With the introduction of SNP-based attestation on AWS
some of the information in the report (MAAToken) is not
applicable to all attestation reports anymore.
Thus, make verify cmd CSP-agnostic and move
CSP-specific logic to internal/verify.
Also make internal/attestation/snp CSP aware.
The integration test for the license module depends on network
connectivity and should be Bazel-tagged as such. Since the unit tests do
not have a network dependency, we should not apply the tag to those. The
easiest way to do this in a Gazelle-compliant way is to move the
integration test into its own module.
* cli: move internal packages
Signed-off-by: Moritz Sanft <58110325+msanft@users.noreply.github.com>
* cli: fix buildfiles
Signed-off-by: Moritz Sanft <58110325+msanft@users.noreply.github.com>
* bazel: fix exclude dir
Signed-off-by: Moritz Sanft <58110325+msanft@users.noreply.github.com>
* cli: move back libraries that will not be used by TF provider
Signed-off-by: Moritz Sanft <58110325+msanft@users.noreply.github.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: Moritz Sanft <58110325+msanft@users.noreply.github.com>
* Allow creation of Constellation clusters using `apply` command
* Add auto-completion for `--skip-phases` flag
* Deprecate create command
* Replace all doc references to create command with apply
---------
Signed-off-by: Daniel Weiße <dw@edgeless.systems>
* Correct example invocation of aws cli
* Add warning to Helm Intellisense recommendation
* Link code conventions in PR guidelines
* Tighten debugd README
* cmake is not used for building debugd anymore, remove references to it
* make the debug-cluster workflow the authoritative source for cdbg usage - don't replicate the same instructions in different places
* Document that Bazel eats a lot of RAM
This is the first step in our migration off of
konnectivity. Before node-to-node encryption
we used konnectivity to route some KubeAPI
to kubelet traffic over the pod network which then
would be encrypted.
Since we enabled node-to-node encryption this has no
security upsides anymore. Note that we still deploy
the konnectivity agents via helm and still have the
load balancer for konnectivity.
In the following releases we will remove both.
The Cilium strict mode has a special mode which
loosens the security a slight bit. For compatability this
mode is enabled by default. But we don't need it for strict
node-to-node encryption. Therefore, we disable it.
The token given out by control-planes contains the node IP
as an endpoint. Since during this stage the joining node is
not connected to the WireGuard network, we cannot
communicate node-to-node. Therefore, we need to hop over the
load balancer again to have a src IP outside of the strict
range.
For the strict modes we need to dynamically use
the CIDR used in the Terraform files. Therefore,
we write them to our statefile and use them when
installing Cilium.
When enabling node-to-node encryption, Cilium does not
encrypt control-plane to control-plane traffic by
default since they say that they cannot gurantee that
the generated private key for a node is persisted across
reboots.
In Constellation we use stateful VMs which when rebooted
still have the cilium_wg0 interface containing the
private key.
Therefore, we can enable this type of encryption.