ClickHouse/tests/integration/test_ssl_cert_authentication/test.py
2022-03-22 17:39:58 +01:00

236 lines
6.9 KiB
Python

import pytest
from helpers.cluster import ClickHouseCluster
import urllib.request, urllib.parse
import ssl
import os.path
HTTPS_PORT = 8443
NODE_IP = "10.5.172.77" # It's important for the node to work at this IP because 'server-cert.pem' requires that (see server-ext.cnf).
NODE_IP_WITH_HTTPS_PORT = NODE_IP + ":" + str(HTTPS_PORT)
SCRIPT_DIR = os.path.dirname(os.path.realpath(__file__))
cluster = ClickHouseCluster(__file__)
instance = cluster.add_instance(
"node",
ipv4_address=NODE_IP,
main_configs=[
"configs/ssl_config.xml",
"certs/server-key.pem",
"certs/server-cert.pem",
"certs/ca-cert.pem",
],
user_configs=["configs/users_with_ssl_auth.xml"],
)
@pytest.fixture(scope="module", autouse=True)
def started_cluster():
try:
cluster.start()
yield cluster
finally:
cluster.shutdown()
def get_ssl_context(cert_name):
context = ssl.SSLContext(ssl.PROTOCOL_TLS_CLIENT)
context.load_verify_locations(cafile=f"{SCRIPT_DIR}/certs/ca-cert.pem")
if cert_name:
context.load_cert_chain(
f"{SCRIPT_DIR}/certs/{cert_name}-cert.pem",
f"{SCRIPT_DIR}/certs/{cert_name}-key.pem",
)
context.verify_mode = ssl.CERT_REQUIRED
context.check_hostname = True
return context
def execute_query_https(
query, user, enable_ssl_auth=True, cert_name=None, password=None
):
url = f"https://{NODE_IP_WITH_HTTPS_PORT}/?query={urllib.parse.quote(query)}"
request = urllib.request.Request(url)
request.add_header("X-ClickHouse-User", user)
if enable_ssl_auth:
request.add_header("X-ClickHouse-SSL-Certificate-Auth", "on")
if password:
request.add_header("X-ClickHouse-Key", password)
response = urllib.request.urlopen(
request, context=get_ssl_context(cert_name)
).read()
return response.decode("utf-8")
def test_https():
assert (
execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="john", cert_name="client1")
== "john\n"
)
assert (
execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="lucy", cert_name="client2")
== "lucy\n"
)
assert (
execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="lucy", cert_name="client3")
== "lucy\n"
)
def test_https_wrong_cert():
# Wrong certificate: different user's certificate
with pytest.raises(Exception) as err:
execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="john", cert_name="client2")
assert "HTTP Error 403" in str(err.value)
# Wrong certificate: self-signed certificate.
with pytest.raises(Exception) as err:
execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="john", cert_name="wrong")
assert "unknown ca" in str(err.value)
# No certificate.
with pytest.raises(Exception) as err:
execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="john")
assert "HTTP Error 403" in str(err.value)
# No header enabling SSL authentication.
with pytest.raises(Exception) as err:
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="john",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
cert_name="client1",
)
def test_https_non_ssl_auth():
# Users with non-SSL authentication are allowed, in this case we can skip sending a client certificate at all (because "verificationMode" is set to "relaxed").
# assert execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="peter", enable_ssl_auth=False) == "peter\n"
assert (
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="jane",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
password="qwe123",
)
== "jane\n"
)
# But we still can send a certificate if we want.
assert (
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="peter",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
cert_name="client1",
)
== "peter\n"
)
assert (
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="peter",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
cert_name="client2",
)
== "peter\n"
)
assert (
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="peter",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
cert_name="client3",
)
== "peter\n"
)
assert (
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="jane",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
password="qwe123",
cert_name="client1",
)
== "jane\n"
)
assert (
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="jane",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
password="qwe123",
cert_name="client2",
)
== "jane\n"
)
assert (
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="jane",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
password="qwe123",
cert_name="client3",
)
== "jane\n"
)
# However if we send a certificate it must not be wrong.
with pytest.raises(Exception) as err:
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="peter",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
cert_name="wrong",
)
assert "unknown ca" in str(err.value)
with pytest.raises(Exception) as err:
execute_query_https(
"SELECT currentUser()",
user="jane",
enable_ssl_auth=False,
password="qwe123",
cert_name="wrong",
)
assert "unknown ca" in str(err.value)
def test_create_user():
instance.query("CREATE USER emma IDENTIFIED WITH ssl_certificate CN 'client3'")
assert (
execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="emma", cert_name="client3")
== "emma\n"
)
assert (
instance.query("SHOW CREATE USER emma")
== "CREATE USER emma IDENTIFIED WITH ssl_certificate CN \\'client3\\'\n"
)
instance.query("ALTER USER emma IDENTIFIED WITH ssl_certificate CN 'client2'")
assert (
execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="emma", cert_name="client2")
== "emma\n"
)
assert (
instance.query("SHOW CREATE USER emma")
== "CREATE USER emma IDENTIFIED WITH ssl_certificate CN \\'client2\\'\n"
)
with pytest.raises(Exception) as err:
execute_query_https("SELECT currentUser()", user="emma", cert_name="client3")
assert "HTTP Error 403" in str(err.value)
assert (
instance.query("SHOW CREATE USER lucy")
== "CREATE USER lucy IDENTIFIED WITH ssl_certificate CN \\'client2\\', \\'client3\\'\n"
)
assert (
instance.query(
"SELECT name, auth_type, auth_params FROM system.users WHERE name IN ['emma', 'lucy'] ORDER BY name"
)
== 'emma\tssl_certificate\t{"common_names":["client2"]}\n'
'lucy\tssl_certificate\t{"common_names":["client2","client3"]}\n'
)