Add a new boulder service, email-exporter, which uses the Pardot API
client added in #8016 and the email.Exporter gRPC service added in
#8017.
Add pardot-test-srv, a test-only service for mocking communication with
Salesforce OAuth and Pardot APIs in non-production environments. Since
Salesforce does not provide Pardot functionality in developer sandboxes,
pardot-test-srv must run in all non-production environments (e.g.,
sre-development and staging).
Integrate the email-exporter service with the WFE and modify
WFE.NewAccount and WFE.UpdateAccount to submit valid email contacts.
Ensure integration tests verify that contacts eventually reach
pardot-test-srv.
Update configuration where necessary to:
- Build pardot-test-srv as a standalone binary.
- Bring up pardot-test-srv and cmd/email-exporter for integration
testing.
- Integrate WFE with cmd/email-exporter when running test/config-next.
Closes#7966
Compute the width of the ARI suggested renewal window as 2% of the
validity period. This means that 90-day certificates have their
suggested window shrink slightly from 48 hours to 43.2 hours, and gives
six-day (160h) certs a suggested window 3.2 hours wide.
Also move the center of that window to the midpoint of the certificate
validity period for certs which are valid for less than 10 days, so that
operators have (proportionally) a little more time to respond to renewal
issues.
Fixes https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder/issues/7996
These paths receive (literally) zero traffic, and they require the WFE
to duplicate the RA's authorization lifetime configuration. Since that
configuration is now per-profile, the WFE can no longer easily replicate
it, and the resulting staleness calculations will be wrong. Remove the
duplicated configuration, remove the unused endpoints that rely on it,
and remove the staleness-checking code which supported those endpoints.
Leave the non-ACME /get/ endpoint for certificates in place, because
checking staleness for those does not require any additional
configuration, and having a non-ACME serial-based API for certificates
is a good thing.
Fixes https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder/issues/8007
We've been seeing some flaky integration tests where issuance fails. The
integration test only has access to the generic user-facing error. The
real error is available as `InternalError` in the WFE logs, but we need
a higher log level to see it.
Remove code using `certificatesPerName` & `newOrdersRL` tables.
Deprecate `DisableLegacyLimitWrites` & `UseKvLimitsForNewOrder` flags.
Remove legacy `ratelimit` package.
Delete these RA test cases:
- `TestAuthzFailedRateLimitingNewOrder` (rl:
`FailedAuthorizationsPerDomainPerAccount`)
- `TestCheckCertificatesPerNameLimit` (rl: `CertificatesPerDomain`)
- `TestCheckExactCertificateLimit` (rl: `CertificatesPerFQDNSet`)
- `TestExactPublicSuffixCertLimit` (rl: `CertificatesPerDomain`)
Rate limits in NewOrder are now enforced by the WFE, starting here:
5a9b4c4b18/wfe2/wfe.go (L781)
We collect a batch of transactions to check limits, check them all at
once, go through and find which one(s) failed, and serve the failure
with the Retry-After that's furthest in the future. All this code
doesn't really need to be tested again; what needs to be tested is that
we're returning the correct failure. That code is
`NewOrderLimitTransactions`, and the `ratelimits` package's tests cover
this.
The public suffix handling behavior is tested by
`TestFQDNsToETLDsPlusOne`:
5a9b4c4b18/ratelimits/utilities_test.go (L9)
Some other RA rate limit tests were deleted earlier, in #7869.
Part of #7671.
Add a new WFE & nonce config field, `NonceHMACKey`, which uses the new
`cmd.HMACKeyConfig` type. Deprecate the `NoncePrefixKey` config field.
Generalize the error message when validating `HMACKeyConfig` in
`config`.
Remove the deprecated `UseDerivablePrefix` config field, which is no
longer used anywhere.
Part of #7632
Goodkey has two ways to detect a key as weak: it runs a variety of
algorithmic checks (such as Fermat factorization and rocacheck), or the
key can be listed in a "weak key file". Similarly, it has two ways to
detect a key as blocked: it can call a generic function (which we use to
query our database), or the key can be listed in a "blocked key file".
