TrivialFix Change-Id: I644bc36e3bf804c7546034ec8788671bd7cd01e6
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Middleware Architecture
Abstract
The keystonemiddleware architecture supports a common authentication protocol in use between the OpenStack projects. By using keystone as a common authentication and authorization mechanism, various OpenStack projects can leverage the existing authentication and authorization systems in use.
In this document, we describe the architecture and responsibilities of the authentication middleware which acts as the internal API mechanism for OpenStack projects based on the WSGI standard.
This documentation describes the implementation in keystonemiddleware.auth_token
Specification Overview
'Authentication' is the process of determining that users are who they say they are. Typically, 'authentication protocols' such as HTTP Basic Auth, Digest Access, public key, token, etc, are used to verify a user's identity. In this document, we define an 'authentication component' as a software module that implements an authentication protocol for an OpenStack service. Bearer tokens are currently the most common authentication protocol used within OpenStack.
At a high level, an authentication middleware component is a proxy that intercepts HTTP calls from clients and populates HTTP headers in the request context for other WSGI middleware or applications to use. The general flow of the middleware processing is:
- clear any existing authorization headers to prevent forgery
- collect the token from the existing HTTP request headers
- validate the token
- if valid, populate additional headers representing the identity that has been authenticated and authorized
- if invalid, or no token present, reject the request (HTTPUnauthorized) or pass along a header indicating the request is unauthorized (configurable in the middleware)
- if the keystone service is unavailable to validate the token, reject the request with HTTPServiceUnavailable.
Authentication Component
The following shows the default behavior of an Authentication Component deployed in front of an OpenStack service.
The Authentication Component, or middleware, will reject any unauthenticated requests, only allowing authenticated requests through to the OpenStack service.
Authentication Component (Delegated Mode)
The Authentication Component may be configured to operate in a 'delegated mode'. In this mode, the decision to reject or accept an unauthenticated client is delegated to the OpenStack service.
Here, requests are forwarded to the OpenStack service with an identity status message that indicates whether the identity of the client has been confirmed or is indeterminate. The consuming OpenStack service decides whether or not a rejection message should be sent to the client.
Deployment Strategy
The middleware is intended to be used inline with OpenStack WSGI components, based on the Oslo WSGI middleware class. It is typically deployed as a configuration element in a paste configuration pipeline of other middleware components, with the pipeline terminating in the service application. The middleware conforms to the python WSGI standard [PEP-333]. In initializing the middleware, a configuration item (which acts like a python dictionary) is passed to the middleware with relevant configuration options.
Configuration
The middleware is configured within the config file of the main application as a WSGI component. Example for the auth_token middleware:
[app:myService]
paste.app_factory = myService:app_factory
[pipeline:main]
pipeline = authtoken myService
[filter:authtoken]
paste.filter_factory = keystonemiddleware.auth_token:filter_factory
_static/keystonemiddleware.conf.sample
If the auth_plugin
configuration option is set, you may
need to refer to the Authentication Plugins
<http://docs.openstack.org/developer/
python-keystoneclient/authentication-plugins.html> document for
how to configure the auth_token middleware.
For services which have a separate paste-deploy ini file, auth_token
middleware can be alternatively configured in [keystone_authtoken]
section in the main config file. For example in nova, all middleware
parameters can be removed from api-paste.ini
:
[filter:authtoken]
paste.filter_factory = keystonemiddleware.auth_token:filter_factory
and set in nova.conf
:
[DEFAULT]
auth_strategy=keystone
[keystone_authtoken]
auth_host = 127.0.0.1
auth_port = 35357
auth_protocol = http
admin_user = admin
admin_password = SuperSekretPassword
admin_tenant_name = service
# Any of the options that could be set in api-paste.ini can be set here.
Note
Middleware parameters in paste config take priority and must be removed to use options in the [keystone_authtoken] section.
The following is an example of a service's auth_token middleware
configuration when auth_plugin
is set to
password
.
[keystone_authtoken]
auth_plugin = password
project_domain_name = Default
project_name = service
user_domain_name = Default
username = nova
password = ServicePassword
auth_url = http://127.0.0.1:35357
# Any of the options that could be set in api-paste.ini can be set here.
If the service doesn't use the global oslo.config object (CONF), then the oslo config project name can be set it in paste config and keystonemiddleware will load the project configuration itself. Optionally the location of the configuration file can be set if oslo.config is not able to discover it.
