Change-Id: If421d82e4c3522a008054c31a2003e81d591bbd3
4.2 KiB
Identity API protection with role-based access control (RBAC)
Like most OpenStack projects, Identity supports the protection of its
APIs by defining policy rules based on an RBAC approach. Identity stores
a reference to a policy JSON file in the main Identity configuration
file, keystone.conf
.
Typically this file is named policy.json
, and contains the
rules for which roles have access to certain actions in defined
services.
Each Identity API v3 call has a line in the policy file that dictates which level of governance of access applies.
API_NAME: RULE_STATEMENT or MATCH_STATEMENT
Where:
RULE_STATEMENT
can contain RULE_STATEMENT
or MATCH_STATEMENT
.
MATCH_STATEMENT
is a set of identifiers that must match
between the token provided by the caller of the API and the parameters
or target entities of the API call in question. For example:
"identity:create_user": "role:admin and domain_id:%(user.domain_id)s"
Indicates that to create a user, you must have the admin role in your
token. The domain_id
in your token must match the
domain_id
in the user object that you are trying to create,
which implies this must be a domain-scoped token. In other words, you
must have the admin role on the domain in which you are creating the
user, and the token that you use must be scoped to that domain.
Each component of a match statement uses this format:
ATTRIB_FROM_TOKEN:CONSTANT or ATTRIB_RELATED_TO_API_CALL
The Identity service expects these attributes:
Attributes from token:
user_id
domain_id
project_id
The project_id
attribute requirement depends on the
scope, and the list of roles you have within that scope.
Attributes related to API call:
user.domain_id
- Any parameters passed into the API call
- Any filters specified in the query string
You reference attributes of objects passed with an object.attribute
syntax (such as, user.domain_id
). The target objects of an
API are also available using a target.object.attribute syntax. For
instance:
"identity:delete_user": "role:admin and domain_id:%(target.user.domain_id)s"
would ensure that Identity only deletes the user object in the same domain as the provided token.
Every target object has an id
and a name
available as target.OBJECT.id
and
target.OBJECT.name
. Identity retrieves other attributes
from the database, and the attributes vary between object types. The
Identity service filters out some database fields, such as user
passwords.
List of object attributes:
role:
target.role.id
target.role.name
user:
target.user.default_project_id
target.user.description
target.user.domain_id
target.user.enabled
target.user.id
target.user.name
group:
target.group.description
target.group.domain_id
target.group.id
target.group.name
domain:
target.domain.enabled
target.domain.id
target.domain.name
project:
target.project.description
target.project.domain_id
target.project.enabled
target.project.id
target.project.name
The default policy.json
file supplied provides a somewhat basic
example of API protection, and does not assume any particular use of
domains. Refer to policy.v3cloudsample.json
as an example of
multi-domain configuration installations where a cloud provider wants to
delegate administration of the contents of a domain to a particular
admin domain
. This example policy file also shows the use
of an admin_domain
to allow a cloud provider to enable
cloud administrators to have wider access across the APIs.
A clean installation could start with the standard policy file, to
allow creation of the admin_domain
with the first users
within it. You could then obtain the domain_id
of the admin
domain, paste the ID into a modified version of policy.v3cloudsample.json
,
and then enable it as the main policy file.