spiffe-jwt-using-proxy/

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Published: Sep 13, 2023 License: Apache-2.0

README

Authenticating Workloads over TLS-encrypted HTTP Connections Using JWT-SVIDs

This example shows how to use the go-spiffe library to make a server workload authenticate a client workload using JWT-SVIDs fetched from the Workload API.

JWT-SVIDs are useful when the workloads are not able to establish an mTLS communication channel between each other. For instance, when the server workload is behind a TLS terminating load balancer or proxy, a client workload cannot be authenticated directly by the server via mTLS and X.509-SVID. So, an alternative is to forego authenticating the client at the load balancer or proxy and instead require that clients authenticate via SPIFFE JWT-SVIDs conveyed directly to the server via the application layer.

The scenario used in this example goes like this:

  1. The server:
    • Creates an X509Source struct.
    • Creates a JWTSource struct.
    • Starts listening for HTTP requests over TLS. Only one resource is served at /.
  2. The reverse proxy:
    • Creates an X509Source struct.
    • Starts listening for HTTP requests over TLS. It forwards requests to / only.
  3. The client:
    • Creates an X509Source struct.
    • Creates a JWTSource struct.
    • Fetches a JWT-SVID using the JWTSource.
    • Creates a GET / request with the JWT-SVID set as the value of the Authorization header.
    • Sends the request to the proxy using TLS authentication for establishing the connection.
  4. The proxy receives the request, logs the request's method and URL, and forwards the request to the server.
  5. The server receives the request, extracts the JWT-SVID from the Authorization header, and verifies the token. If the token is valid, it logs Request received and returns a response with a body containing the string Success!!!, otherwise an Unauthorized HTTP code is returned.
  6. The proxy receives the response from the server and passes it to the client.
  7. The client receives the response. If the response has an HTTP 200 status, its body is logged, otherwise the HTTP status code is logged.

Creating an X509Source struct

As you may noted, the three workloads create a workloadapi.X509Source struct.

	x509Source, err := workloadapi.NewX509Source(
		ctx,
		workloadapi.WithClientOptions(workloadapi.WithAddr(socketPath)),
	)

Where:

  • ctx is a context.Context. NewX509Source function blocks until the first Workload API response is received or this context times out or is cancelled.
  • socketPath is the address of the Workload API (unix:///tmp/agent.sock) to which the internal Workload API client connects to get up-to-date SVIDs. Alternatively, we could have omitted this configuration option, in which case the listener would have used the SPIFFE_ENDPOINT_SOCKET environment variable to locate the Workload API. The code could have then been written like this:
	x509Source, err := workloadapi.NewX509Source(ctx)

In all cases, the X509Source is used to create a tls.Config for the underlying transport connection of the HTTP client/server. However, there are some differences in its usage on the server, client, and proxy workloads:

The server workload uses the X509Source to create the TLSServerConfig for the HTTP server used:

	server := &http.Server{
		Addr:      ":8080",
		TLSConfig: tlsconfig.TLSServerConfig(x509Source),
	}

This enables the server to present an X.509-SVID to the other end of the connection. This SVID is provided by the X509Source via the Workload API.

The client workload uses the X509Source to create the TLSClientConfig for the Transport of the HTTP client used:

    serverID := spiffeid.RequireFromString("spiffe://example.org/server")
    .
    .
    .
    client := &http.Client{
		Transport: &http.Transport{
			TLSClientConfig: tlsconfig.TLSClientConfig(
				x509Source,
				tlsconfig.AuthorizeID(serverID),
			),
		},
	}

This enables the client to verify that the X.509-SVID presented by the other end of the connection has the specified SPIFFE ID by using:

The proxy workload uses the X509Source to create the TLSClientConfig for the Transport of the HTTP reverse proxy used:

	proxy := httputil.NewSingleHostReverseProxy(remote)
	transport := *(http.DefaultTransport.(*http.Transport)) // copy of http.DefaultTransport.
	transport.TLSClientConfig = tlsconfig.TLSClientConfig(
		x509Source, tlsconfig.AuthorizeID(spiffeid.RequireFromString("spiffe://example.org/server")),
	)
	proxy.Transport = &transport

This enables the proxy to verify that the X.509-SVID presented by the server has the specified SPIFFE ID by using:

The proxy workload also uses the X509Source to create the TLSServerConfig for the HTTP server used:

	server := &http.Server{
		Addr:      ":8443",
		TLSConfig: tlsconfig.TLSServerConfig(x509Source),
	}

This enables the proxy to present an X.509-SVID to the client. This SVID is provided by the X509Source via the Workload API, and contains the SPIFFE ID of the server (as explained later in Create the registration entries section).