[filter:authtoken]
paste.filter_factory = keystonemiddleware.auth_token:filter_factory
oslo_config_project = nova
# oslo_config_file = /not_discoverable_location/nova.conf
Improving response time
Validating the identity of every client on every request can impact performance for both the OpenStack service and the identity service. As a result, keystonemiddleware is configurable to cache authentication responses from the identity service in-memory. It is worth noting that tokens invalidated after they've been stored in the cache may continue to work. Deployments using memcached may use the following keystonemiddleware configuration options instead of an in-memory cache.
memcached_servers
: (optional) if defined, the memcached server(s) to use for caching. It will be ignored if Swift MemcacheRing is used instead.token_cache_time
: (optional, default 300 seconds) Set to -1 to disable caching completely.
When deploying auth_token middleware with Swift, user may elect to
use Swift MemcacheRing instead of the local Keystone memcache. The Swift
MemcacheRing object is passed in from the request environment and it
defaults to 'swift.cache'. However it could be different, depending on
deployment. To use Swift MemcacheRing, you must provide the
cache
option.
cache
: (optional) if defined, the environment key where the Swift MemcacheRing object is stored.
Memcached dependencies
In order to use memcached it is necessary to install the python-memcached library. If data stored in memcached will need to be encrypted it is also necessary to install the pycrypto library. These libs are not listed in the requirements.txt file.
Memcached and System Time
When using memcached with
auth_token
middleware, ensure that the system time of
memcached hosts is set to UTC. Memcached uses the host's system time in
determining whether a key has expired, whereas Keystone sets key expiry
in UTC. The timezone used by Keystone and memcached must match if key
expiry is to behave as expected.
Memcache Protection
When using memcached, tokens and
authentication responses are stored in the cache as raw data. In the
event the cache is compromised, all token and authentication responses
will be readable. To mitigate this risk, auth_token
middleware provides an option to authenticate and optionally encrypt the
token data stored in the cache.
memcache_security_strategy
: (optional) if defined, indicate whether token data should be authenticated or authenticated and encrypted. Acceptable values areMAC
orENCRYPT
. IfMAC
, token data is authenticated (with HMAC) in the cache. IfENCRYPT
, token data is encrypted and authenticated in the cache. If the value is not one of these options or empty,auth_token
will raise an exception on initialization.memcache_secret_key
: (optional, mandatory ifmemcache_security_strategy
is defined) this string is used for key derivation. Ifmemcache_security_strategy
is defined andmemcache_secret_key
is absent,auth_token
will raise an exception on initialization.
Exchanging User Information
The middleware expects to find a token representing the user with the
header X-Auth-Token
or X-Storage-Token
. X-Storage-Token is supported for swift/cloud
files and for legacy Rackspace use. If the token isn't present and the
middleware is configured to not delegate auth responsibility, it will
respond to the HTTP request with HTTPUnauthorized, returning the header
WWW-Authenticate
with the value Keystone uri='...' to indicate where to request
a token. The auth_uri returned is configured with the middleware.
The authentication middleware extends the HTTP request with the
header X-Identity-Status
. If a request is successfully
authenticated, the value is set to Confirmed. If the middleware is delegating the
auth decision to the service, then the status is set to Invalid if the auth request was
unsuccessful.
An X-Service-Token
header may also be included with a
request. If present, and the value of X-Auth-Token
or
X-Storage-Token
has not caused the request to be denied,
then the middleware will attempt to validate the value of
X-Service-Token
. If valid, the authentication middleware
extends the HTTP request with the header
X-Service-Identity-Status
having value Confirmed and also extends the request with
additional headers representing the identity authenticated and
authorised by the token.
If X-Service-Token
is present and its value is invalid
and the delay_auth_decision
option is True then the value
of X-Service-Identity-Status
is set to Invalid and no further headers are added.
Otherwise if X-Service-Token
is present and its value is
invalid then the middleware will respond to the HTTP request with
HTTPUnauthorized, regardless of the validity of the
X-Auth-Token
or X-Storage-Token
values.
Extended the request with additional User Information
:pykeystonemiddleware.auth_token.AuthProtocol
extends
the request with additional information if the user has been
authenticated. See the "What we add to the request for use by the
OpenStack service" section in :pykeystonemiddleware.auth_token
for the list of fields
set by the auth_token middleware.
References
- PEP-333
-
pep0333 Phillip J Eby. 'Python Web Server Gateway Interface v1.0.'' http://www.python.org/dev/peps/pep-0333/.