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85 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
85 lines
3.8 KiB
Markdown
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# Architecture
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The server is entirely written in Rust, using [actix](https://actix.rs) for the
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backend and [yew](https://yew.rs) for the frontend.
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Backend:
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* Listens on a port for LDAP protocol.
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* Only a small, read-only subset of the LDAP protocol is supported.
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* An extension to allow resetting the password through LDAP will be added.
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* Listens on another port for HTTP traffic.
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* The authentication API, based on JWTs, is under "/auth".
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* The user management API is a GraphQL API under "/api/graphql". The schema
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is defined in `schema.graphql`.
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* The static frontend files are served by this port too.
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Note that secure protocols (LDAPS, HTTPS) are currently not supported. This can
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be worked around by using a reverse proxy in front of the server (for the HTTP
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API) that wraps/unwraps the HTTPS messages, or only open the service to
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localhost or other trusted docker containers (for the LDAP API).
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Frontend:
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* User management UI.
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* Written in Rust compiled to WASM as an SPA with the Yew library.
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* Based on components, with a React-like organization.
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Data storage:
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* The data (users, groups, memberships, active JWTs, ...) is stored in SQL.
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* Currently only SQLite is supported (see
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https://github.com/launchbadge/sqlx/issues/1225 for what blocks us from
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supporting more SQL backends).
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### Code organization
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* `auth/`: Contains the shared structures needed for authentication, the
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interface between front and back-end. In particular, it contains the OPAQUE
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structures and the JWT format.
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* `app/`: The frontend.
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* `src/components`: The elements containing the business and display logic of
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the various pages and their components.
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* `src/infra`: Various tools and utilities.
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* `server/`: The backend.
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* `src/domain/`: Domain-specific logic: users, groups, checking passwords...
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* `src/infra/`: API, both GraphQL and LDAP
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## Authentication
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### Passwords
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Passwords are hashed using Argon2, the state of the art in terms of password
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storage. They are hashed using a secret provided in the configuration (which
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can be given as environment variable or command line argument as well): this
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should be kept secret and shouldn't change (it would invalidate all passwords).
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Authentication is done via the OPAQUE protocol, meaning that the passwords are
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never sent to the server, but instead the client proves that they know the
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correct password (zero-knowledge proof). This is likely overkill, especially
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considered that the LDAP interface requires sending the password to the server,
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but it's one less potential flaw (especially since the LDAP interface can be
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restricted to an internal docker-only network while the web app is exposed to
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the Internet).
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### JWTs and refresh tokens
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When logging in for the first time, users are provided with a refresh token
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that gets stored in an HTTP-only cookie, valid for 30 days. They can use this
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token to get a JWT to get access to various servers: the JWT lists the groups
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the user belongs to. To simplify the setup, there is a single JWT secret that
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should be shared between the authentication server and the application servers;
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and users don't get a different token per application server
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(this could be implemented, we just didn't have any use case yet).
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JWTs are only valid for one day: when they expire, a new JWT can be obtained
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from the authentication server using the refresh token. If the user stays
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logged in, they would only have to type their password once a month.
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#### Logout
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In order to handle logout correctly, we rely on a blacklist of JWTs. When a
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user logs out, their refresh token is removed from the backend, and all of
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their currently valid JWTs are added to a blacklist. Incoming requests are
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checked against this blacklist (in-memory, faster than calling the database).
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Applications that want to use these JWTs should subscribe to be notified of
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blacklisted JWTs (TODO: implement the PubSub service and API).
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