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caddy/caddytls/maintain.go
Matthew Holt 08028714b5
tls: Synchronize renewals between Caddy instances sharing file storage
Also introduce caddy.OnProcessExit which is a list of functions that
run before exiting the process cleanly; these do not count as shutdown
callbacks, so they do not return errors and must execute quickly.
2018-02-13 13:23:09 -07:00

364 lines
13 KiB
Go

// Copyright 2015 Light Code Labs, LLC
//
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package caddytls
import (
"io/ioutil"
"log"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"time"
"github.com/mholt/caddy"
"golang.org/x/crypto/ocsp"
)
func init() {
// maintain assets while this package is imported, which is
// always. we don't ever stop it, since we need it running.
go maintainAssets(make(chan struct{}))
}
const (
// RenewInterval is how often to check certificates for renewal.
RenewInterval = 12 * time.Hour
// RenewDurationBefore is how long before expiration to renew certificates.
RenewDurationBefore = (24 * time.Hour) * 30
// RenewDurationBeforeAtStartup is how long before expiration to require
// a renewed certificate when the process is first starting up (see #1680).
// A wider window between RenewDurationBefore and this value will allow
// Caddy to start under duress but hopefully this duration will give it
// enough time for the blockage to be relieved.
RenewDurationBeforeAtStartup = (24 * time.Hour) * 7
// OCSPInterval is how often to check if OCSP stapling needs updating.
OCSPInterval = 1 * time.Hour
)
// maintainAssets is a permanently-blocking function
// that loops indefinitely and, on a regular schedule, checks
// certificates for expiration and initiates a renewal of certs
// that are expiring soon. It also updates OCSP stapling and
// performs other maintenance of assets. It should only be
// called once per process.
//
// You must pass in the channel which you'll close when
// maintenance should stop, to allow this goroutine to clean up
// after itself and unblock. (Not that you HAVE to stop it...)
func maintainAssets(stopChan chan struct{}) {
renewalTicker := time.NewTicker(RenewInterval)
ocspTicker := time.NewTicker(OCSPInterval)
for {
select {
case <-renewalTicker.C:
log.Println("[INFO] Scanning for expiring certificates")
RenewManagedCertificates(false)
log.Println("[INFO] Done checking certificates")
case <-ocspTicker.C:
log.Println("[INFO] Scanning for stale OCSP staples")
UpdateOCSPStaples()
DeleteOldStapleFiles()
log.Println("[INFO] Done checking OCSP staples")
case <-stopChan:
renewalTicker.Stop()
ocspTicker.Stop()
log.Println("[INFO] Stopped background maintenance routine")
return
}
}
}
// RenewManagedCertificates renews managed certificates,
// including ones loaded on-demand.
func RenewManagedCertificates(allowPrompts bool) (err error) {
for _, inst := range caddy.Instances() {
inst.StorageMu.RLock()
certCache, ok := inst.Storage[CertCacheInstStorageKey].(*certificateCache)
inst.StorageMu.RUnlock()
if !ok || certCache == nil {
continue
}
// we use the queues for a very important reason: to do any and all
// operations that could require an exclusive write lock outside
// of the read lock! otherwise we get a deadlock, yikes. in other
// words, our first iteration through the certificate cache does NOT
// perform any operations--only queues them--so that more fine-grained
// write locks may be obtained during the actual operations.
var renewQueue, reloadQueue, deleteQueue []Certificate
certCache.RLock()
for certKey, cert := range certCache.cache {
if len(cert.configs) == 0 {
// this is bad if this happens, probably a programmer error (oops)
log.Printf("[ERROR] No associated TLS config for certificate with names %v; unable to manage", cert.Names)
continue
}
if !cert.configs[0].Managed || cert.configs[0].SelfSigned {
continue
}
// the list of names on this cert should never be empty... programmer error?
