6f230c7ea0
Fixed naming conventions of Keystone, Swift and proxy servers in the docs. Change-Id: I294afd8d7bffa8c1fc299f5812effacb9ad08910
333 lines
15 KiB
ReStructuredText
333 lines
15 KiB
ReStructuredText
===============
|
|
The Auth System
|
|
===============
|
|
|
|
--------
|
|
TempAuth
|
|
--------
|
|
|
|
The auth system for Swift is loosely based on the auth system from the existing
|
|
Rackspace architecture -- actually from a few existing auth systems -- and is
|
|
therefore a bit disjointed. The distilled points about it are:
|
|
|
|
* The authentication/authorization part can be an external system or a
|
|
subsystem run within Swift as WSGI middleware
|
|
* The user of Swift passes in an auth token with each request
|
|
* Swift validates each token with the external auth system or auth subsystem
|
|
and caches the result
|
|
* The token does not change from request to request, but does expire
|
|
|
|
The token can be passed into Swift using the X-Auth-Token or the
|
|
X-Storage-Token header. Both have the same format: just a simple string
|
|
representing the token. Some auth systems use UUID tokens, some an MD5 hash of
|
|
something unique, some use "something else" but the salient point is that the
|
|
token is a string which can be sent as-is back to the auth system for
|
|
validation.
|
|
|
|
Swift will make calls to the auth system, giving the auth token to be
|
|
validated. For a valid token, the auth system responds with an overall
|
|
expiration in seconds from now. Swift will cache the token up to the expiration
|
|
time.
|
|
|
|
The included TempAuth also has the concept of admin and non-admin users
|
|
within an account. Admin users can do anything within the account.
|
|
Non-admin users can only perform operations per container based on the
|
|
container's X-Container-Read and X-Container-Write ACLs. Container ACLs
|
|
use the "V1" ACL syntax, which looks like this:
|
|
``name1, name2, .r:referrer1.com, .r:-bad.referrer1.com, .rlistings``
|
|
For more information on ACLs, see :mod:`swift.common.middleware.acl`.
|
|
|
|
Additionally, if the auth system sets the request environ's swift_owner key to
|
|
True, the proxy will return additional header information in some requests,
|
|
such as the X-Container-Sync-Key for a container GET or HEAD.
|
|
|
|
In addition to container ACLs, TempAuth allows account-level ACLs. Any auth
|
|
system may use the special header ``X-Account-Access-Control`` to specify
|
|
account-level ACLs in a format specific to that auth system. (Following the
|
|
TempAuth format is strongly recommended.) These headers are visible and
|
|
settable only by account owners (those for whom ``swift_owner`` is true).
|
|
Behavior of account ACLs is auth-system-dependent. In the case of TempAuth,
|
|
if an authenticated user has membership in a group which is listed in the
|
|
ACL, then the user is allowed the access level of that ACL.
|
|
|
|
Account ACLs use the "V2" ACL syntax, which is a JSON dictionary with keys
|
|
named "admin", "read-write", and "read-only". (Note the case sensitivity.)
|
|
An example value for the ``X-Account-Access-Control`` header looks like this:
|
|
``{"admin":["a","b"],"read-only":["c"]}`` Keys may be absent (as shown).
|
|
The recommended way to generate ACL strings is as follows::
|
|
|
|
from swift.common.middleware.acl import format_acl
|
|
acl_data = { 'admin': ['alice'], 'read-write': ['bob', 'carol'] }
|
|
acl_string = format_acl(version=2, acl_dict=acl_data)
|
|
|
|
Using the :func:`format_acl` method will ensure
|
|
that JSON is encoded as ASCII (using e.g. '\u1234' for Unicode). While
|
|
it's permissible to manually send ``curl`` commands containing
|
|
``X-Account-Access-Control`` headers, you should exercise caution when
|
|
doing so, due to the potential for human error.
