designed for client side. It's fully featured and obeys all the RFC's. It would be great to use however it's tightly coupled with another core library, urllib2.py. The http request and response objects must be urllib2 objects. But we don't use urllib2, rather we use httplib because xmlrpclib uses httplib. I don't see a reason why a cookie library should be so tightly coupled to a protocol library, but it is and that means we can't use it (I tried to just pick some isolated entrypoints for our use but I kept hitting interaction/dependency problems). I decided to solve the cookie library problems by writing a minimal cookie library that does what we need and no more than that. It is a new module in ipapython shared by both client and server and comes with a new unit test. The module has plenty of documentation, no need to repeat it here. Request URL issues: We also had problems in rpc.py whereby information from the request which is needed when we process the response is not available. Most important was the requesting URL. It turns out that the way the class and object relationships are structured it's impossible to get this information. Someone else must have run into the same issue because there was a routine called reconstruct_url() which attempted to recreate the request URL from other available information. Unfortunately reconstruct_url() was not callable from inside the response handler. So I decided to store the information in the thread context and when the request is received extract it from the thread context. It's perhaps not an ideal solution but we do similar things elsewhere so at least it's consistent. I removed the reconstruct_url() function because the exact information is now in the context and trying to apply heuristics to recreate the url is probably not robust. Ticket https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/3022
2012-12-04 17:20:17 -06:00
from urllib2 import urlparse
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
from text import _
from ipapython.ipa_log_manager import *
Tweak the session auth to reflect developer consensus. * Increase the session ID from 48 random bits to 128. * Implement the sesison_logout RPC command. It permits the UI to send a command that destroys the users credentials in the current session. * Restores the original web URL's and their authentication protections. Adds a new URL for sessions /ipa/session/json. Restores the original Kerberos auth which was for /ipa and everything below. New /ipa/session/json URL is treated as an exception and turns all authenticaion off. Similar to how /ipa/ui is handled. * Refactor the RPC handlers in rpcserver.py such that there is one handler per URL, specifically one handler per RPC and AuthMechanism combination. * Reworked how the URL names are used to map a URL to a handler. Previously it only permitted one level in the URL path hierarchy. We now dispatch on more that one URL path component. * Renames the api.Backend.session object to wsgi_dispatch. The use of the name session was historical and is now confusing since we've implemented sessions in a different location than the api.Backend.session object, which is really a WSGI dispatcher, hence the new name wsgi_dispatch. * Bullet-proof the setting of the KRB5CCNAME environment variable. ldap2.connect already sets it via the create_context() call but just in case that's not called or not called early enough (we now have other things besides ldap which need the ccache) we explicitly set it early as soon as we know it. * Rework how we test for credential validity and expiration. The previous code did not work with s4u2proxy because it assumed the existance of a TGT. Now we first try ldap credentials and if we can't find those fallback to the TGT. This logic was moved to the KRB5_CCache object, it's an imperfect location for it but it's the only location that makes sense at the moment given some of the current code limitations. The new methods are KRB5_CCache.valid() and KRB5_CCache.endtime(). * Add two new classes to session.py AuthManager and SessionAuthManager. Their purpose is to emit authication events to interested listeners. At the moment the logout event is the only event, but the framework should support other events as they arise. * Add BuildRequires python-memcached to freeipa.spec.in * Removed the marshaled_dispatch method, it was cruft, no longer referenced. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2362
2012-02-15 09:26:42 -06:00
from ipalib import api, errors
from ipalib import Command
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
from ipalib.krb_utils import *
Compliant client side session cookie behavior In summary this patch does: * Follow the defined rules for cookies when: - receiving a cookie (process the attributes) - storing a cookie (store cookie + attributes) - sending a cookie + validate the cookie domain against the request URL + validate the cookie path against the request URL + validate the cookie expiration + if valid then send only the cookie, no attribtues * Modifies how a request URL is stored during a XMLRPC request/response sequence. * Refactors a bit of the request/response logic to allow for making the decision whether to send a session cookie instead of full Kerberous auth easier. * The server now includes expiration information in the session cookie it sends to the client. The server always had the information available to prevent using an expired session cookie. Now that expiration timestamp is returned to the client as well and now the client will not send an expired session cookie back to the server. * Adds a new module and unit test for cookies (see below) Formerly we were always returning the session cookie no matter what the domain or path was in the URL. We were also sending the cookie attributes which are for the client only (used to determine if to return a cookie). The attributes are not meant to be sent to the server and the previous behavior was a protocol violation. We also were not checking the cookie expiration. Cookie library issues: We need a library to create, parse, manipulate and format cookies both in a client context and a server context. Core Python has two cookie libraries, Cookie.py and cookielib.py. Why did we add a new cookie module instead of using either of these two core Python libaries? Cookie.py is designed for server side generation but can be used to parse cookies on the client. It's the library we were using in the server. However when I tried to use it in the client I discovered it has some serious bugs. There are 7 defined cookie elements, it fails to correctly parse 3 of the 7 elements which makes it unusable because we depend on those elements. Since Cookie.py was designed for server side cookie processing it's not hard to understand how fails to correctly parse a cookie because that's a client side need. (Cookie.py also has an awkward baroque API and is missing some useful functionality we would have to build on top of it). cookielib.py is designed for client side. It's fully featured and obeys all the RFC's. It would be great to use however it's tightly coupled with another core library, urllib2.py. The http request and response objects must be urllib2 objects. But we don't use urllib2, rather we use httplib because xmlrpclib uses httplib. I don't see a reason why a cookie library should be so tightly coupled to a protocol library, but it is and that means we can't use it (I tried to just pick some isolated entrypoints for our use but I kept hitting interaction/dependency problems). I decided to solve the cookie library problems by writing a minimal cookie library that does what we need and no more than that. It is a new module in ipapython shared by both client and server and comes with a new unit test. The module has plenty of documentation, no need to repeat it here. Request URL issues: We also had problems in rpc.py whereby information from the request which is needed when we process the response is not available. Most important was the requesting URL. It turns out that the way the class and object relationships are structured it's impossible to get this information. Someone else must have run into the same issue because there was a routine called reconstruct_url() which attempted to recreate the request URL from other available information. Unfortunately reconstruct_url() was not callable from inside the response handler. So I decided to store the information in the thread context and when the request is received extract it from the thread context. It's perhaps not an ideal solution but we do similar things elsewhere so at least it's consistent. I removed the reconstruct_url() function because the exact information is now in the context and trying to apply heuristics to recreate the url is probably not robust. Ticket https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/3022
2012-12-04 17:20:17 -06:00
from ipapython.cookie import Cookie
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
__doc__ = '''
Session Support for IPA
John Dennis <jdennis@redhat.com>
Goals
=====
Provide per-user session data caching which persists between
requests. Desired features are:
* Integrates cleanly with minimum impact on existing infrastructure.
* Provides maximum security balanced against real-world performance
demands.
* Sessions must be able to be revoked (flushed).
* Should be flexible and easy to use for developers.
* Should leverage existing technology and code to the maximum extent
possible to avoid re-invention, excessive implementation time and to
benefit from robustness in field proven components commonly shared
in the open source community.
* Must support multiple independent processes which share session
data.
* System must function correctly if session data is available or not.
* Must be high performance.
* Should not be tied to specific web servers or browsers. Should
integrate with our chosen WSGI model.
Issues
======
Cookies
-------
Most session implementations are based on the use of cookies. Cookies
have some inherent problems.
* User has the option to disable cookies.
* User stored cookie data is not secure. Can be mitigated by setting
flags indicating the cookie is only to be used with SSL secured HTTP
connections to specific web resources and setting the cookie to
expire at session termination. Most modern browsers enforce these.
Where to store session data?
----------------------------
Session data may be stored on either on the client or on the
server. Storing session data on the client addresses the problem of
session data availability when requests are serviced by independent web
servers because the session data travels with the request. However
there are data size limitations. Storing session data on the client
also exposes sensitive data but this can be mitigated by encrypting
the session data such that only the server can decrypt it.
The more conventional approach is to bind session data to a unique
name, the session ID. The session ID is transmitted to the client and
the session data is paired with the session ID on the server in a
associative data store. The session data is retrieved by the server
using the session ID when the receiving the request. This eliminates
exposing sensitive session data on the client along with limitations
on data size. It however introduces the issue of session data
availability when requests are serviced by more than one server
process.
Multi-process session data availability
---------------------------------------
Apache (and other web servers) fork child processes to handle requests
in parallel. Also web servers may be deployed in a farm where requests
are load balanced in round robin fashion across different nodes. In
both cases session data cannot be stored in the memory of a server
process because it is not available to other processes, either sibling
children of a master server process or server processes on distinct
nodes.
Typically this is addressed by storing session data in a SQL
database. When a request is received by a server process containing a
session ID in it's cookie data the session ID is used to perform a SQL
query and the resulting data is then attached to the request as it
proceeds through the request processing pipeline. This of course
introduces coherency issues.
For IPA the introduction of a SQL database dependency is undesired and
should be avoided.
Session data may also be shared by independent processes by storing
the session data in files.
An alternative solution which has gained considerable popularity
recently is the use of a fast memory based caching server. Data is
stored in a single process memory and may be queried and set via a
light weight protocol using standard socket mechanisms, memcached is
one example. A typical use is to optimize SQL queries by storing a SQL
result in shared memory cache avoiding the more expensive SQL
operation. But the memory cache has distinct advantages in non-SQL
situations as well.
Possible implementations for use by IPA
=======================================
Apache Sessions
---------------
Apache has 2.3 has implemented session support via these modules:
mod_session
Overarching session support based on cookies.
See: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.3/mod/mod_session.html
mod_session_cookie
Stores session data in the client.
See: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.3/mod/mod_session_cookie.html
mod_session_crypto
Encrypts session data for security. Encryption key is shared
configuration parameter visible to all Apache processes and is
stored in a configuration file.
See: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.3/mod/mod_session_crypto.html
mod_session_dbd
Stores session data in a SQL database permitting multiple
processes to access and share the same session data.
See: http://httpd.apache.org/docs/2.3/mod/mod_session_dbd.html
Issues with Apache sessions
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Although Apache has implemented generic session support and Apache is
our web server of preference it nonetheless introduces issues for IPA.
* Session support is only available in httpd >= 2.3 which at the
time of this writing is currently only available as a Beta release
from upstream. We currently only ship httpd 2.2, the same is true
for other distributions.
* We could package and ship the sessions modules as a temporary
package in httpd 2.2 environments. But this has the following
consequences:
- The code has to be backported. the module API has changed
slightly between httpd 2.2 and 2.3. The backporting is not
terribly difficult and a proof of concept has been
implemented.
- We would then be on the hook to package and maintain a special
case Apache package. This is maintenance burden as well as a
distribution packaging burden. Both of which would be best
avoided if possible.
