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authorTim Bielawa <tbielawa@redhat.com>2016-10-07 09:55:13 -0700
committerTim Bielawa <tbielawa@redhat.com>2016-10-20 07:49:40 -0700
commita22e8daf1f7c93469023239f442f19608ffbc970 (patch)
tree0fa7c6e91d471c0833d58ab95baa6dec7ee657f2 /library
parent4273b21105dd11f52de354b4777d33e4296ba7e0 (diff)
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Refactor into a role
Diffstat (limited to 'library')
-rw-r--r--library/openshift_cert_expiry.py635
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 635 deletions
diff --git a/library/openshift_cert_expiry.py b/library/openshift_cert_expiry.py
deleted file mode 100644
index f18ab75d0..000000000
--- a/library/openshift_cert_expiry.py
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,635 +0,0 @@
-#!/usr/bin/python
-# -*- coding: utf-8 -*-
-# pylint: disable=line-too-long,invalid-name
-
-"""For details on this module see DOCUMENTATION (below)"""
-
-# router/registry cert grabbing
-import subprocess
-# etcd config file
-import ConfigParser
-# Expiration parsing
-import datetime
-# File path stuff
-import os
-# Config file parsing
-import yaml
-# Certificate loading
-import OpenSSL.crypto
-
-DOCUMENTATION = '''
----
-module: openshift_cert_expiry
-short_description: Check OpenShift Container Platform (OCP) and Kube certificate expirations on a cluster
-description:
- - The M(openshift_cert_expiry) module has two basic functions: to flag certificates which will expire in a set window of time from now, and to notify you about certificates which have already expired.
- - When the module finishes, a summary of the examination is returned. Each certificate in the summary has a C(health) key with a value of one of the following:
- - C(ok) - not expired, and outside of the expiration C(warning_days) window.
- - C(warning) - not expired, but will expire between now and the C(warning_days) window.
- - C(expired) - an expired certificate.
- - Certificate flagging follow this logic:
- - If the expiration date is before now then the certificate is classified as C(expired).
- - The certificates time to live (expiration date - now) is calculated, if that time window is less than C(warning_days) the certificate is classified as C(warning).
- - All other conditions are classified as C(ok).
- - The following keys are ALSO present in the certificate summary:
- - C(cert_cn) - The common name of the certificate (additional CNs present in SAN extensions are omitted)
- - C(days_remaining) - The number of days until the certificate expires.
- - C(expiry) - The date the certificate expires on.
- - C(path) - The full path to the certificate on the examined host.
-version_added: "0.0"
-options:
- config_base:
- description:
- - Base path to OCP system settings.
- required: false
- default: /etc/origin
- warning_days:
- description:
- - Flag certificates which will expire in C(warning_days) days from now.
- required: false
- default: 30
- show_all:
- description:
- - Enable this option to show analysis of ALL certificates examined by this module.
- - By default only certificates which have expired, or will expire within the C(warning_days) window will be reported.
- required: false
- default: false
-
-author: "Tim Bielawa (@tbielawa) <tbielawa@redhat.com>"
-'''
-
-EXAMPLES = '''
-# Default invocation, only notify about expired certificates or certificates which will expire within 30 days from now
-- openshift_cert_expiry:
-
-# Expand the warning window to show certificates expiring within a year from now
-- openshift_cert_expiry: warning_days=365
-
-# Show expired, soon to expire (now + 30 days), and all other certificates examined
-- openshift_cert_expiry: show_all=true
-'''
-
-
-# We only need this for one thing, we don't care if it doesn't have
-# that many public methods
-#
-# pylint: disable=too-few-public-methods
-class FakeSecHead(object):
- """etcd does not begin their config file with an opening [section] as
-required by the Python ConfigParser module. We hack around it by
-slipping one in ourselves prior to parsing.
-
-Source: Alex Martelli - http://stackoverflow.com/a/2819788/6490583
- """
- def __init__(self, fp):
- self.fp = fp
- self.sechead = '[ETCD]\n'
-
- def readline(self):
- """Make this look like a file-type object"""
- if self.sechead:
- try:
- return self.sechead
- finally:
- self.sechead = None
- else:
- return self.fp.readline()
-
-
-######################################################################
-
-def filter_paths(path_list):
- """`path_list` - A list of file paths to check. Only files which exist
-will be returned
- """
- return [p for p in path_list if os.path.exists(os.path.realpath(p))]
-
-
-def load_and_handle_cert(cert_string, now, base64decode=False):
- """Load a certificate, split off the good parts, and return some
-useful data
-
-Params:
-
-- `cert_string` (string) - a certificate loaded into a string object
-- `now` (datetime) - a datetime object of the time to calculate the certificate 'time_remaining' against
-- `base64decode` (bool) - run .decode('base64') on the input?
