EMI Argus-EES test plan
This test plan is following the EMI SA2 template.
EES Test Plan
Service Description
The EES is a daemon that acts as an obligation transformer for requests to the PEPd. The EES takes SAML2-XACML2 authorization request messages as input. The EES takes the local site policy into account to transform the incoming request. The EES will start a new execution thread and apply the defined policy to the incoming request.
More information on the EES.
Yum Installation
To install the EES configure the YUM-based EPEL and EMI repositories. The IGTF distribution can also be done through a YUM-based repository, including the FetchCRL3 utility to refresh the CA CRLs. Note that the need for the IGTF distribution depends on the set of configured EES plugins.
The EES depends directly on:
- SAML2-XACML2-C-LIB
- (g)libc
EES configurations specify plugins which operate on the incoming request. The EES ships with a transformer plug-in, which is used to unpack the XACML obligations from the PDP response, which are merged into the PEPd request and sent to the EES by the EES obligation handler inside the PEPd.
Install the EES service by performing: yum install ees
This will install the package ees which will pull in the following packages:
- ees
- saml2-xacml2-c-lib
Install the EES obligation handler by performing: yum install ees-pepd-oh
This will install the package ees-pepd-oh which will pull in the following packages:
- argus-pep-server
- java
This is the first release of the EES service and the EES obligation handler in EMI. There is nothing to upgrade from.
System tests
Test setup EES
First we install and setup the system for testing. This means to prepare the system taking a clean CentOS 5 or Scientific Linux 5 machine as a baseline.
yum install ees
If there is no ees useraccount yet, create it
useradd -r ees
Start the ees service
/etc/init.d/ees start
The basic installation is now done. We can now test the basic functionality of the EES by using the following script. Note that it uses nc which can be installed using: yum install nc
#!/bin/bash # Configuration host=0.0.0.0 port=6217 MSG='<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <SOAP-ENV:Envelope xmlns:SOAP-ENV="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/envelope/" xmlns:SOAP-ENC="http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/soap/encoding/" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema" xmlns:dsig="http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#" xmlns:saml="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:assertion" xmlns:XACMLcontext="urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:2.0:context:schema:os" xmlns:XACMLassertion="urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:2.0:profile:saml2.0:v2:schema:assertion" xmlns:XACMLpolicy="urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:2.0:policy:schema:os" xmlns:xenc="http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmlenc#" xmlns:XACMLService="http://www.globus.org/security/XACMLAuthorization/bindings" xmlns:XACMLsamlp="urn:oasis:names:tc:xacml:2.0:profile:saml2.0:v2:schema:protocol" xmlns:samlp="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:protocol"> <SOAP-ENV:Body> <XACMLsamlp:XACMLAuthzDecisionQuery CombinePolicies="true" ReturnContext="true" InputContextOnly="false" IssueInstant="2010-03-25T14:55:01Z" Version="2.0" ID="ID-1804289383"> <saml:Issuer xsi:type="saml:NameIDType" Format="urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:X509SubjectName">NetCat</saml:Issuer> <XACMLcontext:Request xsi:type="XACMLcontext:RequestType"> <XACMLcontext:Action xsi:type="XACMLcontext:ActionType"> </XACMLcontext:Action> </XACMLcontext:Request> </XACMLsamlp:XACMLAuthzDecisionQuery> </SOAP-ENV:Body> </SOAP-ENV:Envelope> ' # Takes three args, a test string and a pattern to match to test_main() { output=`echo -n "$1" | nc -n -i1 $host $port | grep -w "$2"` if [ -z "$output" ] then echo "ERR" else echo "OK" fi } echo -en "Basic sanity test\t" test_main "$MSG" "200 OK" echo -en "Basic failure test\t" test_main "<TEST>" "500 Internal"
Expected result:
(testuser@ees.testmachine:~) ./ees_test.sh Basic sanity test OK Basic failure test OK
Test setup EES Obligation handler
EES preparation
The default /etc/ees.conf configuration file will contain the EES transformer plugin which is able to decode obligations from incoming XACML requests. Here is a ees.conf snippet which loads the transformer plug-in:
# plug-ins transformer = "ees_plugin_transformer.mod" good = "ees_dummy_good.mod" # policies transformer: transformer -> good
To test integration in the Argus PEPd, configure the EES OH in the pepd.ini configuration file.
PEPd preparation
Install the OH plug-in .jar file by running on the PEPd (argus-pep-server) service node:
yum install ees-pepd-oh
This will install it into /var/lib/argus/pepd/lib/ or equivalent PEPd library directory. Configure the PEPd to use the EES OH and specify the url of a running EES instance. Here is a pepd.ini snippet:
[SERVICE] ... obligationHandlers = EES_OH ... [EES_OH] ENDPOINT = http://ees_instance:6217/ parserClass = org.glite.authz.pep.obligation.eesmap.EESObligationHandlerConfigurationParser
Basic functionality tests (manual)
Configure gLExec to use the lcmaps-plugins-c-pep plug-in and the lcmaps-plugins-basic plug-in. Configure the C-PEP plug-in to connect to your running PEPd instance and configure the LCMAPS good plug-in to map to the 'nobody:nobody' account. The expected result is a account mapping by gLExec to the user 'nobody:nobody' account. This can be verified by running the following command and verifying activity by the PEPd and the EES by tailing their log files.
glexec /usr/bin/id -a
For the PEPd /var/log/argus/pepd/process.log should provide detailed information on the incoming authorization requests if the loglevel has been sufficiently raised in /etc/argus/pepd/logging.xml (loglevel 'ALL' is useful here).
The EES will log to syslog (usually /var/log/messages) and must provide basic information on the incoming authorization requests.
Performance tests
Using ab, the Apache benchmarking tool, the EES performance can be benchmarked. Create a request.xml containing a typical XACML request (similar to the excerpt shown in the automated functionality test script) and invoke ab.
ab -n 1000 -c 100 -p ~/request.xml http://ees_instance:6217/
You should see something like this (or better)
Requests per second: 272.75 [#/sec] (mean) Time per request: 366.632 [ms] (mean)
Regression tests
Not applicable