This adds an AES-GCM 256bit encryption layer for storage for sensitive items. This is only TOTP secrets for the time being but this may be expanded later. This will require a configuration change as per https://www.authelia.com/docs/configuration/migration.html#4330.
Closes#682
This is a massive overhaul to the SQL Storage for Authelia. It facilitates a whole heap of utility commands to help manage the database, primary keys, ensures all database requests use a context for cancellations, and paves the way for a few other PR's which improve the database.
Fixes#1337
* refactor(suites): replace selenium with go-rod
This change replaces [tebeka/selenium](https://github.com/tebeka/selenium) with [go-rod](https://github.com/go-rod/rod).
We no longer have a chromedriver/external driver dependency to utilise Selenium as we instead utilise the Chrome Dev Protocol to communicate with the browser.
Rod [documents](https://go-rod.github.io/#/why-rod) benefits of choosing the library as opposed to the available alternatives.
This PR changes the suites tests so if go test -short is used, they are skipped per go standards and a message is displayed. Additionally removed some redundant types from suite_high_availability_test.go and adjusted a warning about a nil req var.
Add a suite for testing the PathPrefix feature implemented earlier to serve authelia under a multi-purpose domain.
Co-authored-by: Clément Michaud <clement.michaud34@gmail.com>
* added regulation validator
* made regulations find_time and ban_time values duration notation strings
* added DefaultRegulationConfiguration for the validator
* made session expiration and inactivity values duration notation strings
* TOTP period does not need to be converted because adjustment should be discouraged
* moved TOTP defaults to DefaultTOTPConfiguration and removed the consts
* arranged the root config validator in configuration file order
* adjusted tests for the changes
* moved duration notation docs to root of configuration
* added references to duration notation where applicable
* project wide gofmt and goimports:
* run gofmt
* run goimports -local github.com/authelia/authelia -w on all files
* Make jwt_secret error uniform and add tests
* now at 100% coverage for internal/configuration/validator/configuration.go
* Redirect to default URL after 1FA when default policy is one_factor.
User is now redirected to the default redirection URL after 1FA if
the default policy is set to one_factor and there is no target URL
or if the target URL is unsafe.
Also, if the default policy is set to one_factor and the user is already
authenticated, if she visits the login portal, the 'already authenticated'
view is displayed with a logout button.
This fixes#581.
* Update users.yml
* Fix permissions issue causing suite test failure
* Encode URL set to rd parameter.
URL encoding that parameter solves PR #476.
Some URL parameters set during redirection were magically disappearing
after the redirection due to the authentication process. By using URL encoding,
those parameters should not be stripped anymore.
* Fix integration tests.
* Build docker image upfront in CI and use it in integration tests.
Previously, the development workflow was broken because the container
generated from Dockerfile.CI was used in dev environments but the binary
was not pre-built as it is on buildkite. I propose to just remove that
image and use the "to be published" image instead in integration tests.
This will have several advantages:
- Fix the dev workflow.
- Remove CI arch from authelia-scripts build command
- Optimize CI time in buildkite since we'll cache a way small artifact
- We don't build authelia more than once for earch arch.
* Fix suites and only build ARM images on master or tagged commits
* Optimise pipeline dependencies and Kubernetes suite to utilise cache
* Run unit tests and docker image build in parallel.
* Fix suite trying to write on read only fs.
Co-authored-by: Amir Zarrinkafsh <nightah@me.com>
Providing a GA tracking ID allows administrators to analyze
how the portal is used by their users in large environments,
i.e., with many users.
This will make even more sense when we have users and admins
management interfaces.