* The design of the Apache session modules is such that they can
only be manipulated by other Apache modules. The ability of
consumers of the session data to control the session data is
simplistic, constrained and static during the period the request
is processed. Request handlers which are not native Apache modules
(e.g. IPA via WSGI) can only examine the session data
via request headers and reset it in response headers.
* Shared session data is available exclusively via SQL.
However using the 2.3 Apache session modules would give us robust
session support implemented in C based on standardized Apache
interfaces which are widely used.
Python Web Frameworks
---------------------
Virtually every Python web framework supports cookie based sessions,
e.g. Django, Twisted, Zope, Turbogears etc. Early on in IPA we decided
to avoid the use of these frameworks. Trying to pull in just one part
of these frameworks just to get session support would be problematic
because the code does not function outside it's framework.
IPA implemented sessions
------------------------
Originally it was believed the path of least effort was to utilize
existing session support, most likely what would be provided by
Apache. However there are enough basic modular components available in
native Python and other standard packages it should be possible to
provide session support meeting the aforementioned goals with a modest
implementation effort. Because we're leveraging existing components
the implementation difficulties are subsumed by other components which
have already been field proven and have community support. This is a
smart strategy.
Proposed Solution
=================
Our interface to the web server is via WSGI which invokes a callback
per request passing us an environmental context for the request. For
this discussion we'll name the WSGI callback "application()", a
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
conventional name in WSGI parlance.
Shared session data will be handled by memcached. We will create one
instance of memcached on each server node dedicated to IPA
exclusively. Communication with memcached will be via a UNIX socket
located in the file system under /var/run/ipa_memcached. It will be
protected by file permissions and optionally SELinux policy.
In application() we examine the request cookies and if there is an IPA
session cookie with a session ID we retrieve the session data from our
memcached instance.
The session data will be a Python dict. IPA components will read or
write their session information by using a pre-agreed upon name
(e.g. key) in the dict. This is a very flexible system and consistent
with how we pass data in most parts of IPA.
If the session data is not available an empty session data dict will
be created.
How does this session data travel with the request in the IPA
pipeline? In IPA we use the HTTP request/response to implement RPC. In
application() we convert the request into a procedure call passing it
arguments derived from the HTTP request. The passed parameters are
specific to the RPC method being invoked. The context the RPC call is
executing in is not passed as an RPC parameter.
How would the contextual information such as session data be bound to
the request and hence the RPC call?
In IPA when a RPC invocation is being prepared from a request we
recognize this will only ever be processed serially by one Python
thread. A thread local dict called "context" is allocated for each
thread. The context dict is cleared in between requests (e.g. RPC method
invocations). The per-thread context dict is populated during the
lifetime of the request and is used as a global data structure unique to
the request that various IPA component can read from and write to with
the assurance the data is unique to the current request and/or method
call.
The session data dict will be written into the context dict under the
session key before the RPC method begins execution. Thus session data
can be read and written by any IPA component by accessing
``context.session``.
When the RPC method finishes execution the session data bound to the
request/method is retrieved from the context and written back to the
memcached instance. The session ID is set in the response sent back to
the client in the ``Set-Cookie`` header along with the flags
controlling it's usage.
Issues and details
------------------
IPA code cannot depend on session data being present, however it
should always update session data with the hope it will be available
in the future. Session data may not be available because:
* This is the first request from the user and no session data has
been created yet.
* The user may have cookies disabled.
* The session data may have been flushed. memcached operates with
a fixed memory allocation and will flush entries on a LRU basis,
like with any cache there is no guarantee of persistence.
Also we may have have deliberately expired or deleted session
data, see below.
Cookie manipulation is done via the standard Python Cookie module.
Session cookies will be set to only persist as long as the browser has
the session open. They will be tagged so the browser only returns
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
the session ID on SSL secured HTTP requests. They will not be visible
to Javascript in the browser.
Session ID's will be created by using 48 bits of random data and
converted to 12 hexadecimal digits. Newly generated session ID's will
be checked for prior existence to handle the unlikely case the random
number repeats.
memcached will have significantly higher performance than a SQL or file
based storage solution. Communication is effectively though a pipe
(UNIX socket) using a very simple protocol and the data is held
entirely in process memory. memcached also scales easily, it is easy
to add more memcached processes and distribute the load across them.
At this point in time we don't anticipate the need for this.
A very nice feature of the Python memcached module is that when a data
item is written to the cache it is done with standard Python pickling
(pickling is a standard Python mechanism to marshal and unmarshal
Python objects). We adopt the convention the object written to cache
will be a dict to meet our internal data handling conventions. The
pickling code will recursively handle nested objects in the dict. Thus
we gain a lot of flexibility using standard Python data structures to
store and retrieve our session data without having to author and debug
code to marshal and unmarshal the data if some other storage mechanism
had been used. This is a significant implementation win. Of course
some common sense limitations need to observed when deciding on what
is written to the session cache keeping in mind the data is shared
between processes and it should not be excessively large (a
configurable option)
We can set an expiration on memcached entries. We may elect to do that
to force session data to be refreshed periodically. For example we may
wish the client to present fresh credentials on a periodic basis even
if the cached credentials are otherwise within their validity period.
We can explicitly delete session data if for some reason we believe it
is stale, invalid or compromised.
memcached also gives us certain facilities to prevent race conditions
between different processes utilizing the cache. For example you can
check of the entry has been modified since you last read it or use CAS
(Check And Set) semantics. What has to be protected in terms of cache
coherency will likely have to be determined as the session support is
utilized and different data items are added to the cache. This is very
much data and context specific. Fortunately memcached operations are
atomic.
Controlling the memcached process
---------------------------------
We need a mechanism to start the memcached process and secure it so
that only IPA components can access it.
Although memcached ships with both an initscript and systemd unit
files those are for generic instances. We want a memcached instance
dedicated exclusively to IPA usage. To accomplish this we would install
a systemd unit file or an SysV initscript to control the IPA specific
memcached service. ipactl would be extended to know about this
additional service. systemd's cgroup facility would give us additional
mechanisms to integrate the IPA memcached service within a larger IPA
process group.
Protecting the memcached data would be done via file permissions (and
optionally SELinux policy) on the UNIX domain socket. Although recent
implementations of memcached support authentication via SASL this
introduces a performance and complexity burden not warranted when
cached is dedicated to our exclusive use and access controlled by OS
mechanisms.
Conventionally daemons are protected by assigning a system uid and/or
gid to the daemon. A daemon launched by root will drop it's privileges
by assuming the effective uid:gid assigned to it. File system access
is controlled by the OS via the effective identity and SELinux policy
can be crafted based on the identity. Thus the memcached UNIX socket
would be protected by having it owned by a specific system user and/or
membership in a restricted system group (discounting for the moment
SELinux).
Unfortunately we currently do not have an IPA system uid whose
identity our processes operate under nor do we have an IPA system
group. IPA does manage a collection of related processes (daemons) and
historically each has been assigned their own uid. When these
unrelated processes communicate they mutually authenticate via other
mechanisms. We do not have much of a history of using shared file
system objects across identities. When file objects are created they
are typically assigned the identity of daemon needing to access the
object and are not accessed by other daemons, or they carry root
identity.
When our WSGI application runs in Apache it is run as a WSGI
daemon. This means when Apache starts up it forks off WSGI processes
for us and we are independent of other Apache processes. When WSGI is
run in this mode there is the ability to set the uid:gid of the WSGI
process hosting us, however we currently do not take advantage of this
option. WSGI can be run in other modes as well, only in daemon mode
can the uid:gid be independently set from the rest of Apache. All
processes started by Apache can be set to a common uid:gid specified
in the global Apache configuration, by default it's
apache:apache. Thus when our IPA code executes it is running as
apache:apache.
To protect our memcached UNIX socket we can do one of two things:
1. Assign it's uid:gid as apache:apache. This would limit access to
our cache only to processes running under httpd. It's somewhat
restricted but far from ideal. Any code running in the web server
could potentially access our cache. It's difficult to control what the
web server runs and admins may not understand the consequences of
configuring httpd to serve other things besides IPA.
2. Create an IPA specific uid:gid, for example ipa:ipa. We then configure
our WSGI application to run as the ipa:ipa user and group. We also
configure our memcached instance to run as the ipa:ipa user and
group. In this configuration we are now fully protected, only our WSGI
code can read & write to our memcached UNIX socket.
However there may be unforeseen issues by converting our code to run as
something other than apache:apache. This would require some
investigation and testing.
IPA is dependent on other system daemons, specifically Directory
Server (ds) and Certificate Server (cs). Currently we configure ds to
run under the dirsrv:dirsrv user and group, an identity of our
creation. We allow cs to default to it's pkiuser:pkiuser user and
group. Should these other cooperating daemons also run under the
common ipa:ipa user and group identities? At first blush there would
seem to be an advantage to coalescing all process identities under a
common IPA user and group identity. However these other processes do
not depend on user and group permissions when working with external
agents, processes, etc. Rather they are designed to be stand-alone
network services which authenticate their clients via other
mechanisms. They do depend on user and group permission to manage
their own file system objects. If somehow the ipa user and/or group
were compromised or malicious code somehow executed under the ipa
identity there would be an advantage in having the cooperating
processes cordoned off under their own identities providing one extra
layer of protection. (Note, these cooperating daemons may not even be
co-located on the same node in which case the issue is moot)
The UNIX socket behavior (ldapi) with Directory Server is as follows:
* The socket ownership is: root:root
* The socket permissions are: 0666
* When connecting via ldapi you must authenticate as you would
normally with a TCP socket, except ...
* If autobind is enabled and the uid:gid is available via
SO_PEERCRED and the uid:gid can be found in the set of users known
to the Directory Server then that connection will be bound as that
user.
* Otherwise an anonymous bind will occur.
memcached UNIX socket behavior is as follows:
* memcached can be invoked with a user argument, no group may be
specified. The effective uid is the uid of the user argument and
the effective gid is the primary group of the user, let's call
this euid:egid
* The socket ownership is: euid:egid
* The socket permissions are 0700 by default, but this can be
modified by the -a mask command line arg which sets the umask
(defaults to 0700).
Overview of authentication in IPA
=================================
This describes how we currently authenticate and how we plan to
improve authentication performance. First some definitions.
There are 4 major players:
1. client
2. mod_auth_kerb (in Apache process)
3. wsgi handler (in IPA wsgi python process)
4. ds (directory server)
There are several resources:
1. /ipa/ui (unprotected, web UI static resources)
2. /ipa/xml (protected, xmlrpc RPC used by command line clients)
3. /ipa/json (protected, json RPC used by javascript in web UI)
4. ds (protected, wsgi acts as proxy, our LDAP server)
Current Model
-------------
This describes how things work in our current system for the web UI.
1. Client requests /ipa/ui, this is unprotected, is static and
contains no sensitive information. Apache replies with html and
javascript. The javascript requests /ipa/json.
2. Client sends post to /ipa/json.
3. mod_auth_kerb is configured to protect /ipa/json, replies 401
authenticate negotiate.