-
-Returns:
-A 3-tuple of the form: (certificate_common_name, certificate_expiry_date, certificate_time_remaining)
-
- """
- if base64decode:
- _cert_string = cert_string.decode('base-64')
- else:
- _cert_string = cert_string
-
- cert_loaded = OpenSSL.crypto.load_certificate(
- OpenSSL.crypto.FILETYPE_PEM, _cert_string)
-
- ######################################################################
- # Read just the first name from the cert - DISABLED while testing
- # out the 'get all possible names' function (below)
- #
- # Strip the subject down to just the value of the first name
- # cert_subject = cert_loaded.get_subject().get_components()[0][1]
-
- ######################################################################
- # Read all possible names from the cert
- cert_subjects = []
- for name, value in cert_loaded.get_subject().get_components():
- cert_subjects.append('{}:{}'.format(name, value))
-
- # To read SANs from a cert we must read the subjectAltName
- # extension from the X509 Object. What makes this more difficult
- # is that pyOpenSSL does not give extensions as a list, nor does
- # it provide a count of all loaded extensions.
- #
- # Rather, extensions are REQUESTED by index. We must iterate over
- # all extensions until we find the one called 'subjectAltName'. If
- # we don't find that extension we'll eventually request an
- # extension at an index where no extension exists (IndexError is
- # raised). When that happens we know that the cert has no SANs so
- # we break out of the loop.
- i = 0
- checked_all_extensions = False
- while not checked_all_extensions:
- try:
- # Read the extension at index 'i'
- ext = cert_loaded.get_extension(i)
- except IndexError:
- # We tried to read an extension but it isn't there, that
- # means we ran out of extensions to check. Abort
- san = None
- checked_all_extensions = True
- else:
- # We were able to load the extension at index 'i'
- if ext.get_short_name() == 'subjectAltName':
- san = ext
- checked_all_extensions = True
- else:
- # Try reading the next extension
- i += 1
-
- if san is not None:
- # The X509Extension object for subjectAltName prints as a
- # string with the alt names separated by a comma and a
- # space. Split the string by ', ' and then add our new names
- # to the list of existing names
- cert_subjects.extend(str(san).split(', '))
-
- cert_subject = ', '.join(cert_subjects)
- ######################################################################
-
- # Grab the expiration date
- cert_expiry = cert_loaded.get_notAfter()
- cert_expiry_date = datetime.datetime.strptime(
- cert_expiry,
- # example get_notAfter() => 20180922170439Z
- '%Y%m%d%H%M%SZ')
-
- time_remaining = cert_expiry_date - now
-
- return (cert_subject, cert_expiry_date, time_remaining)
-
-
-def classify_cert(cert_meta, now, time_remaining, expire_window, cert_list):
- """Given metadata about a certificate under examination, classify it
- into one of three categories, 'ok', 'warning', and 'expired'.
-
-Params:
-
-- `cert_meta` dict - A dict with certificate metadata. Required fields
- include: 'cert_cn', 'path', 'expiry', 'days_remaining', 'health'.
-- `now` (datetime) - a datetime object of the time to calculate the certificate 'time_remaining' against
-- `time_remaining` (datetime.timedelta) - a timedelta for how long until the cert expires
-- `expire_window` (datetime.timedelta) - a timedelta for how long the warning window is
-- `cert_list` list - A list to shove the classified cert into
-
-Return:
-- `cert_list` - The updated list of classified certificates
- """
- expiry_str = str(cert_meta['expiry'])
- # Categorization
- if cert_meta['expiry'] < now:
- # This already expired, must NOTIFY
- cert_meta['health'] = 'expired'
- elif time_remaining < expire_window:
- # WARN about this upcoming expirations
- cert_meta['health'] = 'warning'
- else:
- # Not expired or about to expire
- cert_meta['health'] = 'ok'
-
- cert_meta['expiry'] = expiry_str
- cert_list.append(cert_meta)
- return cert_list
-
-
-def tabulate_summary(certificates, kubeconfigs, etcd_certs, router_certs, registry_certs):
- """Calculate the summary text for when the module finishes
-running. This includes counds of each classification and what have
-you.
-
-Params:
-
-- `certificates` (list of dicts) - Processed `expire_check_result`
- dicts with filled in `health` keys for system certificates.
-- `kubeconfigs` - as above for kubeconfigs
-- `etcd_certs` - as above for etcd certs
-Return:
-
-- `summary_results` (dict) - Counts of each cert type classification
- and total items examined.
