This change adds integration tests for the client and server for
the Modify and DeleteAttribute operations, proving they work in
tandem. Minor bug fixes in the client are included to enable
correct test execution.
Partially implements #547
This changes fixes a minor bug with proper attribute index range
checking in the server implementation of ModifyAttribute. A corner
case that previously slipped through index checking and testing
has been closed. An existing unit test has been modified to fix
this bug.
Partially implements #547
This change adds ModifyAttribute operation support to the PyKMIP
server, including additional attribute policy functionality to
check for certain attribute characteristics that preclude
ModifyAttribute operation functionality. New unit tests have been
added to cover these changes.
Partially implements #547
This change adds ModifyAttribute support to the ProxyKmipClient,
leveraging the new generic request capability in the underlying
KMIPProxy client. New unit tests have been added to cover the new
client additions.
Partially implements #547
This change adds SetAttribute support to the ProxyKmipClient,
leveraging the new generic request capability in the underlying
KMIPProxy client. New unit tests have been added to cover the new
client additions.
Partially implements #547
This change adds SetAttribute operation support to the PyKMIP
server, including additional attribute policy functionality to
check for certain attribute characteristics that preclude
SetAttribute operation functionality. Specifically, the operation
cannot set the value of any multivalued attribute nor the value
of any attribute not modifiable by the client. New unit tests
have been added to cover these changes.
Partially implements #547
This change adds support for the Sensitive attribute, adding it to
the attribute factory, the SQLAlchemy object hierarchy, and to the
server attribute handling methods. The intent is to use this new
attribute to test the new SetAttribute and ModifyAttribute
operations coming in future commits. Unit tests have been added
and modified to support the new additions.
This change adds DeleteAttribute support to the ProxyKmipClient,
leveraging the new generic request capability in the underlying
KMIPProxy client. Going forward all new attribute support will
leverage the new request capability and older supported operations
will be migrated to use it as well, with the ultimate vision
being a final merger of the two client classes into one easy to
use architecture. New unit tests have been added to cover the new
client additions.
Partially implements #547
This change adds DeleteAttribute operation support to the PyKMIP
server, supporting functionality unique to KMIP 1.0 - 1.4 and the
newer KMIP 2.0. Due to the current list of attributes supported
by the server, only multivalued attributes can currently be
deleted from a stored KMIP object. Over a dozen unit tests have
been added to verify the functionality of the new additions.
Partially implements #547
This change adds integration tests that verify that objects can
be found by Locate when filtering off of the new ObjectGroup and
ApplicationSpecificInformation attributes. Some minor tweaks to
the database attribute models are included to simplify usage.
This change ObjectGroup attribute support to the server, allowing
for the storage and retrieval of the new attribute in addition to
object filtering based on its value. New unit tests have been
added to cover the new changes.
This change adds ApplicationSpecificInformation attribute support
to the server, allowing for the storage and retrieval of the new
attribute in addition to object filtering based on its value. New
unit tests have been added to cover the new changes.
This change adds integration tests that test registering,
retrieving, and destroying SplitKey objects with the server.
Minor updates are included for the client and server to ensure
that SplitKey operations function as expected.
Partially implements #545
This change adds conversion utilities for SplitKey objects,
allowing for conversions between the Pie and Core object spaces.
The server is also updated to recognize the new Pie SplitKey
object. Unit tests have been added and tweaked to accommodate
these changes.
Partially implements #545
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects based on the object's
Certificate Type. Unit tests and integration tests have
been added to test and verify the correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support Certificate Type filtering. Simply use the
"--certificate-type" flag to specify a Certificate Type
enumeration values for the Locate script to filter on.
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects based on the object's
Cryptographic Usage Masks. Unit tests and integration tests have
been added to test and verify the correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support Cryptographic Usage Mask filtering. Simply use the
"--cryptographic-usage-mask" flag to specify one or more
Cryptographic Usage Mask enumeration values for the Locate script
to filter on.
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects using the offset and maximum item
constraints. The offset constraint tells the server how many
matching items should be skipped before results are returned. The
maximum items constraint tells the server how many matching items
should be returned. Unit tests and integration tests have been
added to test and verify the correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support offset and maximum item filtering. Simply use the
"--offset-items" and "--maximum-items" flags to specify offset and
maximum item values for the Locate script to filter on.