4. Client resends with credentials
5. mod_auth_kerb validates credentials
a. if invalid replies 403 access denied (stops here)
b. if valid creates temporary ccache, adds KRB5CCNAME to request
headers
6. Request passed to wsgi handler
a. validates request, KRB5CCNAME must be present, referrer, etc.
b. ccache saved and used to bind to ds
c. routes to specified RPC handler.
7. wsgi handler replies to client
Proposed new session based optimization
---------------------------------------
The round trip negotiate and credential validation in steps 3,4,5 is
expensive. This can be avoided if we can cache the client
credentials. With client sessions we can store the client credentials
in the session bound to the client.
A few notes about the session implementation.
* based on session cookies, cookies must be enabled
* session cookie is secure, only passed on secure connections, only
passed to our URL resource, never visible to client javascript
etc.
* session cookie has a session id which is used by wsgi handler to
retrieve client session data from shared multi-process cache.
Changes to Apache's resource protection
---------------------------------------
* /ipa/json is no longer protected by mod_auth_kerb. This is
necessary to avoid the negotiate expense in steps 3,4,5
above. Instead the /ipa/json resource will be protected in our wsgi
handler via the session cookie.
* A new protected URI is introduced, /ipa/login. This resource
does no serve any data, it is used exclusively for authentication.
The new sequence is:
1. Client requests /ipa/ui, this is unprotected. Apache replies with
html and javascript. The javascript requests /ipa/json.
2. Client sends post to /ipa/json, which is unprotected.
3. wsgi handler obtains session data from session cookie.
a. if ccache is present in session data and is valid
- request is further validated
- ccache is established for bind to ds
- request is routed to RPC handler
- wsgi handler eventually replies to client
b. if ccache is not present or not valid processing continues ...
4. wsgi handler replies with 401 Unauthorized
5. client sends request to /ipa/login to obtain session credentials
6. mod_auth_kerb replies 401 negotiate on /ipa/login
7. client sends credentials to /ipa/login
8. mod_auth_kerb validates credentials
a. if valid
- mod_auth_kerb permits access to /ipa/login. wsgi handler is
invoked and does the following:
* establishes session for client
* retrieves the ccache from KRB5CCNAME and stores it
a. if invalid
- mod_auth_kerb sends 403 access denied (processing stops)
9. client now posts the same data again to /ipa/json including
session cookie. Processing repeats starting at step 2 and since
the session data now contains a valid ccache step 3a executes, a
successful reply is sent to client.
Command line client using xmlrpc
--------------------------------
The above describes the web UI utilizing the json RPC mechanism. The
IPA command line tools utilize a xmlrpc RPC mechanism on the same
HTTP server. Access to the xmlrpc is via the /ipa/xml URI. The json
and xmlrpc API's are the same, they differ only on how their procedure
calls are marshalled and unmarshalled.
Under the new scheme /ipa/xml will continue to be Kerberos protected
at all times. Apache's mod_auth_kerb will continue to require the
client provides valid Kerberos credentials.
When the WSGI handler routes to /ipa/xml the Kerberos credentials will
be extracted from the KRB5CCNAME environment variable as provided by
mod_auth_kerb. Everything else remains the same.
'''
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
default_max_session_duration = 60*60 # number of seconds
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
Use DN objects instead of strings * Convert every string specifying a DN into a DN object * Every place a dn was manipulated in some fashion it was replaced by the use of DN operators * Add new DNParam parameter type for parameters which are DN's * DN objects are used 100% of the time throughout the entire data pipeline whenever something is logically a dn. * Many classes now enforce DN usage for their attributes which are dn's. This is implmented via ipautil.dn_attribute_property(). The only permitted types for a class attribute specified to be a DN are either None or a DN object. * Require that every place a dn is used it must be a DN object. This translates into lot of:: assert isinstance(dn, DN) sprinkled through out the code. Maintaining these asserts is valuable to preserve DN type enforcement. The asserts can be disabled in production. The goal of 100% DN usage 100% of the time has been realized, these asserts are meant to preserve that. The asserts also proved valuable in detecting functions which did not obey their function signatures, such as the baseldap pre and post callbacks. * Moved ipalib.dn to ipapython.dn because DN class is shared with all components, not just the server which uses ipalib. * All API's now accept DN's natively, no need to convert to str (or unicode). * Removed ipalib.encoder and encode/decode decorators. Type conversion is now explicitly performed in each IPASimpleLDAPObject method which emulates a ldap.SimpleLDAPObject method. * Entity & Entry classes now utilize DN's * Removed __getattr__ in Entity & Entity clases. There were two problems with it. It presented synthetic Python object attributes based on the current LDAP data it contained. There is no way to validate synthetic attributes using code checkers, you can't search the code to find LDAP attribute accesses (because synthetic attriutes look like Python attributes instead of LDAP data) and error handling is circumscribed. Secondly __getattr__ was hiding Python internal methods which broke class semantics. * Replace use of methods inherited from ldap.SimpleLDAPObject via IPAdmin class with IPAdmin methods. Directly using inherited methods was causing us to bypass IPA logic. Mostly this meant replacing the use of search_s() with getEntry() or getList(). Similarly direct access of the LDAP data in classes using IPAdmin were replaced with calls to getValue() or getValues(). * Objects returned by ldap2.find_entries() are now compatible with either the python-ldap access methodology or the Entity/Entry access methodology. * All ldap operations now funnel through the common IPASimpleLDAPObject giving us a single location where we interface to python-ldap and perform conversions. * The above 4 modifications means we've greatly reduced the proliferation of multiple inconsistent ways to perform LDAP operations. We are well on the way to having a single API in IPA for doing LDAP (a long range goal). * All certificate subject bases are now DN's * DN objects were enhanced thusly: - find, rfind, index, rindex, replace and insert methods were added - AVA, RDN and DN classes were refactored in immutable and mutable variants, the mutable variants are EditableAVA, EditableRDN and EditableDN. By default we use the immutable variants preserving important semantics. To edit a DN cast it to an EditableDN and cast it back to DN when done editing. These issues are fully described in other documentation. - first_key_match was removed - DN equalty comparison permits comparison to a basestring * Fixed ldapupdate to work with DN's. This work included: - Enhance test_updates.py to do more checking after applying update. Add test for update_from_dict(). Convert code to use unittest classes. - Consolidated duplicate code. - Moved code which should have been in the class into the class. - Fix the handling of the 'deleteentry' update action. It's no longer necessary to supply fake attributes to make it work. Detect case where subsequent update applies a change to entry previously marked for deletetion. General clean-up and simplification of the 'deleteentry' logic. - Rewrote a couple of functions to be clearer and more Pythonic. - Added documentation on the data structure being used. - Simplfy the use of update_from_dict() * Removed all usage of get_schema() which was being called prior to accessing the .schema attribute of an object. If a class is using internal lazy loading as an optimization it's not right to require users of the interface to be aware of internal optimization's. schema is now a property and when the schema property is accessed it calls a private internal method to perform the lazy loading. * Added SchemaCache class to cache the schema's from individual servers. This was done because of the observation we talk to different LDAP servers, each of which may have it's own schema. Previously we globally cached the schema from the first server we connected to and returned that schema in all contexts. The cache includes controls to invalidate it thus forcing a schema refresh. * Schema caching is now senstive to the run time context. During install and upgrade the schema can change leading to errors due to out-of-date cached schema. The schema cache is refreshed in these contexts. * We are aware of the LDAP syntax of all LDAP attributes. Every attribute returned from an LDAP operation is passed through a central table look-up based on it's LDAP syntax. The table key is the LDAP syntax it's value is a Python callable that returns a Python object matching the LDAP syntax. There are a handful of LDAP attributes whose syntax is historically incorrect (e.g. DistguishedNames that are defined as DirectoryStrings). The table driven conversion mechanism is augmented with a table of hard coded exceptions. Currently only the following conversions occur via the table: - dn's are converted to DN objects - binary objects are converted to Python str objects (IPA convention). - everything else is converted to unicode using UTF-8 decoding (IPA convention). However, now that the table driven conversion mechanism is in place it would be trivial to do things such as converting attributes which have LDAP integer syntax into a Python integer, etc. * Expected values in the unit tests which are a DN no longer need to use lambda expressions to promote the returned value to a DN for equality comparison. The return value is automatically promoted to a DN. The lambda expressions have been removed making the code much simpler and easier to read. * Add class level logging to a number of classes which did not support logging, less need for use of root_logger. * Remove ipaserver/conn.py, it was unused. * Consolidated duplicate code wherever it was found. * Fixed many places that used string concatenation to form a new string rather than string formatting operators. This is necessary because string formatting converts it's arguments to a string prior to building the result string. You can't concatenate a string and a non-string. * Simplify logic in rename_managed plugin. Use DN operators to edit dn's. * The live version of ipa-ldap-updater did not generate a log file. The offline version did, now both do. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/1670 https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/1671 https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/1672 https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/1673 https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/1674 https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/1392 https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2872
2012-05-13 06:36:35 -05:00
ISO8601_DATETIME_FMT = '%Y-%m-%dT%H:%M:%S' # FIXME, this should be defined elsewhere
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
def fmt_time(timestamp):
return time.strftime(ISO8601_DATETIME_FMT, time.localtime(timestamp))
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tweak the session auth to reflect developer consensus. * Increase the session ID from 48 random bits to 128. * Implement the sesison_logout RPC command. It permits the UI to send a command that destroys the users credentials in the current session. * Restores the original web URL's and their authentication protections. Adds a new URL for sessions /ipa/session/json. Restores the original Kerberos auth which was for /ipa and everything below. New /ipa/session/json URL is treated as an exception and turns all authenticaion off. Similar to how /ipa/ui is handled. * Refactor the RPC handlers in rpcserver.py such that there is one handler per URL, specifically one handler per RPC and AuthMechanism combination. * Reworked how the URL names are used to map a URL to a handler. Previously it only permitted one level in the URL path hierarchy. We now dispatch on more that one URL path component. * Renames the api.Backend.session object to wsgi_dispatch. The use of the name session was historical and is now confusing since we've implemented sessions in a different location than the api.Backend.session object, which is really a WSGI dispatcher, hence the new name wsgi_dispatch. * Bullet-proof the setting of the KRB5CCNAME environment variable. ldap2.connect already sets it via the create_context() call but just in case that's not called or not called early enough (we now have other things besides ldap which need the ccache) we explicitly set it early as soon as we know it. * Rework how we test for credential validity and expiration. The previous code did not work with s4u2proxy because it assumed the existance of a TGT. Now we first try ldap credentials and if we can't find those fallback to the TGT. This logic was moved to the KRB5_CCache object, it's an imperfect location for it but it's the only location that makes sense at the moment given some of the current code limitations. The new methods are KRB5_CCache.valid() and KRB5_CCache.endtime(). * Add two new classes to session.py AuthManager and SessionAuthManager. Their purpose is to emit authication events to interested listeners. At the moment the logout event is the only event, but the framework should support other events as they arise. * Add BuildRequires python-memcached to freeipa.spec.in * Removed the marshaled_dispatch method, it was cruft, no longer referenced. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2362
2012-02-15 09:26:42 -06:00
class AuthManager(object):
'''
This class is an abstract base class and is meant to be subclassed
to provide actual functionality. The purpose is to encapsulate all
the callbacks one might need to manage authenticaion. Different
authentication mechanisms will instantiate a subclass of this and
register it with the SessionAuthManger. When an authentication
event occurs the matching method will be called for each
registered class. This allows the SessionAuthManager to notify
interested parties.