This is two methods too many. Reliance on files of weak or blocked keys
introduces unnecessary complexity to both the implementation and
configuration of the goodkey package. Remove both "key file" options and
delete all code which supported them.
Also remove //test/block-a-key, as it was only used to generate these
test files.
IN-10762 tracked the removal of these files in prod.
Fixes https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder/issues/7748
Add a new method, `BatchIncrement`, to issue `IncrBy` (instead of `Set`)
to Redis. This helps prevent the race condition that allows bursts of
near-simultaneous requests to, effectively, spend the same token.
Call this new method when incrementing an existing key. New keys still
need to use `BatchSet` because Redis doesn't have a facility to, within
a single operation, increment _or_ set a default value if none exists.
Add a new feature flag, `IncrementRateLimits`, gating the use of this
new method.
CPS Compliance Review: This feature flag does not change any behaviour
that is described or constrained by our CP/CPS. The closest relation
would just be API availability in general.
Fixes#7780
- Add feature flag `UseKvLimitsForNewOrder`
- Add feature flag `UseKvLimitsForNewAccount`
- Flush all Redis shards before running integration or unit tests, this
avoids false positives between local testing runs
Fixes#7664
Blocked by #7676
Change the way profiles are configured at the WFE to allow them to be
accompanied by descriptive strings. Augment the construction of the
directory resource's "meta" sub-object to include these profile names
and descriptions.
This config swap is safe, since no Boulder WFE instance is configured
with `CertificateProfileNames` yet.
Fixes https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder/issues/7602
- Rename `NewOrderRequest` field `LimitsExempt` to `IsARIRenewal`
- Introduce a new `NewOrderRequest` field, `IsRenewal`
- Introduce a new (temporary) feature flag, `CheckRenewalExemptionAtWFE`
WFE:
- Perform renewal detection in the WFE when `CheckRenewalExemptionAtWFE`
is set
- Skip (key-value) `NewOrdersPerAccount` and `CertificatesPerDomain`
limit checks when renewal detection indicates the the order is a
renewal.
RA:
- Leave renewal detection in the RA intact
- Skip renewal detection and (legacy) `NewOrdersPerAccount` and
`CertificatesPerDomain` limit checks when `CheckRenewalExemptionAtWFE`
is set and the `NewOrderRequest` indicates that the order is a renewal.
Fixes#7508
Part of #5545
Remove the redis-tls, wfe-tls, and mail-test-srv keys which were
generated by minica and then checked in to the repo. All three are
replaced by the dynamically-generated ipki directory.
Part of https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder/issues/7476
The summary here is:
- Move test/cert-ceremonies to test/certs
- Move .hierarchy (generated by the above) to test/certs/webpki
- Remove our mapping of .hierarchy to /hierarchy inside docker
- Move test/grpc-creds to test/certs/ipki
- Unify the generation of both test/certs/webpki and test/certs/ipki
into a single script at test/certs/generate.sh
- Make that script the entrypoint of a new docker compose service
- Have t.sh and tn.sh invoke that service to ensure keys and certs are
created before tests run
No production changes are necessary, the config changes here are just
for testing purposes.
Part of https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder/issues/7476
Update the hierarchy which the integration tests auto-generate inside
the ./hierarchy folder to include three intermediates of each key type,
two to be actively loaded and one to be held in reserve. To facilitate
this:
- Update the generation script to loop, rather than hard-coding each
intermediate we want
- Improve the filenames of the generated hierarchy to be more readable
- Replace the WFE's AIA endpoint with a thin aia-test-srv so that we
don't have to have NameIDs hardcoded in our ca.json configs
Having this new hierarchy will make it easier for our integration tests
to validate that new features like "unpredictable issuance" are working
correctly.
Part of https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder/issues/729
- Parse and validate the `profile` field in `newOrder` requests.
- Pass the `profile` field from `newOrder` calls to the resulting
`RA.NewOrder` call.
- When the client requests a specific profile, ensure that the profile
field is populated in the order returned.
