swiftonhpss/doc/markdown/auth_guide.md
Chetan Risbud 4b988ce3c5 Initial import of the swiftkerbauth
Imported code till commit f64a3354185f32928e2568d9ece4a52fa4746c05
Changed a code bit to import correct definitions.
kerbauth unit tests do run along with gluster-swift.
Install script does install swiftkerbauth.
import swiftkerbauth from http://review.gluster.org/swiftkrbauth.git

Change-Id: Ia89f2b77cc68df10dee2f41ce074f3381ac3c408
Signed-off-by: Chetan Risbud <crisbud@redhat.com>
Reviewed-on: http://review.gluster.org/6597
Reviewed-by: Prashanth Pai <ppai@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Luis Pabon <lpabon@redhat.com>
Tested-by: Luis Pabon <lpabon@redhat.com>
2014-01-21 10:09:44 -08:00

9.3 KiB

Authentication Services Start Guide

Contents

Keystone

The Standard Openstack authentication service

TBD

GSwauth

Overview

An easily deployable GlusterFS aware authentication service based on Swauth. GSwauth is a WSGI Middleware that uses Swift itself as a backing store to maintain its metadata.

This model has the benefit of having the metadata available to all proxy servers and saving the data to a GlusterFS volume. To protect the metadata, the GlusterFS volume should only be able to be mounted by the systems running the proxy servers.

Currently, gluster-swift has a strict mapping of one account to a GlusterFS volume. Future releases, this will be enhanced to support multiple accounts per GlusterFS volume.

See http://gholt.github.com/swauth/ for more information on Swauth.

Installing GSwauth

  1. GSwauth is installed by default with Gluster-Swift.

  2. Create and start the gsmetadata gluster volume

gluster volume create gsmetadata <hostname>:<brick>
gluster volume start gsmetadata
  1. run gluster-swift-gen-builders with all volumes that should be accessible by gluster-swift, including gsmetadata
gluster-swift-gen-builders gsmetadata <other volumes>
  1. Change your proxy-server.conf pipeline to have gswauth instead of tempauth:

    Was:

[pipeline:main]
pipeline = catch_errors cache tempauth proxy-server
Change To:
[pipeline:main]
pipeline = catch_errors cache gswauth proxy-server
  1. Add to your proxy-server.conf the section for the GSwauth WSGI filter:
[filter:gswauth]
use = egg:gluster_swift#gswauth
set log_name = gswauth
super_admin_key = gswauthkey
metadata_volume = gsmetadata
auth_type = sha1
auth_type_salt = swauthsalt
  1. Restart your proxy server swift-init proxy reload
Advanced options for GSwauth WSGI filter:
  • default-swift-cluster - default storage-URL for newly created accounts. When attempting to authenticate with a user for the first time, the return information is the access token and the storage-URL where data for the given account is stored.

  • token_life - set default token life. The default value is 86400 (24hrs).

  • max_token_life - The maximum token life. Users can set a token lifetime when requesting a new token with header x-auth-token-lifetime. If the passed in value is bigger than the max_token_life, then max_token_life will be used.

User Roles

There are only three user roles in GSwauth:

  • A regular user has basically no rights. He needs to be given both read/write priviliges to any container.
  • The admin user is a super-user at the account level. This user can create and delete users for the account they are members and have both write and read priviliges to all stored objects in that account.
  • The reseller admin user is a super-user at the cluster level. This user can create and delete accounts and users and has read/write priviliges to all accounts under that cluster.