'''
def __init__(self, name):
log_mgr.get_logger(self, True)
self.name = name
def logout(self, session_data):
'''
Called when a user requests to be logged out of their session.
:parameters:
session_data
The current session data
:returns:
None
'''
self.debug('AuthManager.logout.%s:', self.name)
class SessionAuthManager(object):
'''
'''
def __init__(self):
'''
'''
log_mgr.get_logger(self, True)
self.auth_managers = {}
def register(self, name, auth_mgr):
self.debug('SessionAuthManager.register: name=%s', name)
existing_mgr = self.auth_managers.get(name)
if existing_mgr is not None:
raise KeyError('cannot register auth manager named "%s" one already exists, name="%s" object=%s',
name, existing_mgr.name, repr(existing_mgr))
if not isinstance(auth_mgr, AuthManager):
raise TypeError('auth_mgr must be an instance of AuthManager, not %s',
auth_mgr.__class__.__name__)
self.auth_managers[name] = auth_mgr
def unregister(self, name):
self.debug('SessionAuthManager.unregister: name=%s', name)
if not self.auth_managers.has_key(name):
raise KeyError('cannot unregister auth manager named "%s", does not exist',
name)
del self.auth_managers[name]
def logout(self, session_data):
'''
'''
self.debug('SessionAuthManager.logout:')
for auth_mgr in self.auth_managers.values():
try:
auth_mgr.logout(session_data)
except Exception, e:
self.error('%s auth_mgr logout failed: %s', auth_mgr.name, e)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
class SessionManager(object):
'''
This class is used to manage a set of sessions. Each client
connecting to the server is assigned a session id wich is then
used to store data bound to the client's session in between server
requests.
'''
def __init__(self):
'''
:returns:
`SessionManager` object
'''
log_mgr.get_logger(self, True)
self.generated_session_ids = set()
Tweak the session auth to reflect developer consensus. * Increase the session ID from 48 random bits to 128. * Implement the sesison_logout RPC command. It permits the UI to send a command that destroys the users credentials in the current session. * Restores the original web URL's and their authentication protections. Adds a new URL for sessions /ipa/session/json. Restores the original Kerberos auth which was for /ipa and everything below. New /ipa/session/json URL is treated as an exception and turns all authenticaion off. Similar to how /ipa/ui is handled. * Refactor the RPC handlers in rpcserver.py such that there is one handler per URL, specifically one handler per RPC and AuthMechanism combination. * Reworked how the URL names are used to map a URL to a handler. Previously it only permitted one level in the URL path hierarchy. We now dispatch on more that one URL path component. * Renames the api.Backend.session object to wsgi_dispatch. The use of the name session was historical and is now confusing since we've implemented sessions in a different location than the api.Backend.session object, which is really a WSGI dispatcher, hence the new name wsgi_dispatch. * Bullet-proof the setting of the KRB5CCNAME environment variable. ldap2.connect already sets it via the create_context() call but just in case that's not called or not called early enough (we now have other things besides ldap which need the ccache) we explicitly set it early as soon as we know it. * Rework how we test for credential validity and expiration. The previous code did not work with s4u2proxy because it assumed the existance of a TGT. Now we first try ldap credentials and if we can't find those fallback to the TGT. This logic was moved to the KRB5_CCache object, it's an imperfect location for it but it's the only location that makes sense at the moment given some of the current code limitations. The new methods are KRB5_CCache.valid() and KRB5_CCache.endtime(). * Add two new classes to session.py AuthManager and SessionAuthManager. Their purpose is to emit authication events to interested listeners. At the moment the logout event is the only event, but the framework should support other events as they arise. * Add BuildRequires python-memcached to freeipa.spec.in * Removed the marshaled_dispatch method, it was cruft, no longer referenced. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2362
2012-02-15 09:26:42 -06:00
self.auth_mgr = SessionAuthManager()
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
Tweak the session auth to reflect developer consensus. * Increase the session ID from 48 random bits to 128. * Implement the sesison_logout RPC command. It permits the UI to send a command that destroys the users credentials in the current session. * Restores the original web URL's and their authentication protections. Adds a new URL for sessions /ipa/session/json. Restores the original Kerberos auth which was for /ipa and everything below. New /ipa/session/json URL is treated as an exception and turns all authenticaion off. Similar to how /ipa/ui is handled. * Refactor the RPC handlers in rpcserver.py such that there is one handler per URL, specifically one handler per RPC and AuthMechanism combination. * Reworked how the URL names are used to map a URL to a handler. Previously it only permitted one level in the URL path hierarchy. We now dispatch on more that one URL path component. * Renames the api.Backend.session object to wsgi_dispatch. The use of the name session was historical and is now confusing since we've implemented sessions in a different location than the api.Backend.session object, which is really a WSGI dispatcher, hence the new name wsgi_dispatch. * Bullet-proof the setting of the KRB5CCNAME environment variable. ldap2.connect already sets it via the create_context() call but just in case that's not called or not called early enough (we now have other things besides ldap which need the ccache) we explicitly set it early as soon as we know it. * Rework how we test for credential validity and expiration. The previous code did not work with s4u2proxy because it assumed the existance of a TGT. Now we first try ldap credentials and if we can't find those fallback to the TGT. This logic was moved to the KRB5_CCache object, it's an imperfect location for it but it's the only location that makes sense at the moment given some of the current code limitations. The new methods are KRB5_CCache.valid() and KRB5_CCache.endtime(). * Add two new classes to session.py AuthManager and SessionAuthManager. Their purpose is to emit authication events to interested listeners. At the moment the logout event is the only event, but the framework should support other events as they arise. * Add BuildRequires python-memcached to freeipa.spec.in * Removed the marshaled_dispatch method, it was cruft, no longer referenced. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2362
2012-02-15 09:26:42 -06:00
def generate_session_id(self, n_bits=128):
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
'''
Return a random string to be used as a session id.
This implementation creates a string of hexadecimal digits.
There is no guarantee of uniqueness, it is the caller's
responsibility to validate the returned id is not currently in
use.
:parameters:
n_bits
number of bits of random data, will be rounded to next
highest multiple of 4
:returns:
string of random hexadecimal digits
'''
# round up to multiple of 4
n_bits = (n_bits + 3) & ~3
session_id = '%0*x' % (n_bits >> 2, random.getrandbits(n_bits))
return session_id
def new_session_id(self, max_retries=5):
'''
Returns a new *unique* session id. See `generate_session_id()`
for how the session id's are formulated.
The scope of the uniqueness of the id is limited to id's
generated by this instance of the `SessionManager`.
:parameters:
max_retries
Maximum number of attempts to produce a unique id.
:returns:
Unique session id as a string.
'''
n_retries = 0
while n_retries < max_retries:
session_id = self.generate_session_id()
if not session_id in self.generated_session_ids:
break
n_retries += 1
if n_retries >= max_retries:
self.error('could not allocate unique new session_id, %d retries exhausted', n_retries)
raise errors.ExecutionError(message=_('could not allocate unique new session_id'))
self.generated_session_ids.add(session_id)
return session_id
class MemcacheSessionManager(SessionManager):
'''
This class is used to assign a session id to a HTTP server client
and then store client specific data associated with the session in
a memcached memory cache instance. Multiple processes may share
the memory cache permitting session data to be shared between
forked HTTP server children handling server requests.
The session id is guaranteed to be unique.
The session id is set into a session cookie returned to the client
and is secure (see `generate_cookie()`). Future requests from the
client will send the session id which is then used to retrieve the
session data (see `load_session_data()`)
'''
memcached_socket_path = '/var/run/ipa_memcached/ipa_memcached'
session_cookie_name = 'ipa_session'
mc_server_stat_name_re = re.compile(r'(.+)\s+\((\d+)\)')
def __init__(self):
'''
:returns:
`MemcacheSessionManager` object.
'''
super(MemcacheSessionManager, self).__init__()
self.servers = ['unix:%s' % self.memcached_socket_path]
self.mc = memcache.Client(self.servers, debug=0)
if not self.servers_running():
self.warning("session memcached servers not running")
def get_server_statistics(self):
'''
Return memcached server statistics.
Return value is a dict whose keys are server names and whose
value is a dict of key/value statistics as returned by the
memcached server.
:returns:
dict of server names, each value is dict of key/value server
statistics.
'''
result = {}
stats = self.mc.get_stats()
for server in stats:
match = self.mc_server_stat_name_re.search(server[0])
if match:
name = match.group(1)
result[name] = server[1]
else:
self.warning('unparseable memcached server name "%s"', server[0])
return result
def servers_running(self):
'''
Check if all configured memcached servers are running and can
be communicated with.
:returns:
True if at least one server is configured and all servers
can respond, False otherwise.
'''
if len(self.servers) == 0:
return False
stats = self.get_server_statistics()
return len(self.servers) == len(stats)
def new_session_id(self, max_retries=5):
'''
Returns a new *unique* session id. See `generate_session_id()`
for how the session id's are formulated.
The scope of the uniqueness of the id is limited to id's
generated by this instance of the `SessionManager` and session
id's currently stored in the memcache instance.
:parameters:
max_retries
Maximum number of attempts to produce a unique id.
:returns:
Unique session id as a string.