Fixes#7332
Part of #7309
Remove three deprecated feature flags which have been removed from all
production configs:
- StoreLintingCertificateInsteadOfPrecertificate
- LeaseCRLShards
- AllowUnrecognizedFeatures
Deprecate three flags which are set to true in all production configs:
- CAAAfterValidation
- AllowNoCommonName
- SHA256SubjectKeyIdentifier
IN-9879 tracked the removal of these flags.
These names corresponded to single instances of a service, and were
primarily used for (a) specifying which interface to bind a gRPC port on
and (b) allowing `health-checker` to check individual instances rather
than a service as a whole.
For (a), change the `--grpc-addr` flags to bind to "all interfaces." For
(b), provide a specific IP address and port for health checking. This
required adding a `--hostOverride` flag for `health-checker` because the
service certificates contain hostname SANs, not IP address SANs.
Clarify the situation with nonce services a little bit. Previously we
had one nonce "service" in Consul and got nonces from that (i.e.
randomly between the two nonce-service instances). Now we have two nonce
services in consul, representing multiple datacenters, and one of them
is explicitly configured as the "get" service, while both are configured
as the "redeem" service.
Part of #7245.
Note this change does not yet get rid of the rednet/bluenet distinction,
nor does it get rid of all use of 10.88.88.88. That will be a followup
change.
Many services already have --addr and/or --debug-addr flags.
However, it wasn't universal, so this PR adds flags to commands where
they're not currently present.
This makes it easier to use a shared config file but listen on different
ports, for running multiple instances on a single host.
The config options are made optional as well, and removed from
config-next/.
The RequireCommonName feature flag was our only "inverted" feature flag,
which defaulted to true and had to be explicitly set to false. This
inversion can lead to confusion, especially to readers who expect all Go
default values to be zero values. We plan to remove the ability for our
feature flag system to support default-true flags, which the existence
of this flag blocked. Since this flag has not been set in any real
configs, inverting it is easy.
Part of https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder/issues/6802
Integrate the key-value rate limits from #6947 into the WFE. Rate limits
are backed by the Redis source added in #7016, and use the SRV record
shard discovery added in #7042.
Part of #5545
In `//cmd/ceremony`:
* Added `CertificateToCrossSignPath` to the `cross-certificate` ceremony
type. This new input field takes an existing certificate that will be
cross-signed and performs checks against the manually configured data in
each ceremony file.
* Added byte-for-byte subject/issuer comparison checks to root,
intermediate, and cross-certificate ceremonies to detect that signing is
happening as expected.
* Added Fermat factorization check from the `//goodkey` package to all
functions that generate new key material.
In `//linter`:
* The Check function now exports linting certificate bytes. The idea is
that a linting certificate's `tbsCertificate` bytes can be compared
against the final certificate's `tbsCertificate` bytes as a verification
that `x509.CreateCertificate` was deterministic and produced identical
DER bytes after each signing operation.
Other notable changes:
* Re-orders the issuers list in each CA config to match staging and
production. There is an ordering issue mentioned by @aarongable two
years ago on IN-5913 that didn't make it's way back to this repository.
> Order here matters – the default chain we serve for each intermediate
should be the first listed chain containing that intermediate.
* Enables `ECDSAForAll` in `config-next` CA configs to match Staging.
* Generates 2x new ECDSA subordinate CAs cross-signed by an RSA root and
adds these chains to the WFE for clients to download.
* Increased the test.sh startup timeout to account for the extra
ceremony run time.
Fixes https://github.com/letsencrypt/boulder/issues/7003
---------
Co-authored-by: Aaron Gable <aaron@letsencrypt.org>
In configs, opentelemetry -> openTelemetry
As pointed out in review of #6867, these should match the case of their
corresponding Go identifiers for consistency.
JSON keys are case-insensitive in Go (part of why we've got a fork in
go-jose),
so this change should have no functional impact.
This PR adds a new configuration block specifically for the otelhttp
instrumentation. This block is separate from the existing
"opentelemetry" configuration, and is only relevant when using otelhttp
instrumentation. It does not share any codepath with the existing
configuration, so it is at the top level to indicate which services it
applies to.