Creating a JWTSource struct

On the scenario described we can see that only the client and the server workloads create a workloadapi.JWTSource. This is because the proxy workload doesn't need to deal with JWTs since the server is the one in charge of authenticating the clients:

    jwtSource, err := workloadapi.NewJWTSource(
		ctx,
		workloadapi.WithClientOptions(workloadapi.WithAddr(socketPath)),
	)

Where:

  • ctx is a context.Context. NewJWTSource function blocks until the first Workload API response is received or this context times out or is cancelled.
  • socketPath is the address of the Workload API (unix:///tmp/agent.sock) to which the internal Workload API client connects to get up-to-date SVIDs. Alternatively, we could have omitted this configuration option, in which case the listener would have used the SPIFFE_ENDPOINT_SOCKET environment variable to locate the Workload API. The code could have then been written like this:
	jwtSource, err := workloadapi.NewJWTSource(ctx)

Although both client and server workloads create a JWTSource, it is used differently in each case:

The client workload uses the JWTSource to get a JWT-SVID by calling its FetchJWTSVID function:

	svid, err := jwtSource.FetchJWTSVID(ctx, jwtsvid.Params{
		Audience: audience,
	})

Where:

  • ctx is a context.Context. FetchJWTSVID method blocks until a response is received or this context times out or is cancelled.
  • audience is the intended recipient of the JWT-SVID. By default it is spiffe://example.org/server, otherwise it is equal to the value passed as the first argument of the client's executable.

Then, the client uses the JWT-SVID to set a bearer token to the request's Authorization header:

	req, err := http.NewRequest("GET", serverURL, nil)
	.
	.
	.
	req.Header.Set("Authorization", fmt.Sprintf("Bearer %s", svid.Marshal()))

The server workload uses the JWTSource to authenticate the client by calling the ParseAndValidate function:

	_, err := jwtsvid.ParseAndValidate(token, a.jwtSource, a.audiences)

Where:

  • token is the marshalled JWT-SVID sent by the client in the Authorization header.
  • a.jwtSource is the JWTSource.
  • a.audiences is a slice of strings. Specifies a list of expected audiences in the aud field of the token.

When ParseAndValidate returns an error, the server returns an Unauthorized status. Otherwise, the request continues normal processing.

That is it!

As we can see the go-spiffe library allows your application avoiding to deal with the implementation details of the Workload API. You just create the SVID sources and then simply ask the library for what you need.

Building

To build the client workload:

cd examples/spiffe-jwt-using-proxy/client
go build

To build the proxy workload:

cd examples/spiffe-jwt-using-proxy/proxy
go build

To build the server workload:

cd examples/spiffe-jwt-using-proxy/server
go build

Running

This example assumes the following preconditions:

  • There is a SPIRE Server and Agent up and running.
  • There is a Unix workload attestor configured.
  • The trust domain is example.org.
  • The agent SPIFFE ID is spiffe://example.org/host.
  • There are server-workload and client-workload users in the system.
1. Create the registration entries

Create two registration entries, one for the client workload and another for the server and proxy workloads:

Server:

./spire-server entry create -spiffeID spiffe://example.org/server \
                            -parentID spiffe://example.org/host \
                            -selector unix:user:server-workload

Client:

./spire-server entry create -spiffeID spiffe://example.org/client \
                            -parentID spiffe://example.org/host \
                            -selector unix:user:client-workload

We will use the server-workload user to run the proxy because we want it to be as transparent as possible to the client. By using this user, the proxy will get an SVID with the same SPIFFE ID as the server, due to the unix:user:server-workload selector used when registering the entry.

2. Start the server

Start the server with the server-workload user:

sudo -u server-workload ./server
3. Start the proxy

Start the proxy with the server-workload user:

sudo -u server-workload ./proxy
4. Run the client

Run the client with the client-workload user:

sudo -u client-workload ./client

For each component the logs would contain:

Component Log content (stdout)
Proxy GET /
Server Request received
Client Success!!!

To demonstrate a failure, we can run the client using a wrong audience as the first argument:

sudo -u client-workload ./client spiffe://example.org/some-other-server

401 Unauthorized

Given that the server expects its own SPIFFE ID as the audience value it will reject the token because of the audience's mismatch. Then server log would contain:

Invalid token: jwtsvid: expected audience in ["spiffe://example.org/server"] (audience=["spiffe://example.org/some-other-server"])

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