|
|
|
|
Within the JSON dictionary stored in ``X-Account-Access-Control``, the keys
|
|
have the following meanings:
|
|
|
|
============ ==============================================================
|
|
Access Level Description
|
|
============ ==============================================================
|
|
read-only These identities can read *everything* (except privileged
|
|
headers) in the account. Specifically, a user with read-only
|
|
account access can get a list of containers in the account,
|
|
list the contents of any container, retrieve any object, and
|
|
see the (non-privileged) headers of the account, any
|
|
container, or any object.
|
|
read-write These identities can read or write (or create) any container.
|
|
A user with read-write account access can create new
|
|
containers, set any unprivileged container headers, overwrite
|
|
objects, delete containers, etc. A read-write user can NOT
|
|
set account headers (or perform any PUT/POST/DELETE requests
|
|
on the account).
|
|
admin These identities have "swift_owner" privileges. A user with
|
|
admin account access can do anything the account owner can,
|
|
including setting account headers and any privileged headers
|
|
-- and thus granting read-only, read-write, or admin access
|
|
to other users.
|
|
============ ==============================================================
|
|
|
|
|
|
For more details, see :mod:`swift.common.middleware.tempauth`. For details
|
|
on the ACL format, see :mod:`swift.common.middleware.acl`.
|
|
|
|
Users with the special group ``.reseller_admin`` can operate on any account.
|
|
For an example usage please see :mod:`swift.common.middleware.tempauth`.
|
|
If a request is coming from a reseller the auth system sets the request environ
|
|
reseller_request to True. This can be used by other middlewares.
|
|
|
|
TempAuth will now allow OPTIONS requests to go through without a token.
|
|
|
|
The user starts a session by sending a REST request to the auth system to
|
|
receive the auth token and a URL to the Swift system.
|
|
|
|
-------------
|
|
Keystone Auth
|
|
-------------
|
|
|
|
Swift is able to authenticate against OpenStack Keystone_ via the
|
|
:ref:`keystoneauth` middleware.
|
|
|
|
In order to use the ``keystoneauth`` middleware the ``auth_token``
|
|
middleware from KeystoneMiddleware_ will need to be configured.
|
|
|
|
The ``authtoken`` middleware performs the authentication token
|
|
validation and retrieves actual user authentication information. It
|
|
can be found in the KeystoneMiddleware_ distribution.
|
|
|
|
The :ref:`keystoneauth` middleware performs authorization and mapping the
|
|
Keystone roles to Swift's ACLs.
|
|
|
|
.. _KeystoneMiddleware: http://docs.openstack.org/developer/keystonemiddleware/
|
|
.. _Keystone: http://docs.openstack.org/developer/keystone/
|
|
|
|
Configuring Swift to use Keystone
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
Configuring Swift to use Keystone_
|
|
is relatively straight forward. The first
|
|
step is to ensure that you have the ``auth_token`` middleware installed. It can
|
|
either be dropped in your python path or installed via the KeystoneMiddleware_
|
|
package.
|
|
|
|
You need at first make sure you have a service endpoint of type
|
|
``object-store`` in Keystone pointing to your Swift proxy. For example
|
|
having this in your ``/etc/keystone/default_catalog.templates`` ::
|
|
|
|
catalog.RegionOne.object_store.name = Swift Service
|
|
catalog.RegionOne.object_store.publicURL = http://swiftproxy:8080/v1/AUTH_$(tenant_id)s
|
|
catalog.RegionOne.object_store.adminURL = http://swiftproxy:8080/
|
|
catalog.RegionOne.object_store.internalURL = http://swiftproxy:8080/v1/AUTH_$(tenant_id)s
|
|
|
|
On your Swift proxy server you will want to adjust your main pipeline
|
|
and add auth_token and keystoneauth in your
|
|
``/etc/swift/proxy-server.conf`` like this ::
|
|
|
|
[pipeline:main]
|
|
pipeline = [....] authtoken keystoneauth proxy-logging proxy-server
|
|
|
|
add the configuration for the authtoken middleware::
|
|
|
|
[filter:authtoken]
|
|
paste.filter_factory = keystonemiddleware.auth_token:filter_factory
|
|
auth_uri = http://keystonehost:5000/
|
|
auth_url = http://keystonehost:35357/
|
|
auth_plugin = password
|
|
project_domain_id = default
|
|
user_domain_id = default
|
|
project_name = service
|
|
username = swift
|
|
password = password
|
|
cache = swift.cache
|
|
include_service_catalog = False
|
|
delay_auth_decision = True
|
|
|
|
The actual values for these variables will need to be set depending on
|
|
your situation, but in short:
|
|
|
|
* ``auth_uri`` should point to a Keystone service from which users may
|
|
retrieve tokens. This value is used in the `WWW-Authenticate` header that
|
|
auth_token sends with any denial response.