Fixes#562
This change updates the PyKMIP server's support for the Locate
operation, sorting the matched objects found by Locate by their
initial date, newest objects first. This matches the KMIP
specification's definition for how Locate results should be
ordered.
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects based on the object's Operation
Policy Name. Unit tests and integration tests have been added to
test and verify the correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support Operation Policy Name filtering. Simply use the
"--operation-policy-name" flag to specify an Operation Policy Name
string value for the Locate script to filter on.
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects based on the object's Unique
Identifier. Unit tests and integration tests have been added to
test and verify the correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support Unique Identifier filtering. Simply use the
"--unique-identifier" flag to specify a Unique Identifier string
value for the Locate script to filter on.
This change adds debug logging statements for the request and
response message encodings sent and received by the server
session. These provide direct visability into each message that
is handled by the server, facilitating debugging and correctness
checking. Given the content of these encodings may contain
sensitive information, debug logging should only be enabled when
testing or developing server features.
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects based on the object's
Cryptographic Length. If an object's type does not support the
Cryptographic Length attribute, the object is not a match. Unit
tests and integration tests have been added to test and verify
the correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support Cryptographic Length filtering. Simply use the
"--cryptographic-length" flag to specify a Cryptographic Length
integer value for the Locate script to filter on.
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects based on the object's
Cryptographic Algorithm. If an object's type does not support the
Cryptographic Algorithm attribute, that object is not a match.
Unit tests and integration tests have been added to test and
verify the correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support Cryptographic Algorithm filtering. Simply use the
"--cryptographic-algorithm" flag to specify a Cryptographic
Algorithm enumeration for the Locate script to filter on.
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects based on the object's Object Type.
Unit tests and integration tests have been added to test and verify
the correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support Object Type filtering. Simply use the "--object-type" flag
to specify an Object Type enumeration for the Locate script to
filter on.
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects based on the object's State. Unit
tests and integration tests have been added to test and verify the
correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support State filtering. Simply use the "--state" flag to specify
a State enumeration for the Locate script to filter on.
This change updates Locate operation support in the PyKMIP server,
allowing users to filter objects based on the objects InitialDate
attribute value. Specifying a single InitialDate attribute in the
Locate request will perform an exact match on objects; specifying
two InitialDate attributes will perform a ranged match. Unit tests
and integration tests have been added to test and verify the
correctness of this feature.
Additionally, the Locate demo scripts have also been updated to
support InitialDate filtering. Simply use the "--initial-date"
flag to provide one or more InitialDate values to the Locate
script to filter on those dates.
This change fixes a bug in the server attribute handling logic
that manifests when attributes are deprecated and removed in KMIP
2.0. Now these attributes are effectively ignored for KMIP 2.0
messages, complying with the KMIP 2.0 specification.
This changes adds all of the final core updates necessary to allow
KMIP 2.0 message encoding/decoding support for the PyKMIP server.
Request and responses now dynamically adjust the KMIP version they
encode/decode under based on the KMIP version included in their
header segments. Extra server logging has also been added to show
the KMIP version specified by the client request.
Message tests have been updated to reflect these changes.
This change upgrades the Query payloads, fixing error messages,
comments, local variables, and internal payload structure to
bring Query support up to KMIP 1.4 standards, in addition to
compliance with the current payload format. The corresponding
unit test suite has been completely rewritten to reflect these
changes.
This change prepares the Query payloads for future updates to
support KMIP 2.0.
This change moves the KMIPProtocol class from the server module
to the services module. Because the client uses KMIPProtocol, and
KMIPProtocol lived in the server module, the client would end up
importing server libraries whenever it was used. If there are any
issues with server dependencies, this would cause the client to
fail for no good reason. This change now insulates the client from
the server code base and prevents this case from happening.
See #509
This change updates the CreateKeyPair payloads to the current
payload format, adding properties for different payload attributes
and adding comparison and string operators. Changes are also made
to the PyKMIP clients and the surrounding testing infrastructure
to reflect the payload changes. The official unit test suite for
the CreateKeyPair payloads has been updated to also reflect these
changes.
This change prepares the CreateKeyPair payloads for future
updates to support KMIP 2.0.