'''
n_retries = 0
while n_retries < max_retries:
session_id = super(MemcacheSessionManager, self).new_session_id(max_retries)
Tweak the session auth to reflect developer consensus. * Increase the session ID from 48 random bits to 128. * Implement the sesison_logout RPC command. It permits the UI to send a command that destroys the users credentials in the current session. * Restores the original web URL's and their authentication protections. Adds a new URL for sessions /ipa/session/json. Restores the original Kerberos auth which was for /ipa and everything below. New /ipa/session/json URL is treated as an exception and turns all authenticaion off. Similar to how /ipa/ui is handled. * Refactor the RPC handlers in rpcserver.py such that there is one handler per URL, specifically one handler per RPC and AuthMechanism combination. * Reworked how the URL names are used to map a URL to a handler. Previously it only permitted one level in the URL path hierarchy. We now dispatch on more that one URL path component. * Renames the api.Backend.session object to wsgi_dispatch. The use of the name session was historical and is now confusing since we've implemented sessions in a different location than the api.Backend.session object, which is really a WSGI dispatcher, hence the new name wsgi_dispatch. * Bullet-proof the setting of the KRB5CCNAME environment variable. ldap2.connect already sets it via the create_context() call but just in case that's not called or not called early enough (we now have other things besides ldap which need the ccache) we explicitly set it early as soon as we know it. * Rework how we test for credential validity and expiration. The previous code did not work with s4u2proxy because it assumed the existance of a TGT. Now we first try ldap credentials and if we can't find those fallback to the TGT. This logic was moved to the KRB5_CCache object, it's an imperfect location for it but it's the only location that makes sense at the moment given some of the current code limitations. The new methods are KRB5_CCache.valid() and KRB5_CCache.endtime(). * Add two new classes to session.py AuthManager and SessionAuthManager. Their purpose is to emit authication events to interested listeners. At the moment the logout event is the only event, but the framework should support other events as they arise. * Add BuildRequires python-memcached to freeipa.spec.in * Removed the marshaled_dispatch method, it was cruft, no longer referenced. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2362
2012-02-15 09:26:42 -06:00
session_data = self.get_session_data(session_id)
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
if session_data is None:
break
n_retries += 1
if n_retries >= max_retries:
self.error('could not allocate unique new session_id, %d retries exhausted', n_retries)
raise errors.ExecutionError(message=_('could not allocate unique new session_id'))
return session_id
def new_session_data(self, session_id):
'''
Return a new session data dict. The session data will be
associated with it's session id. The dict will be
pre-populated with:
session_id
The session ID used to identify this session data.
session_start_timestamp
Timestamp when this session was created.
session_access_timestamp
Timestamp when the session was last accessed.
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
session_expiration_timestamp
Timestamp when session expires. Defaults to zero which
implies no expiration. See `set_session_expiration_time()`.
:parameters:
session_id
The session id used to look up this session data.
:returns:
Session data dict populated with a session_id key.
'''
now = time.time()
return {'session_id' : session_id,
'session_start_timestamp' : now,
'session_access_timestamp' : now,
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
'session_expiration_timestamp' : 0,
}
def session_key(self, session_id):
'''
Given a session id return a memcache key used to look up the
session data in the memcache.
:parameters:
session_id
The session id from which the memcache key will be derived.
:returns:
A key (string) used to look up the session data in the memcache.
'''
return 'ipa.session.%s' % (session_id)
Tweak the session auth to reflect developer consensus. * Increase the session ID from 48 random bits to 128. * Implement the sesison_logout RPC command. It permits the UI to send a command that destroys the users credentials in the current session. * Restores the original web URL's and their authentication protections. Adds a new URL for sessions /ipa/session/json. Restores the original Kerberos auth which was for /ipa and everything below. New /ipa/session/json URL is treated as an exception and turns all authenticaion off. Similar to how /ipa/ui is handled. * Refactor the RPC handlers in rpcserver.py such that there is one handler per URL, specifically one handler per RPC and AuthMechanism combination. * Reworked how the URL names are used to map a URL to a handler. Previously it only permitted one level in the URL path hierarchy. We now dispatch on more that one URL path component. * Renames the api.Backend.session object to wsgi_dispatch. The use of the name session was historical and is now confusing since we've implemented sessions in a different location than the api.Backend.session object, which is really a WSGI dispatcher, hence the new name wsgi_dispatch. * Bullet-proof the setting of the KRB5CCNAME environment variable. ldap2.connect already sets it via the create_context() call but just in case that's not called or not called early enough (we now have other things besides ldap which need the ccache) we explicitly set it early as soon as we know it. * Rework how we test for credential validity and expiration. The previous code did not work with s4u2proxy because it assumed the existance of a TGT. Now we first try ldap credentials and if we can't find those fallback to the TGT. This logic was moved to the KRB5_CCache object, it's an imperfect location for it but it's the only location that makes sense at the moment given some of the current code limitations. The new methods are KRB5_CCache.valid() and KRB5_CCache.endtime(). * Add two new classes to session.py AuthManager and SessionAuthManager. Their purpose is to emit authication events to interested listeners. At the moment the logout event is the only event, but the framework should support other events as they arise. * Add BuildRequires python-memcached to freeipa.spec.in * Removed the marshaled_dispatch method, it was cruft, no longer referenced. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2362
2012-02-15 09:26:42 -06:00
def get_session_data(self, session_id):
'''
Given a session id retrieve the session data associated with it.
If no session data exists for the session id return None.
:parameters:
session_id
The session id whose session data is desired.
:returns:
Session data if found, None otherwise.
'''
session_key = self.session_key(session_id)
session_data = self.mc.get(session_key)
if session_data is not None:
# update the access timestamp
now = time.time()
session_data['session_access_timestamp'] = now
Tweak the session auth to reflect developer consensus. * Increase the session ID from 48 random bits to 128. * Implement the sesison_logout RPC command. It permits the UI to send a command that destroys the users credentials in the current session. * Restores the original web URL's and their authentication protections. Adds a new URL for sessions /ipa/session/json. Restores the original Kerberos auth which was for /ipa and everything below. New /ipa/session/json URL is treated as an exception and turns all authenticaion off. Similar to how /ipa/ui is handled. * Refactor the RPC handlers in rpcserver.py such that there is one handler per URL, specifically one handler per RPC and AuthMechanism combination. * Reworked how the URL names are used to map a URL to a handler. Previously it only permitted one level in the URL path hierarchy. We now dispatch on more that one URL path component. * Renames the api.Backend.session object to wsgi_dispatch. The use of the name session was historical and is now confusing since we've implemented sessions in a different location than the api.Backend.session object, which is really a WSGI dispatcher, hence the new name wsgi_dispatch. * Bullet-proof the setting of the KRB5CCNAME environment variable. ldap2.connect already sets it via the create_context() call but just in case that's not called or not called early enough (we now have other things besides ldap which need the ccache) we explicitly set it early as soon as we know it. * Rework how we test for credential validity and expiration. The previous code did not work with s4u2proxy because it assumed the existance of a TGT. Now we first try ldap credentials and if we can't find those fallback to the TGT. This logic was moved to the KRB5_CCache object, it's an imperfect location for it but it's the only location that makes sense at the moment given some of the current code limitations. The new methods are KRB5_CCache.valid() and KRB5_CCache.endtime(). * Add two new classes to session.py AuthManager and SessionAuthManager. Their purpose is to emit authication events to interested listeners. At the moment the logout event is the only event, but the framework should support other events as they arise. * Add BuildRequires python-memcached to freeipa.spec.in * Removed the marshaled_dispatch method, it was cruft, no longer referenced. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2362
2012-02-15 09:26:42 -06:00
return session_data
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
def get_session_id_from_http_cookie(self, cookie_header):
'''
Parse an HTTP cookie header and search for our session
id. Return the session id if found, return None if not
found.
:parameters:
cookie_header
An HTTP cookie header. May be None, if None return None.
:returns:
Session id as string or None if not found.
'''
Compliant client side session cookie behavior In summary this patch does: * Follow the defined rules for cookies when: - receiving a cookie (process the attributes) - storing a cookie (store cookie + attributes) - sending a cookie + validate the cookie domain against the request URL + validate the cookie path against the request URL + validate the cookie expiration + if valid then send only the cookie, no attribtues * Modifies how a request URL is stored during a XMLRPC request/response sequence. * Refactors a bit of the request/response logic to allow for making the decision whether to send a session cookie instead of full Kerberous auth easier. * The server now includes expiration information in the session cookie it sends to the client. The server always had the information available to prevent using an expired session cookie. Now that expiration timestamp is returned to the client as well and now the client will not send an expired session cookie back to the server. * Adds a new module and unit test for cookies (see below) Formerly we were always returning the session cookie no matter what the domain or path was in the URL. We were also sending the cookie attributes which are for the client only (used to determine if to return a cookie). The attributes are not meant to be sent to the server and the previous behavior was a protocol violation. We also were not checking the cookie expiration. Cookie library issues: We need a library to create, parse, manipulate and format cookies both in a client context and a server context. Core Python has two cookie libraries, Cookie.py and cookielib.py. Why did we add a new cookie module instead of using either of these two core Python libaries? Cookie.py is designed for server side generation but can be used to parse cookies on the client. It's the library we were using in the server. However when I tried to use it in the client I discovered it has some serious bugs. There are 7 defined cookie elements, it fails to correctly parse 3 of the 7 elements which makes it unusable because we depend on those elements. Since Cookie.py was designed for server side cookie processing it's not hard to understand how fails to correctly parse a cookie because that's a client side need. (Cookie.py also has an awkward baroque API and is missing some useful functionality we would have to build on top of it). cookielib.py is designed for client side. It's fully featured and obeys all the RFC's. It would be great to use however it's tightly coupled with another core library, urllib2.py. The http request and response objects must be urllib2 objects. But we don't use urllib2, rather we use httplib because xmlrpclib uses httplib. I don't see a reason why a cookie library should be so tightly coupled to a protocol library, but it is and that means we can't use it (I tried to just pick some isolated entrypoints for our use but I kept hitting interaction/dependency problems). I decided to solve the cookie library problems by writing a minimal cookie library that does what we need and no more than that. It is a new module in ipapython shared by both client and server and comes with a new unit test. The module has plenty of documentation, no need to repeat it here. Request URL issues: We also had problems in rpc.py whereby information from the request which is needed when we process the response is not available. Most important was the requesting URL. It turns out that the way the class and object relationships are structured it's impossible to get this information. Someone else must have run into the same issue because there was a routine called reconstruct_url() which attempted to recreate the request URL from other available information. Unfortunately reconstruct_url() was not callable from inside the response handler. So I decided to store the information in the thread context and when the request is received extract it from the thread context. It's perhaps not an ideal solution but we do similar things elsewhere so at least it's consistent. I removed the reconstruct_url() function because the exact information is now in the context and trying to apply heuristics to recreate the url is probably not robust. Ticket https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/3022
2012-12-04 17:20:17 -06:00
if cookie_header is None:
return None
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
session_id = None
Compliant client side session cookie behavior In summary this patch does: * Follow the defined rules for cookies when: - receiving a cookie (process the attributes) - storing a cookie (store cookie + attributes) - sending a cookie + validate the cookie domain against the request URL + validate the cookie path against the request URL + validate the cookie expiration + if valid then send only the cookie, no attribtues * Modifies how a request URL is stored during a XMLRPC request/response sequence. * Refactors a bit of the request/response logic to allow for making the decision whether to send a session cookie instead of full Kerberous auth easier. * The server now includes expiration information in the session cookie it sends to the client. The server always had the information available to prevent using an expired session cookie. Now that expiration timestamp is returned to the client as well and now the client will not send an expired session cookie back to the server. * Adds a new module and unit test for cookies (see below) Formerly we were always returning the session cookie no matter what the domain or path was in the URL. We were also sending the cookie attributes which are for the client only (used to determine if to return a cookie). The attributes are not meant to be sent to the server and the previous behavior was a protocol violation. We also were not checking the cookie expiration. Cookie library issues: We need a library to create, parse, manipulate and format cookies both in a client context and a server context. Core Python has two cookie libraries, Cookie.py and cookielib.py. Why did we add a new cookie module instead of using either of these two core Python libaries? Cookie.py is designed for server side generation but can be used to parse cookies on the client. It's the library we were using in the server. However when I tried to use it in the client I discovered it has some serious bugs. There are 7 defined cookie elements, it fails to correctly parse 3 of the 7 elements which makes it unusable because we depend on those elements. Since Cookie.py was designed for server side cookie processing it's not hard to understand how fails to correctly parse a cookie because that's a client side need. (Cookie.py also has an awkward baroque API and is missing some useful functionality we would have to build on top of it). cookielib.py is designed for client side. It's fully featured and obeys all the RFC's. It would be great to use however it's tightly coupled with another core library, urllib2.py. The http request and response objects must be urllib2 objects. But we don't use urllib2, rather we use httplib because xmlrpclib uses httplib. I don't see a reason why a cookie library should be so tightly coupled to a protocol library, but it is and that means we can't use it (I tried to just pick some isolated entrypoints for our use but I kept hitting interaction/dependency problems). I decided to solve the cookie library problems by writing a minimal cookie library that does what we need and no more than that. It is a new module in ipapython shared by both client and server and comes with a new unit test. The module has plenty of documentation, no need to repeat it here. Request URL issues: We also had problems in rpc.py whereby information from the request which is needed when we process the response is not available. Most important was the requesting URL. It turns out that the way the class and object relationships are structured it's impossible to get this information. Someone else must have run into the same issue because there was a routine called reconstruct_url() which attempted to recreate the request URL from other available information. Unfortunately reconstruct_url() was not callable from inside the response handler. So I decided to store the information in the thread context and when the request is received extract it from the thread context. It's perhaps not an ideal solution but we do similar things elsewhere so at least it's consistent. I removed the reconstruct_url() function because the exact information is now in the context and trying to apply heuristics to recreate the url is probably not robust. Ticket https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/3022
2012-12-04 17:20:17 -06:00
try:
session_cookie = Cookie.get_named_cookie_from_string(cookie_header, self.session_cookie_name)
except Exception, e:
session_cookie = None
if session_cookie:
session_id = session_cookie.value
if session_id is None:
self.debug('no session cookie found')
else:
self.debug('found session cookie_id = %s', session_id)
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
return session_id
def load_session_data(self, cookie_header):
'''
Parse an HTTP cookie header looking for our session
information.
