nixpkgs/nixos/tests/nginx-proxyprotocol/default.nix

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nixos/nginx: first-class PROXY protocol support PROXY protocol is a convenient way to carry information about the originating address/port of a TCP connection across multiple layers of proxies/NAT, etc. Currently, it is possible to make use of it in NGINX's NixOS module, but is painful when we want to enable it "globally". Technically, this is achieved by reworking the defaultListen options and the objective is to have a coherent way to specify default listeners in the current API design. See `mkDefaultListenVhost` and `defaultListen` for the details. It adds a safeguard against running a NGINX with no HTTP listeners (e.g. only PROXY listeners) while asking for ACME certificates over HTTP-01. An interesting usecase of PROXY protocol is to enable seamless IPv4 to IPv6 proxy with origin IPv4 address for IPv6-only NGINX servers, it is demonstrated how to achieve this in the tests, using sniproxy. Finally, the tests covers: - NGINX `defaultListen` mechanisms are not broken by these changes; - NGINX PROXY protocol listeners are working in a final usecase (sniproxy); - uses snakeoil TLS certs from ACME setup with wildcard certificates; In the future, it is desirable to spoof-attack NGINX in this scenario to ascertain that `set_real_ip_from` and all the layers are working as intended and preventing any user from setting their origin IP address to any arbitrary, opening up the NixOS module to bad™ vulnerabilities. For now, it is quite hard to achieve while being minimalistic about the tests dependencies.
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let
certs = import ./snakeoil-certs.nix;
in
import ../make-test-python.nix ({ pkgs, ... }: {
name = "nginx-proxyprotocol";
meta = {
maintainers = with pkgs.lib.maintainers; [ raitobezarius ];
};
nixos/nginx: first-class PROXY protocol support PROXY protocol is a convenient way to carry information about the originating address/port of a TCP connection across multiple layers of proxies/NAT, etc. Currently, it is possible to make use of it in NGINX's NixOS module, but is painful when we want to enable it "globally". Technically, this is achieved by reworking the defaultListen options and the objective is to have a coherent way to specify default listeners in the current API design. See `mkDefaultListenVhost` and `defaultListen` for the details. It adds a safeguard against running a NGINX with no HTTP listeners (e.g. only PROXY listeners) while asking for ACME certificates over HTTP-01. An interesting usecase of PROXY protocol is to enable seamless IPv4 to IPv6 proxy with origin IPv4 address for IPv6-only NGINX servers, it is demonstrated how to achieve this in the tests, using sniproxy. Finally, the tests covers: - NGINX `defaultListen` mechanisms are not broken by these changes; - NGINX PROXY protocol listeners are working in a final usecase (sniproxy); - uses snakeoil TLS certs from ACME setup with wildcard certificates; In the future, it is desirable to spoof-attack NGINX in this scenario to ascertain that `set_real_ip_from` and all the layers are working as intended and preventing any user from setting their origin IP address to any arbitrary, opening up the NixOS module to bad™ vulnerabilities. For now, it is quite hard to achieve while being minimalistic about the tests dependencies.
2023-03-05 17:13:27 +00:00
nodes = {
webserver = { pkgs, lib, ... }: {
environment.systemPackages = [ pkgs.netcat ];
security.pki.certificateFiles = [
certs.ca.cert
];
networking.extraHosts = ''
127.0.0.5 proxy.test.nix
127.0.0.5 noproxy.test.nix
127.0.0.3 direct-nossl.test.nix
127.0.0.4 unsecure-nossl.test.nix
127.0.0.2 direct-noproxy.test.nix
127.0.0.1 direct-proxy.test.nix
'';
services.nginx = {
enable = true;
defaultListen = [
{ addr = "127.0.0.1"; proxyProtocol = true; ssl = true; }
{ addr = "127.0.0.2"; }
{ addr = "127.0.0.3"; ssl = false; }
{ addr = "127.0.0.4"; ssl = false; proxyProtocol = true; }
];
commonHttpConfig = ''
log_format pcombined '(proxy_protocol=$proxy_protocol_addr) - (remote_addr=$remote_addr) - (realip=$realip_remote_addr) - (upstream=) - (remote_user=$remote_user) [$time_local] '