This change updates the Locate payloads to the current payload
format, adding properties for different payload attributes and
adding comparison and string operators. Changes are also made to
the PyKMIP clients and the surrounding testing infrastructure to
reflect the payload changes. An official unit test suite for the
Locate payloads has also been included, which will eventually
replace the existing Locate message tests elsewhere in the test
suite.
This change prepares the Locate payloads for future updates to
support KMIP 2.0.
This change updates the Register payloads to the current payload
format, adding properties for different payload attributes and
adding comparison and string operators. Changes are also made to
the PyKMIP clients and the surrounding testing infrastructure to
reflect the payload changes. An official unit test suite for the
Register payloads has also been included, which will eventually
replace the existing Register message tests elsewhere in the test
suite.
This change prepares the Register payloads for future updates to
support KMIP 2.0.
When TLS handshake is performed while in `accept()` call, main thread
might blocked up to network timeout effectively locking out other
clients from being able to establish connection with PyKMIP server.
Easy way to reproduce the problem:
1. Start PyKMIP server
2. Establish TCP connection with `nc -v 127.0.0.1 5696`
3. Attempt to connect (concurrently):
`openssl s_client -host 127.0.0.1 -port 5696`
Without the fix, `openssl` would be blocked (won't even do initial TLS
handshake) until `nc` connection times out.
This change updates the Create payloads to the current payload
format, adding properties for different payload attributes and
adding comparison and string operators. Changes are also made to
the PyKMIP clients and the surrounding testing infrastructure to
reflect the payload changes. An official unit test suite for the
Create payloads has also been included, which will eventually
replace the existing Create message tests elsewhere in the test
suite.
This change prepares the Create payloads for future updates to
support KMIP 2.0.
This change updates the PyKMIP object hierarchy's read/write
method signatures to support propagation of the KMIP version. The
introduction of KMIP 2.0 introduces future KMIP message encodings
that break backwards compatibility; to support this, PyKMIP must
know what KMIP version is being used when encoding or decoding an
object; the KMIP version residing in the client or server alone
is now insufficient. Prior versions of KMIP, namely 1.0 - 1.4,
have been backwards compatible, obviating the need for the KMIP
version at encode/decode time. Going forward, this is no longer
true.
The PyKMIP client and server have been updated to include the
KMIP version when making calls to read/write, as have the
associated test cases covering this functionality.
This change fixes a bug in the KMIPProxy client's support for the
Rekey operation. Specifically, if the operation fails and does not
return a payload, the client will still try to reference the
payload object when checking for TemplateAttribute data. This
causes an AttributeError since the payload is None. This change
fixes this and adds a unit test that covers this specific case.
Fixes#474
This change updates the PyKMIP clients, adding support for getting
and setting the KMIP version they use when making KMIP requests.
You can now do:
>>> client.kmip_version
to get the KMIP version enumeration the client is using. Use:
>>> client.kmip_version = enums.KMIPVersion.KMIP_1_1
to set the KMIP version the client uses.
The client unit tests have been updated to check and cover these
changes.
Fixes#470
This change updates the list of KMIP versions supported by the
server. While the server does not support any specific KMIP 1.3
or 1.4 features, the protocol formats are compatible across KMIP
1.0 to 1.4. Without this change, KMIP 1.3 and 1.4 requests for
older operations, like Create, Get, and Destroy, would fail.
This change also updates the server unit tests impacted by this
change.
Closes#451
This change fixes various pending deprecation warnings throughout
the library caused by recent updates to different dependencies.
While PyKMIP no longer directly triggers these warnings, some
dependencies still do when run through the test suite.
A recent style update to Python 3.6 adds deprecation W605, which
tightens the usage of invalid escape sequences. This patch removes
any instances of invalid escape sequences from the PyKMIP code
base, bringing the library back up to compliance with Python style.
As an application developer, you might expect to be able to turn on
debug logging at the root logger with something like
logging.basicConfig(level=logging.DEBUG)
However, if the application needed to fetch any secrets from a KMIP
server, these previously would be logged as part of the wire protocol.
Further, any passwords in configs would also get logged at DEBUG.
Applications would need to proactively silence such logging, as in
https://github.com/openstack/swift/commit/12b6d46
Now, we will default the logger level to INFO to suppress the debug
logging. However, seeing the on-wire data may still be useful, for
example when developing a new KMIP server. So, allow developers to
consciously set the logger level to DEBUG.