* If no session id is found then a new session id and new
session data dict will be generated, stored in the memcache
and returned. The new session data dict will contain the new
session id.
* If the session id is found in the cookie an attempt is made
to retrieve the session data from the memcache using the
session id.
- If existing session data is found in the memcache it is
returned.
- If no session data is found in the memcache then a new
session data dict will be generated, stored in the
memcache and returned. The new session data dict will
contain the session id found in the cookie header.
:parameters:
cookie_header
An HTTP cookie header. May be None.
:returns:
Session data dict containing at a minimum the session id it
is bound to.
'''
session_id = self.get_session_id_from_http_cookie(cookie_header)
if session_id is None:
session_id = self.new_session_id()
self.debug('no session id in request, generating empty session data with id=%s', session_id)
session_data = self.new_session_data(session_id)
self.store_session_data(session_data)
return session_data
else:
Tweak the session auth to reflect developer consensus. * Increase the session ID from 48 random bits to 128. * Implement the sesison_logout RPC command. It permits the UI to send a command that destroys the users credentials in the current session. * Restores the original web URL's and their authentication protections. Adds a new URL for sessions /ipa/session/json. Restores the original Kerberos auth which was for /ipa and everything below. New /ipa/session/json URL is treated as an exception and turns all authenticaion off. Similar to how /ipa/ui is handled. * Refactor the RPC handlers in rpcserver.py such that there is one handler per URL, specifically one handler per RPC and AuthMechanism combination. * Reworked how the URL names are used to map a URL to a handler. Previously it only permitted one level in the URL path hierarchy. We now dispatch on more that one URL path component. * Renames the api.Backend.session object to wsgi_dispatch. The use of the name session was historical and is now confusing since we've implemented sessions in a different location than the api.Backend.session object, which is really a WSGI dispatcher, hence the new name wsgi_dispatch. * Bullet-proof the setting of the KRB5CCNAME environment variable. ldap2.connect already sets it via the create_context() call but just in case that's not called or not called early enough (we now have other things besides ldap which need the ccache) we explicitly set it early as soon as we know it. * Rework how we test for credential validity and expiration. The previous code did not work with s4u2proxy because it assumed the existance of a TGT. Now we first try ldap credentials and if we can't find those fallback to the TGT. This logic was moved to the KRB5_CCache object, it's an imperfect location for it but it's the only location that makes sense at the moment given some of the current code limitations. The new methods are KRB5_CCache.valid() and KRB5_CCache.endtime(). * Add two new classes to session.py AuthManager and SessionAuthManager. Their purpose is to emit authication events to interested listeners. At the moment the logout event is the only event, but the framework should support other events as they arise. * Add BuildRequires python-memcached to freeipa.spec.in * Removed the marshaled_dispatch method, it was cruft, no longer referenced. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2362
2012-02-15 09:26:42 -06:00
session_data = self.get_session_data(session_id)
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
if session_data is None:
self.debug('no session data in cache with id=%s, generating empty session data', session_id)
session_data = self.new_session_data(session_id)
self.store_session_data(session_data)
return session_data
else:
self.debug('found session data in cache with id=%s', session_id)
return session_data
def store_session_data(self, session_data):
'''
Store the supplied session_data dict in the memcached instance.
The session_expiration_timestamp is always passed to memcached
when the session data is written back to the memcache. This is
because otherwise the memcache expiration will default to zero
if it's not specified which implies no expiration. Thus a
failure to specify an exiration time when writing an item to
memcached will cause a previously set expiration time for the
item to be discarded and the item will no longer expire.
:parameters:
session_data
Session data dict, must contain session_id key.
:returns:
session_id
'''
session_id = session_data['session_id']
session_key = self.session_key(session_id)
# update the access timestamp
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
now = time.time()
session_data['session_access_timestamp'] = now
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
session_expiration_timestamp = session_data['session_expiration_timestamp']
self.debug('store session: session_id=%s start_timestamp=%s access_timestamp=%s expiration_timestamp=%s',
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
session_id,
fmt_time(session_data['session_start_timestamp']),
fmt_time(session_data['session_access_timestamp']),
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
fmt_time(session_data['session_expiration_timestamp']))
self.mc.set(session_key, session_data, time=session_expiration_timestamp)
return session_id
Compliant client side session cookie behavior In summary this patch does: * Follow the defined rules for cookies when: - receiving a cookie (process the attributes) - storing a cookie (store cookie + attributes) - sending a cookie + validate the cookie domain against the request URL + validate the cookie path against the request URL + validate the cookie expiration + if valid then send only the cookie, no attribtues * Modifies how a request URL is stored during a XMLRPC request/response sequence. * Refactors a bit of the request/response logic to allow for making the decision whether to send a session cookie instead of full Kerberous auth easier. * The server now includes expiration information in the session cookie it sends to the client. The server always had the information available to prevent using an expired session cookie. Now that expiration timestamp is returned to the client as well and now the client will not send an expired session cookie back to the server. * Adds a new module and unit test for cookies (see below) Formerly we were always returning the session cookie no matter what the domain or path was in the URL. We were also sending the cookie attributes which are for the client only (used to determine if to return a cookie). The attributes are not meant to be sent to the server and the previous behavior was a protocol violation. We also were not checking the cookie expiration. Cookie library issues: We need a library to create, parse, manipulate and format cookies both in a client context and a server context. Core Python has two cookie libraries, Cookie.py and cookielib.py. Why did we add a new cookie module instead of using either of these two core Python libaries? Cookie.py is designed for server side generation but can be used to parse cookies on the client. It's the library we were using in the server. However when I tried to use it in the client I discovered it has some serious bugs. There are 7 defined cookie elements, it fails to correctly parse 3 of the 7 elements which makes it unusable because we depend on those elements. Since Cookie.py was designed for server side cookie processing it's not hard to understand how fails to correctly parse a cookie because that's a client side need. (Cookie.py also has an awkward baroque API and is missing some useful functionality we would have to build on top of it). cookielib.py is designed for client side. It's fully featured and obeys all the RFC's. It would be great to use however it's tightly coupled with another core library, urllib2.py. The http request and response objects must be urllib2 objects. But we don't use urllib2, rather we use httplib because xmlrpclib uses httplib. I don't see a reason why a cookie library should be so tightly coupled to a protocol library, but it is and that means we can't use it (I tried to just pick some isolated entrypoints for our use but I kept hitting interaction/dependency problems). I decided to solve the cookie library problems by writing a minimal cookie library that does what we need and no more than that. It is a new module in ipapython shared by both client and server and comes with a new unit test. The module has plenty of documentation, no need to repeat it here. Request URL issues: We also had problems in rpc.py whereby information from the request which is needed when we process the response is not available. Most important was the requesting URL. It turns out that the way the class and object relationships are structured it's impossible to get this information. Someone else must have run into the same issue because there was a routine called reconstruct_url() which attempted to recreate the request URL from other available information. Unfortunately reconstruct_url() was not callable from inside the response handler. So I decided to store the information in the thread context and when the request is received extract it from the thread context. It's perhaps not an ideal solution but we do similar things elsewhere so at least it's consistent. I removed the reconstruct_url() function because the exact information is now in the context and trying to apply heuristics to recreate the url is probably not robust. Ticket https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/3022
2012-12-04 17:20:17 -06:00
def generate_cookie(self, url_path, session_id, expiration=None, add_header=False):
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
'''
Return a session cookie containing the session id. The cookie
will be contrainted to the url path, defined for use
with HTTP only, and only returned on secure connections (SSL).