There's a bit of plumbing new configuration through. I've adopted the
measured_http package to also set up opentelemetry instead of just
metrics, which should hopefully allow any future changes to be smaller
(just config & there) and more consistent between the wfe2 and ocsp
responder.
There's one option here now, which disables setting
[otelhttp.WithPublicEndpoint](https://pkg.go.dev/go.opentelemetry.io/contrib/instrumentation/net/http/otelhttp#WithPublicEndpoint).
This option is designed to do exactly what we want: Don't accept
incoming spans as parents of the new span created in the server.
Previously we had a setting to disable parent-based sampling to help
with this problem, which doesn't really make sense anymore, so let's
just remove it and simplify that setup path. The default of "false" is
designed to be the safe option. It's set to True in the test/ configs
for integration tests that use traces, and I expect we'll likely set it
true in production eventually once the LBs are configured to handle
tracing themselves.
Fixes#6851
Currently we set WaitForReady(true), which causes gRPC requests to not
fail immediately if no backends are available, but instead wait until
the timeout in case a backend does become available. The downside is
that this behavior masks true connection errors. We'd like to turn it
off.
Fixes#6834
This adds Jaeger's all-in-one dev container (with no persistent storage)
to boulder's dev docker-compose. It configures config-next/ to send all
traces there.
A new integration test creates an account and issues a cert, then
verifies the trace contains some set of expected spans.
This test found that async finalize broke spans, so I fixed that and a
few related spots where we make a new context.
Change the SetCommonName flag, introduced in #6706, to
RequireCommonName. Rather than having the flag control both whether or
not a name is hoisted from the SANs into the CN *and* whether or not the
CA is willing to issue certs with no CN, this updated flag now only
controls the latter. By default, the new flag is true, and continues our
current behavior of failing issuance if we cannot set a CN in the cert.
When the flag is set to false, then we are willing to issue certificates
for which the CSR contains no CN and there is no SAN short enough to be
hoisted into the CN field.
When we have rolled out this change, we can move on to the next flag in
this series: HoistCommonName, which will control whether or not a SAN is
hoisted at all, effectively giving the CSRs (and therefore the clients)
full control over whether their certificate contains a SAN.
This change is safe because no environment explicitly sets the
SetCommonName flag to false yet.
Fixes#5112
- Consistently format existing test JSON config files
- Add a small Python script which loads and dumps JSON files
- Add CI JSON lint test to CI
---------
Co-authored-by: Aaron Gable <aaron@aarongable.com>
Remove tracing using Beeline from Boulder. The only remnant left behind
is the deprecated configuration, to ensure deployability.
We had previously planned to swap in OpenTelemetry in a single PR, but
that adds significant churn in a single change, so we're doing this as
multiple steps that will each be significantly easier to reason about
and review.
Part of #6361
Remove the `MandatoryPOSTasGET` flag from the WFE2.
Update the ACMEv2 divergence doc to note that neither staging nor
production use MandatoryPOSTasGET.
Fixes#6582.
Remove `example.com` domain name, which was used by the deleted OldTLS
tests.
Remove GODEBUG=x509sha1=1.
Add a longer comment for the Consul DNS fallback in docker-compose.yml.
Use the "dnsAuthority" field for all gRPC clients in config-next,
instead of implicitly relying on the system DNS. This matches what we do
in prod.
Make "dnsAuthority" field of GRPCClientConfig mandatory whenever
SRVLookup or SRVLookups is used.
Make test/config/ocsp-responder.json use ServerAddress instead of
SRVLookup, like the rest of test/config.
Assign nonce prefixes for each nonce-service by taking the first eight
characters of the the base64url encoded HMAC-SHA256 hash of the RPC
listening address using a provided key. The provided key must be same
across all boulder-wfe and nonce-service instances.
- Add a custom `grpc-go` load balancer implementation (`nonce`) which
can route nonce redemption RPC messages by matching the prefix to the
derived prefix of the nonce-service instance which created it.
- Modify the RPC client constructor to allow the operator to override
the default load balancer implementation (`round_robin`).
- Modify the `srv` RPC resolver to accept a comma separated list of
targets to be resolved.
- Remove unused nonce-service `-prefix` flag.