if cert.Names == nil || len(cert.Names) == 0 {
log.Printf("[WARNING] Certificate keyed by '%s' has no names: %v - removing from cache", certKey, cert.Names)
deleteQueue = append(deleteQueue, cert)
continue
}
// if time is up or expires soon, we need to try to renew it
timeLeft := cert.NotAfter.Sub(time.Now().UTC())
if timeLeft < RenewDurationBefore {
// see if the certificate in storage has already been renewed, possibly by another
// instance of Caddy that didn't coordinate with this one; if so, just load it (this
// might happen if another instance already renewed it - kinda sloppy but checking disk
// first is a simple way to possibly drastically reduce rate limit problems)
storedCertExpiring, err := managedCertInStorageExpiresSoon(cert)
if err != nil {
// hmm, weird, but not a big deal, maybe it was deleted or something
log.Printf("[NOTICE] Error while checking if certificate for %v in storage is also expiring soon: %v",
cert.Names, err)
} else if !storedCertExpiring {
// if the certificate is NOT expiring soon and there was no error, then we
// are good to just reload the certificate from storage instead of repeating
// a likely-unnecessary renewal procedure
reloadQueue = append(reloadQueue, cert)
continue
}
// the certificate in storage has not been renewed yet, so we will do it
// NOTE 1: This is not correct 100% of the time, if multiple Caddy instances
// happen to run their maintenance checks at approximately the same times;
// both might start renewal at about the same time and do two renewals and one
// will overwrite the other. Hence TLS storage plugins. This is sort of a TODO.
// NOTE 2: It is super-important to note that the TLS-SNI challenge requires
// a write lock on the cache in order to complete its challenge, so it is extra
// vital that this renew operation does not happen inside our read lock!
renewQueue = append(renewQueue, cert)
}
}
certCache.RUnlock()
// Reload certificates that merely need to be updated in memory
for _, oldCert := range reloadQueue {
timeLeft := oldCert.NotAfter.Sub(time.Now().UTC())
log.Printf("[INFO] Certificate for %v expires in %v, but is already renewed in storage; reloading stored certificate",
oldCert.Names, timeLeft)
err = certCache.reloadManagedCertificate(oldCert)
if err != nil {
if allowPrompts {
return err // operator is present, so report error immediately
}
log.Printf("[ERROR] Loading renewed certificate: %v", err)
}
}
// Renewal queue
for _, oldCert := range renewQueue {
timeLeft := oldCert.NotAfter.Sub(time.Now().UTC())
log.Printf("[INFO] Certificate for %v expires in %v; attempting renewal", oldCert.Names, timeLeft)
// Get the name which we should use to renew this certificate;
// we only support managing certificates with one name per cert,
// so this should be easy. We can't rely on cert.Config.Hostname
// because it may be a wildcard value from the Caddyfile (e.g.
// *.something.com) which, as of Jan. 2017, is not supported by ACME.
// TODO: ^ ^ ^ (wildcards)
renewName := oldCert.Names[0]
// perform renewal
err := oldCert.configs[0].RenewCert(renewName, allowPrompts)
if err != nil {
if allowPrompts {
// Certificate renewal failed and the operator is present. See a discussion
// about this in issue 642. For a while, we only stopped if the certificate
// was expired, but in reality, there is no difference between reporting
// it now versus later, except that there's somebody present to deal with
// it right now. Follow-up: See issue 1680. Only fail in this case if the
// certificate is dangerously close to expiration.
timeLeft := oldCert.NotAfter.Sub(time.Now().UTC())
if timeLeft < RenewDurationBeforeAtStartup {
return err
}
}
log.Printf("[ERROR] %v", err)
if oldCert.configs[0].OnDemand {
// loaded dynamically, remove dynamically
deleteQueue = append(deleteQueue, oldCert)
}
continue
}
// successful renewal, so update in-memory cache by loading
// renewed certificate so it will be used with handshakes
err = certCache.reloadManagedCertificate(oldCert)
if err != nil {
if allowPrompts {
return err // operator is present, so report error immediately
}
log.Printf("[ERROR] %v", err)
}
}
// Deletion queue
for _, cert := range deleteQueue {
certCache.Lock()
// remove any pointers to this certificate from Configs
for _, cfg := range cert.configs {
for name, certKey := range cfg.Certificates {
if certKey == cert.Hash {
delete(cfg.Certificates, name)
}
}
}
// then delete the certificate from the cache
delete(certCache.cache, cert.Hash)
certCache.Unlock()
}
}
return nil
}
// UpdateOCSPStaples updates the OCSP stapling in all
// eligible, cached certificates.