- """
- items = certificates + kubeconfigs + etcd_certs + router_certs + registry_certs
-
- summary_results = {
- 'system_certificates': len(certificates),
- 'kubeconfig_certificates': len(kubeconfigs),
- 'etcd_certificates': len(etcd_certs),
- 'router_certs': len(router_certs),
- 'registry_certs': len(registry_certs),
- 'total': len(items),
- 'ok': 0,
- 'warning': 0,
- 'expired': 0
- }
-
- summary_results['expired'] = len([c for c in items if c['health'] == 'expired'])
- summary_results['warning'] = len([c for c in items if c['health'] == 'warning'])
- summary_results['ok'] = len([c for c in items if c['health'] == 'ok'])
-
- return summary_results
-
-
-######################################################################
-# This is our module MAIN function after all, so there's bound to be a
-# lot of code bundled up into one block
-#
-# pylint: disable=too-many-locals,too-many-locals,too-many-statements,too-many-branches
-def main():
- """This module examines certificates (in various forms) which compose
-an OpenShift Container Platform cluster
- """
-
- module = AnsibleModule(
- argument_spec=dict(
- config_base=dict(
- required=False,
- default="/etc/origin",
- type='str'),
- warning_days=dict(
- required=False,
- default=int(30),
- type='int'),
- show_all=dict(
- required=False,
- default="False",
- type='bool')
- ),
- supports_check_mode=True,
- )
-
- # Basic scaffolding for OpenShift spcific certs
- openshift_base_config_path = module.params['config_base']
- openshift_master_config_path = os.path.normpath(
- os.path.join(openshift_base_config_path, "master/master-config.yaml")
- )
- openshift_node_config_path = os.path.normpath(
- os.path.join(openshift_base_config_path, "node/node-config.yaml")
- )
- openshift_cert_check_paths = [
- openshift_master_config_path,
- openshift_node_config_path,
- ]
-
- # Paths for Kubeconfigs. Additional kubeconfigs are conditionally
- # checked later in the code
- master_kube_configs = ['admin', 'openshift-master',
- 'openshift-node', 'openshift-router',
- 'openshift-registry']
-
- kubeconfig_paths = []
- for m_kube_config in master_kube_configs:
- kubeconfig_paths.append(
- os.path.normpath(
- os.path.join(openshift_base_config_path, "master/%s.kubeconfig" % m_kube_config)
- )
- )
-
- # etcd, where do you hide your certs? Used when parsing etcd.conf
- etcd_cert_params = [
- "ETCD_CA_FILE",
- "ETCD_CERT_FILE",
- "ETCD_PEER_CA_FILE",
- "ETCD_PEER_CERT_FILE",
- ]
-
- # Expiry checking stuff
- now = datetime.datetime.now()
- # todo, catch exception for invalid input and return a fail_json
- warning_days = int(module.params['warning_days'])
- expire_window = datetime.timedelta(days=warning_days)
-
- # Module stuff
- #
- # The results of our cert checking to return from the task call
- check_results = {}
- check_results['meta'] = {}
- check_results['meta']['warning_days'] = warning_days
- check_results['meta']['checked_at_time'] = str(now)
- check_results['meta']['warn_after_date'] = str(now + expire_window)
- check_results['meta']['show_all'] = str(module.params['show_all'])
- # All the analyzed certs accumulate here
- ocp_certs = []
-
- ######################################################################
- # Sure, why not? Let's enable check mode.
- if module.check_mode:
- check_results['ocp_certs'] = []
- module.exit_json(
- check_results=check_results,
- msg="Checked 0 total certificates. Expired/Warning/OK: 0/0/0. Warning window: %s days" % module.params['warning_days'],
- rc=0,
- changed=False
- )
-
- ######################################################################
- # Check for OpenShift Container Platform specific certs
- ######################################################################
- for os_cert in filter_paths(openshift_cert_check_paths):
- # Open up that config file and locate the cert and CA
- with open(os_cert, 'r') as fp:
- cert_meta = {}
- cfg = yaml.load(fp)
- # cert files are specified in parsed `fp` as relative to the path
- # of the original config file. 'master-config.yaml' with certFile
- # = 'foo.crt' implies that 'foo.crt' is in the same
- # directory. certFile = '../foo.crt' is in the parent directory.