Fixes#6404
- Add a new gRPC client config field which overrides the dNSName checked in the
certificate presented by the gRPC server.
- Revert all test gRPC credentials to `<service>.boulder`
- Revert all ClientNames in gRPC server configs to `<service>.boulder`
- Set all gRPC clients in `test/config` to use `serverAddress` + `hostOverride`
- Set all gRPC clients in `test/config-next` to use `srvLookup` + `hostOverride`
- Rename incorrect SRV record for `ca` with port `9096` to `ca-ocsp`
- Rename incorrect SRV record for `ca` with port `9106` to `ca-crl`
Resolves#6424
- Fork the default `dns` resolver from `go-grpc` to add backend discovery via
DNS SRV resource records.
- Add new fields for SRV based discovery to `cmd.GRPCClientConfig`
- Add new (optional) field `DNSAuthority` for specifying custom DNS server to
`cmd.GRPCClientConfig`
- Add a utility method to `cmd.GRPCClientConfig` to simplify target URI and host
construction. With three schemes and `DNSAuthority` it makes more sense to
handle all of this parsing and construction outside of the RPC client
constructor.
Resolves#6111
- Add a dedicated Consul container
- Replace `sd-test-srv` with Consul
- Add documentation for configuring Consul
- Re-issue all gRPC credentials for `<service-name>.service.consul`
Part of #6111
Honeycomb was emitting logs directly to stderr like this:
```
WARN: Missing API Key.
WARN: Dataset is ignored in favor of service name. Data will be sent to service name: boulder
```
Fix this by providing a fake API key and replacing "dataset" with "serviceName" in configs. Also add missing Honeycomb configs for crl-updater.
For stdout-only logger, include checksums and escape newlines.
Right now, Boulder expects to be able to connect to syslog, and panics
if it's not available. We'd like to be able to log to stdout/stderr as a
replacement for syslog.
- Add a detailed timestamp (down to microseconds, same as we collect in
prod via syslog).
- Remove the escape codes for colorizing output.
- Report the severity level numerically rather than with a letter prefix.
Add locking for stdout/stderr and syslog logs. Neither the [syslog] package
nor the [os] package document concurrency-safety, and the Go rule is: if
it's not documented to be concurrent-safe, it's not. Notably the [log.Logger]
package is documented to be concurrent-safe, and a look at its implementation
shows it uses a Mutex internally.
Remove places that use the singleton `blog.Get()`, and instead pass through
a logger from main in all the places that need it.
[syslog]: https://pkg.go.dev/log/syslog
[os]: https://pkg.go.dev/os
[log.Logger]: https://pkg.go.dev/log#Logger
- Implement a static resolver for the gPRC dialer under the scheme `static:///`
which allows the dialer to resolve a backend from a static list of IPv4/IPv6
addresses passed via the existing JSON config.
- Add config key `serverAddresses` to the `GRPCClientConfig` which, when
populated, enables static IP resolution of gRPC server backends.
- Set `config-next` to use static gRPC backend resolution for all SA clients.
- Generate a new SA certificate which adds `10.77.77.77` and `10.88.88.88` to
the SANs.
Resolves#6255
Followup from #5839.
I chose groupcache/lru as our LRU cache implementation because it's part
of the golang org, written by one of the Go authors, and very simple
and easy to read.
This adds an `AccountGetter` interface that is implemented by both the
AccountCache and the SA. If the WFE config includes an AccountCache field,
it will wrap the SA in an AccountCache with the configured max size and
expiration time.
We set an expiration time on account cache entries because we want a
bounded amount of time that they may be stale by. This will be used in
conjunction with a delay on account-updating pathways to ensure we don't
allow authentication with a deactivated account or changed key.
The account cache stores corepb.Registration objects because protobufs
have an established way to do a deep copy. Deep copies are important so
the cache can maintain its own internal state and ensure nothing external
is modifying it.
As part of this process I changed construction of the WFE. Previously,
"SA" and "RA" were public fields that were mutated after construction. Now
they are parameters to the constructor, along with the new "accountGetter"
parameter.
The cache includes stats for requests categorized by hits and misses.