'"$request" $status $body_bytes_sent '
'"$http_referer" "$http_user_agent"';
access_log /var/log/nginx/access.log pcombined;
error_log /var/log/nginx/error.log;
'';
virtualHosts =
let
commonConfig = {
locations."/".return = "200 '$remote_addr'";
extraConfig = ''
set_real_ip_from 127.0.0.5/32;
real_ip_header proxy_protocol;
'';
};
in
{
"*.test.nix" = commonConfig // {
sslCertificate = certs."*.test.nix".cert;
sslCertificateKey = certs."*.test.nix".key;
forceSSL = true;
};
"direct-nossl.test.nix" = commonConfig;
"unsecure-nossl.test.nix" = commonConfig // {
extraConfig = ''
real_ip_header proxy_protocol;
'';
};
};
};
services.sniproxy = {
enable = true;
config = ''
error_log {
syslog daemon
}
access_log {
syslog daemon
}
listener 127.0.0.5:443 {
protocol tls
source 127.0.0.5
}
table {
^proxy\.test\.nix$ 127.0.0.1 proxy_protocol
^noproxy\.test\.nix$ 127.0.0.2
}
'';
};
};
};
testScript = ''
def check_origin_ip(src_ip: str, dst_url: str, failure: bool = False, proxy_protocol: bool = False, expected_ip: str | None = None):
check = webserver.fail if failure else webserver.succeed
if expected_ip is None:
expected_ip = src_ip
return check(f"curl {'--haproxy-protocol' if proxy_protocol else '''} --interface {src_ip} --fail -L {dst_url} | grep '{expected_ip}'")
webserver.wait_for_unit("nginx")
webserver.wait_for_unit("sniproxy")
# This should be closed by virtue of ssl = true;
webserver.wait_for_closed_port(80, "127.0.0.1")
# This should be open by virtue of no explicit ssl
webserver.wait_for_open_port(80, "127.0.0.2")
# This should be open by virtue of ssl = true;
webserver.wait_for_open_port(443, "127.0.0.1")
# This should be open by virtue of no explicit ssl
webserver.wait_for_open_port(443, "127.0.0.2")
# This should be open by sniproxy
webserver.wait_for_open_port(443, "127.0.0.5")
# This should be closed by sniproxy
webserver.wait_for_closed_port(80, "127.0.0.5")
# Sanity checks for the NGINX module
# direct-HTTP connection to NGINX without TLS, this checks that ssl = false; works well.
check_origin_ip("127.0.0.10", "http://direct-nossl.test.nix/")
# webserver.execute("openssl s_client -showcerts -connect direct-noproxy.test.nix:443")
# direct-HTTP connection to NGINX with TLS
check_origin_ip("127.0.0.10", "http://direct-noproxy.test.nix/")
check_origin_ip("127.0.0.10", "https://direct-noproxy.test.nix/")
# Well, sniproxy is not listening on 80 and cannot redirect
check_origin_ip("127.0.0.10", "http://proxy.test.nix/", failure=True)
check_origin_ip("127.0.0.10", "http://noproxy.test.nix/", failure=True)
# Actual PROXY protocol related tests
# Connecting through sniproxy should passthrough the originating IP address.
check_origin_ip("127.0.0.10", "https://proxy.test.nix/")
# Connecting through sniproxy to a non-PROXY protocol enabled listener should not pass the originating IP address.
check_origin_ip("127.0.0.10", "https://noproxy.test.nix/", expected_ip="127.0.0.5")
# Attack tests against spoofing
# Let's try to spoof our IP address by connecting direct-y to the PROXY protocol listener.
# FIXME(RaitoBezarius): rewrite it using Python + (Scapy|something else) as this is too much broken unfortunately.
# Or wait for upstream curl patch.
# def generate_attacker_request(original_ip: str, target_ip: str, dst_url: str):
# return f"""PROXY TCP4 {original_ip} {target_ip} 80 80
# GET / HTTP/1.1
# Host: {dst_url}
# """
# def spoof(original_ip: str, target_ip: str, dst_url: str, tls: bool = False, expect_failure: bool = True):
# method = webserver.fail if expect_failure else webserver.succeed
# port = 443 if tls else 80
# print(webserver.execute(f"cat <<EOF | nc {target_ip} {port}\n{generate_attacker_request(original_ip, target_ip, dst_url)}\nEOF"))
# return method(f"cat <<EOF | nc {target_ip} {port} | grep {original_ip}\n{generate_attacker_request(original_ip, target_ip, dst_url)}\nEOF")
# check_origin_ip("127.0.0.10", "http://unsecure-nossl.test.nix", proxy_protocol=True)
# spoof("1.1.1.1", "127.0.0.4", "direct-nossl.test.nix")
# spoof("1.1.1.1", "127.0.0.4", "unsecure-nossl.test.nix", expect_failure=False)
'';
})