|
|
* ``auth_url`` points to the Keystone Admin service. This information is
|
|
used by the middleware to actually query Keystone about the validity of the
|
|
authentication tokens. It is not necessary to append any Keystone API version
|
|
number to this URI.
|
|
* The auth credentials (``project_domain_id``, ``user_domain_id``,
|
|
``username``, ``project_name``, ``password``) will be used to retrieve an
|
|
admin token. That token will be used to authorize user tokens behind the
|
|
scenes.
|
|
* ``cache`` is set to ``swift.cache``. This means that the middleware
|
|
will get the Swift memcache from the request environment.
|
|
* ``include_service_catalog`` defaults to ``True`` if not set. This means
|
|
that when validating a token, the service catalog is retrieved
|
|
and stored in the ``X-Service-Catalog`` header. Since Swift does not
|
|
use the ``X-Service-Catalog`` header, there is no point in getting
|
|
the service catalog. We recommend you set ``include_service_catalog``
|
|
to ``False``.
|
|
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
The authtoken config variable ``delay_auth_decision`` must be set to
|
|
``True``. The default is ``False``, but that breaks public access,
|
|
:ref:`staticweb`, :ref:`formpost`, :ref:`tempurl`, and authenticated
|
|
capabilities requests (using :ref:`discoverability`).
|
|
|
|
and you can finally add the keystoneauth configuration. Here is a simple
|
|
configuration::
|
|
|
|
[filter:keystoneauth]
|
|
use = egg:swift#keystoneauth
|
|
operator_roles = admin, swiftoperator
|
|
|
|
Use an appropriate list of roles in operator_roles. For example, in
|
|
some systems, the role ``_member_`` or ``Member`` is used to indicate
|
|
that the user is allowed to operate on project resources.
|
|
|
|
OpenStack Service Using Composite Tokens
|
|
----------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
Some OpenStack services such as Cinder and Glance may use
|
|
a "service account". In this mode, you configure a separate account where
|
|
the service stores project data that it manages. This account is not used
|
|
directly by the end-user. Instead, all access is done through the service.
|
|
|
|
To access the "service" account, the service must present two tokens: one from
|
|
the end-user and another from its own service user. Only when both tokens are
|
|
present can the account be accessed. This section describes how to set the
|
|
configuration options to correctly control access to both the "normal" and
|
|
"service" accounts.
|
|
|
|
In this example, end users use the ``AUTH_`` prefix in account names,
|
|
whereas services use the ``SERVICE_`` prefix::
|
|
|
|
[filter:keystoneauth]
|
|
use = egg:swift#keystoneauth
|
|
reseller_prefix = AUTH, SERVICE
|
|
operator_roles = admin, swiftoperator
|
|
SERVICE_service_roles = service
|
|
|
|
The actual values for these variable will need to be set depending on your
|
|
situation as follows:
|
|
|
|
* The first item in the reseller_prefix list must match Keystone's endpoint
|
|
(see ``/etc/keystone/default_catalog.templates`` above). Normally
|
|
this is ``AUTH``.
|
|
* The second item in the reseller_prefix list is the prefix used by the
|
|
OpenStack services(s). You must configure this value (``SERVICE`` in the
|
|
example) with whatever the other OpenStack service(s) use.
|
|
* Set the operator_roles option to contain a role or roles that end-user's
|
|
have on project's they use.
