* packaging: display First Install and Onboarding Message
* Update #5851: Update as per Rohit's comments
* Update #5851: display package name in help message
* Update #5851: display links of installed cloudstack version on UI
* Update #5851: fix vue warnings
Updates the DB properties (with strict / full property string search) having master and slave(s), with source and replica(s) respectively on upgrade (for inclusiveness).
Signed-off-by: Suresh Kumar Anaparti <suresh.anaparti@shapeblue.com>
- Migrate to embedded Jetty server.
- Improve ServerDaemon implementation.
- Introduce a new server.properties file for easier configuration.
- Have a single /etc/default/cloudstack-management to configure env.
- Reduce shaded jar file, removing unnecessary dependencies.
- Upgrade to Spring 5.x, upgrade several jar dependencies.
- Does not shade and include mysql-connector, used from classpath instead.
- Upgrade and use bountcastle as a separate un-shaded jar dependency.
- Remove tomcat related configuration and files.
- Have both embedded UI assets in uber jar and separate webapp directory.
- Refactor systemd and init scripts, cleanup packaging.
- Made cloudstack-setup-databases faster, using `urandom`.
- Remove unmaintained distro packagings.
- Moves creation and usage of server keystore in CA manager, this
deprecates the need to create/store cloud.jks in conf folder and
the db.cloud.keyStorePassphrase in db.properties file. This also
remove the need of the --keystore-passphrase in the
cloudstack-setup-encryption script.
- GZip contents dynamically in embedded Jetty
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
This introduces a new certificate authority framework that allows
pluggable CA provider implementations to handle certificate operations
around issuance, revocation and propagation. The framework injects
itself to `NioServer` to handle agent connections securely. The
framework adds assumptions in `NioClient` that a keystore if available
with known name `cloud.jks` will be used for SSL negotiations and
handshake.
This includes a default 'root' CA provider plugin which creates its own
self-signed root certificate authority on first run and uses it for
issuance and provisioning of certificate to CloudStack agents such as
the KVM, CPVM and SSVM agents and also for the management server for
peer clustering.
Additional changes and notes:
- Comma separate list of management server IPs can be set to the 'host'
global setting. Newly provisioned agents (KVM/CPVM/SSVM etc) will get
radomized comma separated list to which they will attempt connection
or reconnection in provided order. This removes need of a TCP LB on
port 8250 (default) of the management server(s).
- All fresh deployment will enforce two-way SSL authentication where
connecting agents will be required to present certificates issued
by the 'root' CA plugin.
- Existing environment on upgrade will continue to use one-way SSL
authentication and connecting agents will not be required to present
certificates.
- A script `keystore-setup` is responsible for initial keystore setup
and CSR generation on the agent/hosts.
- A script `keystore-cert-import` is responsible for import provided
certificate payload to the java keystore file.
- Agent security (keystore, certificates etc) are setup initially using
SSH, and later provisioning is handled via an existing agent connection
using command-answers. The supported clients and agents are limited to
CPVM, SSVM, and KVM agents, and clustered management server (peering).
- Certificate revocation does not revoke an existing agent-mgmt server
connection, however rejects a revoked certificate used during SSL
handshake.
- Older `cloudstackmanagement.keystore` is deprecated and will no longer
be used by mgmt server(s) for SSL negotiations and handshake. New
keystores will be named `cloud.jks`, any additional SSL certificates
should not be imported in it for use with tomcat etc. The `cloud.jks`
keystore is stricly used for agent-server communications.
- Management server keystore are validated and renewed on start up only,
the validity of them are same as the CA certificates.
New APIs:
- listCaProviders: lists all available CA provider plugins
- listCaCertificate: lists the CA certificate(s)
- issueCertificate: issues X509 client certificate with/without a CSR
- provisionCertificate: provisions certificate to a host
- revokeCertificate: revokes a client certificate using its serial
Global settings for the CA framework:
- ca.framework.provider.plugin: The configured CA provider plugin
- ca.framework.cert.keysize: The key size for certificate generation
- ca.framework.cert.signature.algorithm: The certificate signature algorithm
- ca.framework.cert.validity.period: Certificate validity in days
- ca.framework.cert.automatic.renewal: Certificate auto-renewal setting
- ca.framework.background.task.delay: CA background task delay/interval
- ca.framework.cert.expiry.alert.period: Days to check and alert expiring certificates
Global settings for the default 'root' CA provider:
- ca.plugin.root.private.key: (hidden/encrypted) CA private key
- ca.plugin.root.public.key: (hidden/encrypted) CA public key
- ca.plugin.root.ca.certificate: (hidden/encrypted) CA certificate
- ca.plugin.root.issuer.dn: The CA issue distinguished name
- ca.plugin.root.auth.strictness: Are clients required to present certificates
- ca.plugin.root.allow.expired.cert: Are clients with expired certificates allowed
UI changes:
- Button to download/save the CA certificates.
Misc changes:
- Upgrades bountycastle version and uses newer classes
- Refactors SAMLUtil to use new CertUtils
Signed-off-by: Rohit Yadav <rohit.yadav@shapeblue.com>
We should be carefull what we package since all configuration should
be in /etc/cloudstack/management
Signed-off-by: Wido den Hollander <wido@widodh.nl>
working again.
The newly created package for cloudstack-management was not correctly
installing the service. This prevented cloud-setup-management from being
able to configure the service, and the init script didn't even believe
the service was installed. I also added sudo to the chmod command for
checking script permissions, as most scripts belong to root. It was
trying to configure the agent with cloudstack-setup-agent but the script
was still called cloud-setup-agent, so I renamed it to cloudstack-setup-agent.
Some concepts included:
* the replace.properties location used by maven is parameterized to allow
for a build that does not modify the currently git tracked files
* package naming is updated along the lines of what was discussed on the
-dev mailing list and between committers at the Build a Cloud Day in Belgi
* package version pattern is updated (since we redo all package names,
we might as well drop the epoch)