:parameters:
url_path
The cookie will be returned in a request if it begins
with this url path.
session_id
The session id identified by the session cookie
add_header
If true format cookie string with Set-Cookie: header
:returns:
cookie string
'''
Compliant client side session cookie behavior In summary this patch does: * Follow the defined rules for cookies when: - receiving a cookie (process the attributes) - storing a cookie (store cookie + attributes) - sending a cookie + validate the cookie domain against the request URL + validate the cookie path against the request URL + validate the cookie expiration + if valid then send only the cookie, no attribtues * Modifies how a request URL is stored during a XMLRPC request/response sequence. * Refactors a bit of the request/response logic to allow for making the decision whether to send a session cookie instead of full Kerberous auth easier. * The server now includes expiration information in the session cookie it sends to the client. The server always had the information available to prevent using an expired session cookie. Now that expiration timestamp is returned to the client as well and now the client will not send an expired session cookie back to the server. * Adds a new module and unit test for cookies (see below) Formerly we were always returning the session cookie no matter what the domain or path was in the URL. We were also sending the cookie attributes which are for the client only (used to determine if to return a cookie). The attributes are not meant to be sent to the server and the previous behavior was a protocol violation. We also were not checking the cookie expiration. Cookie library issues: We need a library to create, parse, manipulate and format cookies both in a client context and a server context. Core Python has two cookie libraries, Cookie.py and cookielib.py. Why did we add a new cookie module instead of using either of these two core Python libaries? Cookie.py is designed for server side generation but can be used to parse cookies on the client. It's the library we were using in the server. However when I tried to use it in the client I discovered it has some serious bugs. There are 7 defined cookie elements, it fails to correctly parse 3 of the 7 elements which makes it unusable because we depend on those elements. Since Cookie.py was designed for server side cookie processing it's not hard to understand how fails to correctly parse a cookie because that's a client side need. (Cookie.py also has an awkward baroque API and is missing some useful functionality we would have to build on top of it). cookielib.py is designed for client side. It's fully featured and obeys all the RFC's. It would be great to use however it's tightly coupled with another core library, urllib2.py. The http request and response objects must be urllib2 objects. But we don't use urllib2, rather we use httplib because xmlrpclib uses httplib. I don't see a reason why a cookie library should be so tightly coupled to a protocol library, but it is and that means we can't use it (I tried to just pick some isolated entrypoints for our use but I kept hitting interaction/dependency problems). I decided to solve the cookie library problems by writing a minimal cookie library that does what we need and no more than that. It is a new module in ipapython shared by both client and server and comes with a new unit test. The module has plenty of documentation, no need to repeat it here. Request URL issues: We also had problems in rpc.py whereby information from the request which is needed when we process the response is not available. Most important was the requesting URL. It turns out that the way the class and object relationships are structured it's impossible to get this information. Someone else must have run into the same issue because there was a routine called reconstruct_url() which attempted to recreate the request URL from other available information. Unfortunately reconstruct_url() was not callable from inside the response handler. So I decided to store the information in the thread context and when the request is received extract it from the thread context. It's perhaps not an ideal solution but we do similar things elsewhere so at least it's consistent. I removed the reconstruct_url() function because the exact information is now in the context and trying to apply heuristics to recreate the url is probably not robust. Ticket https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/3022
2012-12-04 17:20:17 -06:00
if not expiration: # Catch zero unix timestamps
expiration = None;
cookie = Cookie(self.session_cookie_name, session_id,
domain=urlparse.urlparse(api.env.xmlrpc_uri).netloc,
path=url_path, httponly=True, secure=True,
expires=expiration)
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
if add_header:
Compliant client side session cookie behavior In summary this patch does: * Follow the defined rules for cookies when: - receiving a cookie (process the attributes) - storing a cookie (store cookie + attributes) - sending a cookie + validate the cookie domain against the request URL + validate the cookie path against the request URL + validate the cookie expiration + if valid then send only the cookie, no attribtues * Modifies how a request URL is stored during a XMLRPC request/response sequence. * Refactors a bit of the request/response logic to allow for making the decision whether to send a session cookie instead of full Kerberous auth easier. * The server now includes expiration information in the session cookie it sends to the client. The server always had the information available to prevent using an expired session cookie. Now that expiration timestamp is returned to the client as well and now the client will not send an expired session cookie back to the server. * Adds a new module and unit test for cookies (see below) Formerly we were always returning the session cookie no matter what the domain or path was in the URL. We were also sending the cookie attributes which are for the client only (used to determine if to return a cookie). The attributes are not meant to be sent to the server and the previous behavior was a protocol violation. We also were not checking the cookie expiration. Cookie library issues: We need a library to create, parse, manipulate and format cookies both in a client context and a server context. Core Python has two cookie libraries, Cookie.py and cookielib.py. Why did we add a new cookie module instead of using either of these two core Python libaries? Cookie.py is designed for server side generation but can be used to parse cookies on the client. It's the library we were using in the server. However when I tried to use it in the client I discovered it has some serious bugs. There are 7 defined cookie elements, it fails to correctly parse 3 of the 7 elements which makes it unusable because we depend on those elements. Since Cookie.py was designed for server side cookie processing it's not hard to understand how fails to correctly parse a cookie because that's a client side need. (Cookie.py also has an awkward baroque API and is missing some useful functionality we would have to build on top of it). cookielib.py is designed for client side. It's fully featured and obeys all the RFC's. It would be great to use however it's tightly coupled with another core library, urllib2.py. The http request and response objects must be urllib2 objects. But we don't use urllib2, rather we use httplib because xmlrpclib uses httplib. I don't see a reason why a cookie library should be so tightly coupled to a protocol library, but it is and that means we can't use it (I tried to just pick some isolated entrypoints for our use but I kept hitting interaction/dependency problems). I decided to solve the cookie library problems by writing a minimal cookie library that does what we need and no more than that. It is a new module in ipapython shared by both client and server and comes with a new unit test. The module has plenty of documentation, no need to repeat it here. Request URL issues: We also had problems in rpc.py whereby information from the request which is needed when we process the response is not available. Most important was the requesting URL. It turns out that the way the class and object relationships are structured it's impossible to get this information. Someone else must have run into the same issue because there was a routine called reconstruct_url() which attempted to recreate the request URL from other available information. Unfortunately reconstruct_url() was not callable from inside the response handler. So I decided to store the information in the thread context and when the request is received extract it from the thread context. It's perhaps not an ideal solution but we do similar things elsewhere so at least it's consistent. I removed the reconstruct_url() function because the exact information is now in the context and trying to apply heuristics to recreate the url is probably not robust. Ticket https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/3022
2012-12-04 17:20:17 -06:00
result = 'Set-Cookie: %s' % cookie
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
else:
Compliant client side session cookie behavior In summary this patch does: * Follow the defined rules for cookies when: - receiving a cookie (process the attributes) - storing a cookie (store cookie + attributes) - sending a cookie + validate the cookie domain against the request URL + validate the cookie path against the request URL + validate the cookie expiration + if valid then send only the cookie, no attribtues * Modifies how a request URL is stored during a XMLRPC request/response sequence. * Refactors a bit of the request/response logic to allow for making the decision whether to send a session cookie instead of full Kerberous auth easier. * The server now includes expiration information in the session cookie it sends to the client. The server always had the information available to prevent using an expired session cookie. Now that expiration timestamp is returned to the client as well and now the client will not send an expired session cookie back to the server. * Adds a new module and unit test for cookies (see below) Formerly we were always returning the session cookie no matter what the domain or path was in the URL. We were also sending the cookie attributes which are for the client only (used to determine if to return a cookie). The attributes are not meant to be sent to the server and the previous behavior was a protocol violation. We also were not checking the cookie expiration. Cookie library issues: We need a library to create, parse, manipulate and format cookies both in a client context and a server context. Core Python has two cookie libraries, Cookie.py and cookielib.py. Why did we add a new cookie module instead of using either of these two core Python libaries? Cookie.py is designed for server side generation but can be used to parse cookies on the client. It's the library we were using in the server. However when I tried to use it in the client I discovered it has some serious bugs. There are 7 defined cookie elements, it fails to correctly parse 3 of the 7 elements which makes it unusable because we depend on those elements. Since Cookie.py was designed for server side cookie processing it's not hard to understand how fails to correctly parse a cookie because that's a client side need. (Cookie.py also has an awkward baroque API and is missing some useful functionality we would have to build on top of it). cookielib.py is designed for client side. It's fully featured and obeys all the RFC's. It would be great to use however it's tightly coupled with another core library, urllib2.py. The http request and response objects must be urllib2 objects. But we don't use urllib2, rather we use httplib because xmlrpclib uses httplib. I don't see a reason why a cookie library should be so tightly coupled to a protocol library, but it is and that means we can't use it (I tried to just pick some isolated entrypoints for our use but I kept hitting interaction/dependency problems). I decided to solve the cookie library problems by writing a minimal cookie library that does what we need and no more than that. It is a new module in ipapython shared by both client and server and comes with a new unit test. The module has plenty of documentation, no need to repeat it here. Request URL issues: We also had problems in rpc.py whereby information from the request which is needed when we process the response is not available. Most important was the requesting URL. It turns out that the way the class and object relationships are structured it's impossible to get this information. Someone else must have run into the same issue because there was a routine called reconstruct_url() which attempted to recreate the request URL from other available information. Unfortunately reconstruct_url() was not callable from inside the response handler. So I decided to store the information in the thread context and when the request is received extract it from the thread context. It's perhaps not an ideal solution but we do similar things elsewhere so at least it's consistent. I removed the reconstruct_url() function because the exact information is now in the context and trying to apply heuristics to recreate the url is probably not robust. Ticket https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/3022
2012-12-04 17:20:17 -06:00
result = str(cookie)
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
return result
def set_session_expiration_time(self, session_data,
duration=default_max_session_duration,
max_age=None, duration_type='inactivity_timeout'):
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
'''
memcached permits setting an expiration time on entries. The
expiration time may either be Unix time (number of seconds since
January 1, 1970, as a 32-bit value), or a number of seconds starting
from current time. In the latter case, this number of seconds may
not exceed 60*60*24*30 (number of seconds in 30 days); if the number
sent by a client is larger than that, the server will consider it to
be real Unix time value rather than an offset from current time.
We never use the duration value (< 30 days), we always use a
timestamp, this makes it easier to integrate with other time
constraints.
When a session is created it's start time is recorded in the
session data as the session_start_timestamp value.
There are two ways the expiration timestamp can be computed:
from_start
A session has a fixed duration beginning with the start of
the session. The session expires when the duration
interval has elapsed relative to the start of the session.
inactivity_timeout
A session times out after a period of inactivity. The
expiration time is advanced by the value of the duration
interval everytime the session is updated.
After the expiration is computed it may be capped at a maximum
value due to other constraints (e.g. authentication credential
expiration). If the optional max_age parameter is specified
then expiration is constrained to be not greater than the
max_age.
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
The final computed expiration is then written into the
session_data as the session_expiration_timestamp value. The
session_expiration_timestamp is always passed to memcached
when the session data is written back to the memcache. This is
because otherwise the memcache expiration will default to zero
if it's not specified which implies no expiration. Thus a
failure to specify an exiration time when writing an item to
memcached will cause a previously set expiration time for the
item to be discarded and the item will no longer expire.
:parameters:
session_data
Session data dict, must contain session_id key.
duration
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
Number of seconds cache entry should live. This is a
duration value, not a timestamp. Zero implies no
expiration.
max_age
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
Unix time value when cache entry must expire by.