- cfg_path = os.path.dirname(fp.name)
- cert_meta['certFile'] = os.path.join(cfg_path, cfg['servingInfo']['certFile'])
- cert_meta['clientCA'] = os.path.join(cfg_path, cfg['servingInfo']['clientCA'])
-
- ######################################################################
- # Load the certificate and the CA, parse their expiration dates into
- # datetime objects so we can manipulate them later
- for _, v in cert_meta.iteritems():
- with open(v, 'r') as fp:
- cert = fp.read()
- cert_subject, cert_expiry_date, time_remaining = load_and_handle_cert(cert, now)
-
- expire_check_result = {
- 'cert_cn': cert_subject,
- 'path': fp.name,
- 'expiry': cert_expiry_date,
- 'days_remaining': time_remaining.days,
- 'health': None,
- }
-
- classify_cert(expire_check_result, now, time_remaining, expire_window, ocp_certs)
-
- ######################################################################
- # /Check for OpenShift Container Platform specific certs
- ######################################################################
-
- ######################################################################
- # Check service Kubeconfigs
- ######################################################################
- kubeconfigs = []
-
- # There may be additional kubeconfigs to check, but their naming
- # is less predictable than the ones we've already assembled.
-
- try:
- # Try to read the standard 'node-config.yaml' file to check if
- # this host is a node.
- with open(openshift_node_config_path, 'r') as fp:
- cfg = yaml.load(fp)
-
- # OK, the config file exists, therefore this is a
- # node. Nodes have their own kubeconfig files to
- # communicate with the master API. Let's read the relative
- # path to that file from the node config.
- node_masterKubeConfig = cfg['masterKubeConfig']
- # As before, the path to the 'masterKubeConfig' file is
- # relative to `fp`
- cfg_path = os.path.dirname(fp.name)
- node_kubeconfig = os.path.join(cfg_path, node_masterKubeConfig)
-
- with open(node_kubeconfig, 'r') as fp:
- # Read in the nodes kubeconfig file and grab the good stuff
- cfg = yaml.load(fp)
-
- c = cfg['users'][0]['user']['client-certificate-data']
- (cert_subject,
- cert_expiry_date,
- time_remaining) = load_and_handle_cert(c, now, base64decode=True)
-
- expire_check_result = {
- 'cert_cn': cert_subject,
- 'path': fp.name,
- 'expiry': cert_expiry_date,
- 'days_remaining': time_remaining.days,
- 'health': None,
- }
-
- classify_cert(expire_check_result, now, time_remaining, expire_window, kubeconfigs)
- except IOError:
- # This is not a node
- pass
-
- for kube in filter_paths(kubeconfig_paths):
- with open(kube, 'r') as fp:
- # TODO: Maybe consider catching exceptions here?
- cfg = yaml.load(fp)
-
- # Per conversation, "the kubeconfigs you care about:
- # admin, router, registry should all be single
- # value". Following that advice we only grab the data for
- # the user at index 0 in the 'users' list. There should
- # not be more than one user.
- c = cfg['users'][0]['user']['client-certificate-data']
- (cert_subject,
- cert_expiry_date,
- time_remaining) = load_and_handle_cert(c, now, base64decode=True)
-
- expire_check_result = {
- 'cert_cn': cert_subject,
- 'path': fp.name,
- 'expiry': cert_expiry_date,
- 'days_remaining': time_remaining.days,
- 'health': None,
- }
-
- classify_cert(expire_check_result, now, time_remaining, expire_window, kubeconfigs)
-
- ######################################################################
- # /Check service Kubeconfigs
- ######################################################################
-
- ######################################################################
- # Check etcd certs
- ######################################################################
- # Some values may be duplicated, make this a set for now so we
- # unique them all
- etcd_certs_to_check = set([])
- etcd_certs = []
- etcd_cert_params.append('dne')
- try:
- with open('/etc/etcd/etcd.conf', 'r') as fp:
- etcd_config = ConfigParser.ConfigParser()
- etcd_config.readfp(FakeSecHead(fp))
-
- for param in etcd_cert_params:
- try:
- etcd_certs_to_check.add(etcd_config.get('ETCD', param))
- except ConfigParser.NoOptionError:
- # That parameter does not exist, oh well...
- pass
- except IOError:
- # No etcd to see here, move along
- pass
-
- for etcd_cert in filter_paths(etcd_certs_to_check):
- with open(etcd_cert, 'r') as fp:
- c = fp.read()
- (cert_subject,
- cert_expiry_date,
- time_remaining) = load_and_handle_cert(c, now)
-
- expire_check_result = {
- 'cert_cn': cert_subject,
- 'path': fp.name,
- 'expiry': cert_expiry_date,
- 'days_remaining': time_remaining.days,
- 'health': None,
- }
-
- classify_cert(expire_check_result, now, time_remaining, expire_window, etcd_certs)
-
- ######################################################################
- # /Check etcd certs
- ######################################################################
-
- ######################################################################
- # Check router/registry certs
- #
- # These are saved as secrets in etcd. That means that we can not
- # simply read a file to grab the data. Instead we're going to
- # subprocess out to the 'oc get' command. On non-masters this
- # command will fail, that is expected so we catch that exception.
