This change ensures keyring tests that utilize the real OS keyring use
credentials that are isolated by process ID so that parallel test processes
do not access the same credentials.
https://github.com/coder/internal/issues/1192
This fixes a regression that caused the VS code extension to be unable
to authenticate after making keyring usage on by default. This is
because the VS code extension assumes the CLI will always use the
session token stored on disk, specifically in the directory specified by
--global-config.
This fix makes keyring usage enabled when the --global-config directory
is not set. This is a bit wonky but necessary to allow the extension to
continue working without modification and without backwards compat
concerns. In the future we should modify these extensions to either
access the credential in the keyring (like Coder Desktop) or some other
approach that doesn't rely on the session token being stored on disk.
Tests:
`coder login dev.coder.com` -> token stored in keyring
`coder login --global-config=/tmp/ dev.coder.com` -> token stored in
`/tmp/session`
Make keyring usage for session token storage on by default for supported
platforms (Windows and macOS), with the ability to opt-out via
--use-keyring=false.
This change will be a breaking change for any users depending on the
session token being stored on disk, though users can restore file usage
via the flag above.
This change will also require CLI users to authenticate after updating.
This change implements optional secure storage of the CLI token using the operating system
keyring for Windows, with groundwork laid for macOS in a future change. Previously, the
Coder CLI stored authentication tokens in plaintext configuration files, which posed a
security risk because users' tokens are stored unencrypted and can be easily accessed by
other processes or users with file system access.
The keyring is opt-in to preserve compatibility with applications (like the JetBrains
Toolbox plugin, VS code plugin, etc). Users can opt into keyring use with a new
`--use-keyring` flag.
The secure storage is platform dependent. Windows Credential Manager API is used on Windows.
The session token continues to be stored in plain text on macOS and Linux. macOS is omitted
for now while we figure out the best path forward for compatibility with apps like Coder Desktop.
https://www.notion.so/coderhq/CLI-Session-Token-in-OS-Keyring-293d579be592808b8b7fd235304e50d5https://github.com/coder/coder/issues/19403