:returns:
expiration timestamp, zero implies no expiration
'''
if duration == 0 and max_age is None:
# No expiration
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
expiration = 0
session_data['session_expiration_timestamp'] = expiration
return expiration
if duration_type == 'inactivity_timeout':
now = time.time()
session_data['session_access_timestamp'] = now
expiration = now + duration
elif duration_type == 'from_start':
session_start_timestamp = session_data['session_start_timestamp']
expiration = session_start_timestamp + duration
else:
# Don't throw an exception, it's critical the session be
# given some expiration, instead log the error and execute
# a default action of expiring the session 5 minutes after
# it was initiated (similar to from_start but with
# hardcoded duration)
default = 60*5
self.warning('unknown session duration_type (%s), defaulting to %s seconds from session start',
duration_type, default)
session_start_timestamp = session_data['session_start_timestamp']
expiration = session_start_timestamp + default
# Cap the expiration if max_age is specified
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
if max_age is not None:
expiration = min(expiration, max_age)
session_data['session_expiration_timestamp'] = expiration
self.debug('set_session_expiration_time: duration_type=%s duration=%s max_age=%s expiration=%s (%s)',
duration_type, duration, max_age, expiration, fmt_time(expiration))
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
return expiration
def delete_session_data(self, session_id):
'''
Given a session id removed the session data bound to the id from the memcache.
:parameters:
session_id
The ID of the session which should be removed from the cache.
:returns:
None
'''
session_key = self.session_key(session_id)
self.debug('delete session data from memcache, session_id=%s', session_id)
self.mc.delete(session_key)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
krbccache_dir ='/var/run/ipa_memcached'
krbccache_prefix = 'krbcc_'
Implement password based session login * Adjust URL's - rename /ipa/login -> /ipa/session/login_kerberos - add /ipa/session/login_password * Adjust Kerberos protection on URL's in ipa.conf * Bump VERSION in httpd ipa.conf to pick up session changes. * Adjust login URL in ipa.js * Add InvalidSessionPassword to errors.py * Rename krblogin class to login_kerberos for consistency with new login_password class * Implement login_password.kinit() method which invokes /usr/bin/kinit as a subprocess * Add login_password class for WSGI dispatch, accepts POST application/x-www-form-urlencoded user & password parameters. We form the Kerberos principal from the server's realm. * Add function krb5_unparse_ccache() * Refactor code to share common code * Clean up use of ccache names, be consistent * Replace read_krbccache_file(), store_krbccache_file(), delete_krbccache_file() with load_ccache_data(), bind_ipa_ccache(), release_ipa_ccache(). bind_ipa_ccache() now sets environment KRB5CCNAME variable. release_ipa_ccache() now clears environment KRB5CCNAME variable. * ccache names should now support any ccache storage scheme, not just FILE based ccaches * Add utilies to return HTTP status from wsgi handlers, use constants for HTTP status code for consistency. Use utilies for returning from wsgi handlers rather than duplicated code. * Add KerberosSession.finalize_kerberos_acquisition() method so different login handlers can share common code. * add Requires: krb5-workstation to server (server now calls kinit) * Fix test_rpcserver.py to use new dispatch inside route() method https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2095
2012-02-25 12:39:19 -06:00
def _get_krbccache_pathname():
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
return os.path.join(krbccache_dir, '%s%s' % (krbccache_prefix, os.getpid()))
Implement password based session login * Adjust URL's - rename /ipa/login -> /ipa/session/login_kerberos - add /ipa/session/login_password * Adjust Kerberos protection on URL's in ipa.conf * Bump VERSION in httpd ipa.conf to pick up session changes. * Adjust login URL in ipa.js * Add InvalidSessionPassword to errors.py * Rename krblogin class to login_kerberos for consistency with new login_password class * Implement login_password.kinit() method which invokes /usr/bin/kinit as a subprocess * Add login_password class for WSGI dispatch, accepts POST application/x-www-form-urlencoded user & password parameters. We form the Kerberos principal from the server's realm. * Add function krb5_unparse_ccache() * Refactor code to share common code * Clean up use of ccache names, be consistent * Replace read_krbccache_file(), store_krbccache_file(), delete_krbccache_file() with load_ccache_data(), bind_ipa_ccache(), release_ipa_ccache(). bind_ipa_ccache() now sets environment KRB5CCNAME variable. release_ipa_ccache() now clears environment KRB5CCNAME variable. * ccache names should now support any ccache storage scheme, not just FILE based ccaches * Add utilies to return HTTP status from wsgi handlers, use constants for HTTP status code for consistency. Use utilies for returning from wsgi handlers rather than duplicated code. * Add KerberosSession.finalize_kerberos_acquisition() method so different login handlers can share common code. * add Requires: krb5-workstation to server (server now calls kinit) * Fix test_rpcserver.py to use new dispatch inside route() method https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2095
2012-02-25 12:39:19 -06:00
def get_ipa_ccache_name(scheme='FILE'):
if scheme == 'FILE':
name = os.path.join(krbccache_dir, '%s%s' % (krbccache_prefix, os.getpid()))
else:
raise ValueError('ccache scheme "%s" unsupported', scheme)
ccache_name = krb5_unparse_ccache(scheme, name)
return ccache_name
def load_ccache_data(ccache_name):
scheme, name = krb5_parse_ccache(ccache_name)
if scheme == 'FILE':
root_logger.debug('reading ccache data from file "%s"', name)
src = open(name)
ccache_data = src.read()
src.close()
return ccache_data
else:
raise ValueError('ccache scheme "%s" unsupported (%s)', scheme, ccache_name)
def bind_ipa_ccache(ccache_data, scheme='FILE'):
if scheme == 'FILE':
name = _get_krbccache_pathname()
root_logger.debug('storing ccache data into file "%s"', name)
dst = open(name, 'w')
dst.write(ccache_data)
dst.close()
else:
raise ValueError('ccache scheme "%s" unsupported', scheme)
ccache_name = krb5_unparse_ccache(scheme, name)
os.environ['KRB5CCNAME'] = ccache_name
return ccache_name
def release_ipa_ccache(ccache_name):
'''
Stop using the current request's ccache.
* Remove KRB5CCNAME from the enviroment
* Remove the ccache file from the file system
Note, we do not demand any of these elements exist, but if they
do we'll remove them.
'''
if os.environ.has_key('KRB5CCNAME'):
if ccache_name != os.environ['KRB5CCNAME']:
root_logger.error('release_ipa_ccache: ccache_name (%s) != KRB5CCNAME environment variable (%s)',
ccache_name, os.environ['KRB5CCNAME'])
del os.environ['KRB5CCNAME']
else:
root_logger.debug('release_ipa_ccache: KRB5CCNAME environment variable not set')
scheme, name = krb5_parse_ccache(ccache_name)
if scheme == 'FILE':
if os.path.exists(name):
try:
os.unlink(name)
except Exception, e:
root_logger.error('unable to delete session ccache file "%s", %s', name, e)
else:
raise ValueError('ccache scheme "%s" unsupported (%s)', scheme, ccache_name)
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Tweak the session auth to reflect developer consensus. * Increase the session ID from 48 random bits to 128. * Implement the sesison_logout RPC command. It permits the UI to send a command that destroys the users credentials in the current session. * Restores the original web URL's and their authentication protections. Adds a new URL for sessions /ipa/session/json. Restores the original Kerberos auth which was for /ipa and everything below. New /ipa/session/json URL is treated as an exception and turns all authenticaion off. Similar to how /ipa/ui is handled. * Refactor the RPC handlers in rpcserver.py such that there is one handler per URL, specifically one handler per RPC and AuthMechanism combination. * Reworked how the URL names are used to map a URL to a handler. Previously it only permitted one level in the URL path hierarchy. We now dispatch on more that one URL path component. * Renames the api.Backend.session object to wsgi_dispatch. The use of the name session was historical and is now confusing since we've implemented sessions in a different location than the api.Backend.session object, which is really a WSGI dispatcher, hence the new name wsgi_dispatch. * Bullet-proof the setting of the KRB5CCNAME environment variable. ldap2.connect already sets it via the create_context() call but just in case that's not called or not called early enough (we now have other things besides ldap which need the ccache) we explicitly set it early as soon as we know it. * Rework how we test for credential validity and expiration. The previous code did not work with s4u2proxy because it assumed the existance of a TGT. Now we first try ldap credentials and if we can't find those fallback to the TGT. This logic was moved to the KRB5_CCache object, it's an imperfect location for it but it's the only location that makes sense at the moment given some of the current code limitations. The new methods are KRB5_CCache.valid() and KRB5_CCache.endtime(). * Add two new classes to session.py AuthManager and SessionAuthManager. Their purpose is to emit authication events to interested listeners. At the moment the logout event is the only event, but the framework should support other events as they arise. * Add BuildRequires python-memcached to freeipa.spec.in * Removed the marshaled_dispatch method, it was cruft, no longer referenced. https://fedorahosted.org/freeipa/ticket/2362
2012-02-15 09:26:42 -06:00
from ipalib.request import context
class session_logout(Command):
'''
RPC command used to log the current user out of their session.
'''
def execute(self, *args, **options):
session_data = getattr(context, 'session_data', None)
if session_data is None:
self.debug('session logout command: no session_data found')
else:
session_id = session_data.get('session_id')
self.debug('session logout command: session_id=%s', session_id)
# Notifiy registered listeners
session_mgr.auth_mgr.logout(session_data)
return dict(result=None)
api.register(session_logout)
#-------------------------------------------------------------------------------
add session manager and cache krb auth This patch adds a session manager and support for caching authentication in the session. Major elements of the patch are: * Add a session manager to support cookie based sessions which stores session data in a memcached entry. * Add ipalib/krb_utils.py which contains functions to parse ccache names, format principals, format KRB timestamps, and a KRB_CCache class which reads ccache entry and allows one to extract information such as the principal, credentials, credential timestamps, etc. * Move krb constants defined in ipalib/rpc.py to ipa_krb_utils.py so that all kerberos items are co-located. * Modify javascript in ipa.js so that the IPA.command() RPC call checks for authentication needed error response and if it receives it sends a GET request to /ipa/login URL to refresh credentials. * Add session_auth_duration config item to constants.py, used to configure how long a session remains valid. * Add parse_time_duration utility to ipalib/util.py. Used to parse the session_auth_duration config item. * Update the default.conf.5 man page to document session_auth_duration config item (also added documentation for log_manager config items which had been inadvertantly omitted from a previous commit). * Add SessionError object to ipalib/errors.py * Move Kerberos protection in Apache config from /ipa to /ipa/xml and /ipa/login * Add SessionCCache class to session.py to manage temporary Kerberos ccache file in effect for the duration of an RPC command. * Adds a krblogin plugin used to implement the /ipa/login handler. login handler sets the session expiration time, currently 60 minutes or the expiration of the TGT, whichever is shorter. It also copies the ccache provied by mod_auth_kerb into the session data. The json handler will later extract and validate the ccache belonging to the session. * Refactored the WSGI handlers so that json and xlmrpc could have independent behavior, this also moves where create and destroy context occurs, now done in the individual handler rather than the parent class. * The json handler now looks up the session data, validates the ccache bound to the session, if it's expired replies with authenicated needed error. * Add documentation to session.py. Fully documents the entire process, got questions, read the doc. * Add exclusions to make-lint as needed.
2012-02-06 12:29:56 -06:00
session_mgr = MemcacheSessionManager()