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Author SHA1 Message Date
epriestley
08bea1d363 Add ViewController and SearchEngine for SSH Public Keys
Summary:
Ref T10917. This primarily prepares these for transactions by giving us a place to:

  - review old deactivated keys; and
  - review changes to keys.

Future changes will add transactions and a timeline so key changes are recorded exhaustively and can be more easily audited.

Test Plan:
{F1652089}

{F1652090}

{F1652091}

{F1652092}

Reviewers: chad

Reviewed By: chad

Maniphest Tasks: T10917

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D15946
2016-05-19 09:48:46 -07:00
epriestley
0308d580d7 Deactivate SSH keys instead of destroying them completely
Summary:
Ref T10917. Currently, when you delete an SSH key, we really truly delete it forever.

This isn't very consistent with other applications, but we built this stuff a long time ago before we were as rigorous about retaining data and making it auditable.

In partiular, destroying data isn't good for auditing after security issues, since it means we can't show you logs of any changes an attacker might have made to your keys.

To prepare to improve this, stop destoying data. This will allow later changes to become transaction-oriented and show normal transaction logs.

The tricky part here is that we have a `UNIQUE KEY` on the public key part of the key.

Instead, I changed this to `UNIQUE (key, isActive)`, where `isActive` is a nullable boolean column. This works because MySQL does not enforce "unique" if part of the key is `NULL`.

So you can't have two rows with `("A", 1)`, but you can have as many rows as you want with `("A", null)`. This lets us keep the "each key may only be active for one user/object" rule without requiring us to delete any data.

Test Plan:
- Ran schema changes.
- Viewed public keys.
- Tried to add a duplicate key, got rejected (already associated with another object).
- Deleted SSH key.
- Verified that the key was no longer actually deleted from the database, just marked inactive (in future changes, I'll update the UI to be more clear about this).
- Uploaded a new copy of the same public key, worked fine (no duplicate key rejection).
- Tried to upload yet another copy, got rejected.
- Generated a new keypair.
- Tried to upload a duplicate to an Almanac device, got rejected.
- Generated a new pair for a device.
- Trusted a device key.
- Untrusted a device key.
- "Deleted" a device key.
- Tried to trust a deleted device key, got "inactive" message.
- Ran `bin/ssh-auth`, got good output with unique keys.
- Ran `cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa.pub | ./bin/ssh-auth-key`, got good output with one key.
- Used `auth.querypublickeys` Conduit method to query keys, got good active keys.

Reviewers: chad

Reviewed By: chad

Maniphest Tasks: T10917

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D15943
2016-05-18 14:54:28 -07:00
Evan Priestley
32cdc23efc Separate SSH key management from the settings panel
Summary:
Ref T5833. I want to add SSH keys to Almanac devices, but the edit workflows for them are currently bound tightly to users.

Instead, decouple key management from users and the settings panel.

Test Plan:
  - Uploaded, generated, edited and deleted SSH keys.
  - Hit missing name, missing key, bad key format, duplicate key errors.
  - Edited/generated/deleted/etc keys for a bot user as an administrator.
  - Got HiSec'd on everything.

Reviewers: btrahan

Reviewed By: btrahan

Subscribers: epriestley

Maniphest Tasks: T5833

Differential Revision: https://secure.phabricator.com/D10824
2014-11-11 08:18:26 -08:00