- ######################################################################
- router_certs = []
- registry_certs = []
-
- ######################################################################
- # First the router certs
- try:
- router_secrets_raw = subprocess.Popen('oc get secret router-certs -o yaml'.split(),
- stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
- router_ds = yaml.load(router_secrets_raw.communicate()[0])
- router_c = router_ds['data']['tls.crt']
- router_path = router_ds['metadata']['selfLink']
- except TypeError:
- # YAML couldn't load the result, this is not a master
- pass
- else:
- (cert_subject,
- cert_expiry_date,
- time_remaining) = load_and_handle_cert(router_c, now, base64decode=True)
-
- expire_check_result = {
- 'cert_cn': cert_subject,
- 'path': router_path,
- 'expiry': cert_expiry_date,
- 'days_remaining': time_remaining.days,
- 'health': None,
- }
-
- classify_cert(expire_check_result, now, time_remaining, expire_window, router_certs)
-
- check_results['router'] = router_certs
-
- ######################################################################
- # Now for registry
- # registry_secrets = subprocess.call('oc get secret registry-certificates -o yaml'.split())
- # out = subprocess.PIPE
- try:
- registry_secrets_raw = subprocess.Popen('oc get secret registry-certificates -o yaml'.split(),
- stdout=subprocess.PIPE)
- registry_ds = yaml.load(registry_secrets_raw.communicate()[0])
- registry_c = registry_ds['data']['registry.crt']
- registry_path = registry_ds['metadata']['selfLink']
- except TypeError:
- # YAML couldn't load the result, this is not a master
- pass
- else:
- (cert_subject,
- cert_expiry_date,
- time_remaining) = load_and_handle_cert(registry_c, now, base64decode=True)
-
- expire_check_result = {
- 'cert_cn': cert_subject,
- 'path': registry_path,
- 'expiry': cert_expiry_date,
- 'days_remaining': time_remaining.days,
- 'health': None,
- }
-
- classify_cert(expire_check_result, now, time_remaining, expire_window, registry_certs)
-
- check_results['registry'] = registry_certs
-
- ######################################################################
- # /Check router/registry certs
- ######################################################################
-
- res = tabulate_summary(ocp_certs, kubeconfigs, etcd_certs, router_certs, registry_certs)
-
- msg = "Checked {count} total certificates. Expired/Warning/OK: {exp}/{warn}/{ok}. Warning window: {window} days".format(
- count=res['total'],
- exp=res['expired'],
- warn=res['warning'],
- ok=res['ok'],
- window=int(module.params['warning_days']),
- )
-
- # By default we only return detailed information about expired or
- # warning certificates. If show_all is true then we will print all
- # the certificates examined.
- if not module.params['show_all']:
- check_results['ocp_certs'] = [crt for crt in ocp_certs if crt['health'] in ['expired', 'warning']]
- check_results['kubeconfigs'] = [crt for crt in kubeconfigs if crt['health'] in ['expired', 'warning']]
- check_results['etcd'] = [crt for crt in etcd_certs if crt['health'] in ['expired', 'warning']]
- else:
- check_results['ocp_certs'] = ocp_certs
- check_results['kubeconfigs'] = kubeconfigs
- check_results['etcd'] = etcd_certs
-
- # Sort the final results to report in order of ascending safety
- # time. That is to say, the certificates which will expire sooner
- # will be at the front of the list and certificates which will
- # expire later are at the end.
- check_results['ocp_certs'] = sorted(check_results['ocp_certs'], cmp=lambda x, y: cmp(x['days_remaining'], y['days_remaining']))
- check_results['kubeconfigs'] = sorted(check_results['kubeconfigs'], cmp=lambda x, y: cmp(x['days_remaining'], y['days_remaining']))
- check_results['etcd'] = sorted(check_results['etcd'], cmp=lambda x, y: cmp(x['days_remaining'], y['days_remaining']))
-
- # This module will never change anything, but we might want to
- # change the return code parameter if there is some catastrophic
- # error we noticed earlier
- module.exit_json(
- check_results=check_results,
- summary=res,
- msg=msg,
- rc=0,
- changed=False
- )
-
-######################################################################
-# It's just the way we do things in Ansible. So disable this warning
-#
-# pylint: disable=wrong-import-position,import-error
-from ansible.module_utils.basic import AnsibleModule
-if __name__ == '__main__':
- main()