|
|
* Set the SERVICE_service_roles value to a role or roles that only the
|
|
OpenStack service user has. Do not use a role that is assigned to
|
|
"normal" end users. In this example, the role ``service`` is used.
|
|
The service user is granted this role to a *single* project only. You do
|
|
not need to make the service user a member of every project.
|
|
|
|
This configuration works as follows:
|
|
|
|
* The end-user presents a user token to an OpenStack service. The service
|
|
then makes a Swift request to the account with the ``SERVICE`` prefix.
|
|
* The service forwards the original user token with the request. It also
|
|
adds it's own service token.
|
|
* Swift validates both tokens. When validated, the user token gives the
|
|
``admin`` or ``swiftoperator`` role(s). When validated, the service token
|
|
gives the ``service`` role.
|
|
* Swift interprets the above configuration as follows:
|
|
|
|
* Did the user token provide one of the roles listed in operator_roles?
|
|
* Did the service token have the ``service`` role as described by the
|
|
``SERVICE_service_roles`` options.
|
|
|
|
* If both conditions are met, the request is granted. Otherwise, Swift
|
|
rejects the request.
|
|
|
|
In the above example, all services share the same account. You can separate
|
|
each service into its own account. For example, the following provides a
|
|
dedicated account for each of the Glance and Cinder services. In addition,
|
|
you must assign the ``glance_service`` and ``cinder_service`` to the
|
|
appropriate service users::
|
|
|
|
[filter:keystoneauth]
|
|
use = egg:swift#keystoneauth
|
|
reseller_prefix = AUTH, IMAGE, VOLUME
|
|
operator_roles = admin, swiftoperator
|
|
IMAGE_service_roles = glance_service
|
|
VOLUME_service_roles = cinder_service
|
|
|
|
|
|
Access control using keystoneauth
|
|
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
|
|
|
|
By default the only users able to perform operations (e.g. create a container)
|
|
on an account are those having a Keystone role for the corresponding Keystone
|
|
project that matches one of the roles specified in the ``operator_roles``
|
|
option.
|
|
|
|
Users who have one of the ``operator_roles`` will be able to set container ACLs
|
|
to grant other users permission to read and/or write objects in specific
|
|
containers, using ``X-Container-Read`` and ``X-Container-Write`` headers
|
|
respectively. In addition to the ACL formats described
|
|
:mod:`here <swift.common.middleware.acl>`, keystoneauth supports ACLs using the
|
|
format::
|
|
|
|
other_project_id:other_user_id.
|
|
|
|
where ``other_project_id`` is the UUID of a Keystone project and
|
|
``other_user_id`` is the UUID of a Keystone user. This will allow the other
|
|
user to access a container provided their token is scoped on the other
|
|
project. Both ``other_project_id`` and ``other_user_id`` may be replaced with
|
|
the wildcard character ``*`` which will match any project or user respectively.
|
|
|
|
Be sure to use Keystone UUIDs rather than names in container ACLs.
|
|
|
|
.. note::
|
|
|
|
For backwards compatibility, keystoneauth will by default grant container
|
|
ACLs expressed as ``other_project_name:other_user_name`` (i.e. using
|
|
Keystone names rather than UUIDs) in the special case when both the other
|
|
project and the other user are in Keystone's default domain and the project
|
|
being accessed is also in the default domain.
|
|
|
|
For further information see :ref:`keystoneauth`
|
|
|
|
Users with the Keystone role defined in ``reseller_admin_role``
|
|
(``ResellerAdmin`` by default) can operate on any account. The auth system
|
|
sets the request environ reseller_request to True if a request is coming
|
|
from a user with this role. This can be used by other middlewares.
|
|
|
|
--------------
|
|
Extending Auth
|
|
--------------
|
|
|
|
TempAuth is written as wsgi middleware, so implementing your own auth is as
|
|
easy as writing new wsgi middleware, and plugging it in to the proxy server.
|
|
The Keystone project and the Swauth project are examples of additional auth
|
|
services.
|
|
|
|
Also, see :doc:`development_auth`.
|