//
// OCSP maintenance strives to abide the relevant points on
// Ryan Sleevi's recommendations for good OCSP support:
// https://gist.github.com/sleevi/5efe9ef98961ecfb4da8
func UpdateOCSPStaples() {
for _, inst := range caddy.Instances() {
inst.StorageMu.RLock()
certCache, ok := inst.Storage[CertCacheInstStorageKey].(*certificateCache)
inst.StorageMu.RUnlock()
if !ok || certCache == nil {
continue
}
// Create a temporary place to store updates
// until we release the potentially long-lived
// read lock and use a short-lived write lock
// on the certificate cache.
type ocspUpdate struct {
rawBytes []byte
parsed *ocsp.Response
}
updated := make(map[string]ocspUpdate)
certCache.RLock()
for certHash, cert := range certCache.cache {
// no point in updating OCSP for expired certificates
if time.Now().After(cert.NotAfter) {
continue
}
var lastNextUpdate time.Time
if cert.OCSP != nil {
lastNextUpdate = cert.OCSP.NextUpdate
if freshOCSP(cert.OCSP) {
continue // no need to update staple if ours is still fresh
}
}
err := stapleOCSP(&cert, nil)
if err != nil {
if cert.OCSP != nil {
// if there was no staple before, that's fine; otherwise we should log the error
log.Printf("[ERROR] Checking OCSP: %v", err)
}
continue
}
// By this point, we've obtained the latest OCSP response.
// If there was no staple before, or if the response is updated, make
// sure we apply the update to all names on the certificate.
if cert.OCSP != nil && (lastNextUpdate.IsZero() || lastNextUpdate != cert.OCSP.NextUpdate) {
log.Printf("[INFO] Advancing OCSP staple for %v from %s to %s",
cert.Names, lastNextUpdate, cert.OCSP.NextUpdate)
updated[certHash] = ocspUpdate{rawBytes: cert.Certificate.OCSPStaple, parsed: cert.OCSP}
}
}
certCache.RUnlock()
// These write locks should be brief since we have all the info we need now.
for certKey, update := range updated {
certCache.Lock()
cert := certCache.cache[certKey]
cert.OCSP = update.parsed
cert.Certificate.OCSPStaple = update.rawBytes
certCache.cache[certKey] = cert
certCache.Unlock()
}
}
}
// DeleteOldStapleFiles deletes cached OCSP staples that have expired.
// TODO: Should we do this for certificates too?
func DeleteOldStapleFiles() {
// TODO: Upgrade caddytls.Storage to support OCSP operations too
files, err := ioutil.ReadDir(ocspFolder)
if err != nil {
// maybe just hasn't been created yet; no big deal
return
}
for _, file := range files {
if file.IsDir() {
// weird, what's a folder doing inside the OCSP cache?
continue
}
stapleFile := filepath.Join(ocspFolder, file.Name())
ocspBytes, err := ioutil.ReadFile(stapleFile)
if err != nil {
continue
}
resp, err := ocsp.ParseResponse(ocspBytes, nil)
if err != nil {
// contents are invalid; delete it
err = os.Remove(stapleFile)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("[ERROR] Purging corrupt staple file %s: %v", stapleFile, err)
}
}
if time.Now().After(resp.NextUpdate) {
// response has expired; delete it
err = os.Remove(stapleFile)
if err != nil {
log.Printf("[ERROR] Purging expired staple file %s: %v", stapleFile, err)
}
}
}
}
// freshOCSP returns true if resp is still fresh,
// meaning that it is not expedient to get an
// updated response from the OCSP server.
func freshOCSP(resp *ocsp.Response) bool {
nextUpdate := resp.NextUpdate
// If there is an OCSP responder certificate, and it expires before the
// OCSP response, use its expiration date as the end of the OCSP
// response's validity period.
if resp.Certificate != nil && resp.Certificate.NotAfter.Before(nextUpdate) {
nextUpdate = resp.Certificate.NotAfter
}
// start checking OCSP staple about halfway through validity period for good measure
refreshTime := resp.ThisUpdate.Add(nextUpdate.Sub(resp.ThisUpdate) / 2)
return time.Now().Before(refreshTime)
}
var ocspFolder = filepath.Join(caddy.AssetsPath(), "ocsp")