GSwauth Tools

GSwauth provides cli tools to facilitate managing accounts and users. All tools have some options in common:

Common Options:

  • -A, --admin-url: The URL to the auth
    • Default: http://127.0.0.1:8080/auth/
  • -U, --admin-user: The user with admin rights to perform action
    • Default: .super_admin
  • -K, --admin-key: The key for the user with admin rights to perform action
    • no default value

gswauth-prep:

Prepare the gluster volume where gswauth will save its metadata.

gswauth-prep [option]

Example:

gswauth-prep -A http://10.20.30.40:8080/auth/ -K gswauthkey

gswauth-add-account:

Create account. Currently there's a requirement that an account must map to a gluster volume. The gluster volume must not exist at the time when the account is being created.

gswauth-add-account [option] <account_name>

Example:

gswauth-add-account -K gswauthkey <account_name>

gswauth-add-user:

Create user. If the provided account does not exist, it will be automatically created before creating the user. Use the -r flag to create a reseller admin user and the -a flag to create an admin user. To change the password or make the user an admin, just run the same command with the new information.

gswauth-add-user [option] <account_name> <user> <password>

Example:

gswauth-add-user -K gswauthkey -a test ana anapwd

Change password examples

Command to update password/key of regular user:

gswauth-add-user -U account1:user1 -K old_pass account1 user1 new_pass

Command to update password/key of account admin:

gswauth-add-user -U account1:admin -K old_pass -a account1 admin new_pass

Command to update password/key of reseller_admin:

gswauth-add-user -U account1:radmin -K old_pass -r account1 radmin new_pass

gswauth-delete-account:

Delete an account. An account cannot be deleted if it still contains users, an error will be returned.

gswauth-delete-account [option] <account_name>

Example:

gswauth-delete-account -K gswauthkey test

gswauth-delete-user:

Delete a user.

gswauth-delete-user [option] <account_name> <user>

Example:

gswauth-delete-user -K gswauthkey test ana

gswauth-set-account-service:

Sets a service URL for an account. Can only be set by a reseller admin. This command can be used to changed the default storage URL for a given account. All accounts have the same storage-URL default value, which comes from the default-swift-cluster option.

gswauth-set-account-service [options] <account> <service> <name> <value>

Example:

gswauth-set-account-service -K gswauthkey test storage local http://newhost:8080/v1/AUTH_test

gswauth-list:

List information about accounts and users

  • If [account] and [user] are omitted, a list of accounts will be output.
  • If [account] is included but not [user], a list of users within the account will be output.
  • If [account] and [user] are included, a list of groups the user belongs to will be ouptput.
  • If the [user] is .groups, the active groups for the account will be listed.

The default output format is tabular. -p changes the output to plain text. -j changes the output to JSON format. This will print all information about given account or user, including stored password

gswauth-list [options] [account] [user]

Example:

gswauth-list -K gswauthkey test ana
+----------+
|  Groups  |
+----------+
| test:ana |
|   test   |
|  .admin  |
+----------+

gswauth-cleanup-tokens:

Delete expired tokens. Users also have the option to provide the expected life of tokens, delete all tokens or all tokens for a given account.

Options:

  • -t, --token-life: The expected life of tokens, token objects modified more than this number of seconds ago will be checked for expiration (default: 86400).
  • --purge: Purge all tokens for a given account whether the tokens have expired or not.
  • --purge-all: Purges all tokens for all accounts and users whether the tokens have expired or not.
gswauth-cleanup-tokens [options]

Example:

gswauth-cleanup-tokens -K gswauthkey --purge test

Authenticating a user

Accessing data through swift is a two-step process, first users must authenticate with a username and password to get a token and the storage URL. Then, users can make the object requests to the storage URL with the given token.

It is important to remember that tokens expires, so the authentication process needs to be repeated every so often.

Authenticate a user with the curl command

curl -v -H 'X-Storage-User: test:ana' -H 'X-Storage-Pass: anapwd' -k http://localhost:8080/auth/v1.0
...
< X-Auth-Token: AUTH_tk7e68ef4698f14c7f95af07ab7b298610
< X-Storage-Url: http://127.0.0.1:8080/v1/AUTH_test
...

Now, the user can access the object-storage using the swift client with the given token and storage URL

bash-4.2$ swift --os-auth-token=AUTH_tk7e68ef4698f14c7f95af07ab7b298610 --os-storage-url=http://127.0.0.1:8080/v1/AUTH_test upload container1 README.md
README.md
bash-4.2$ 
bash-4.2$ swift --os-auth-token=AUTH_tk7e68ef4698f14c7f95af07ab7b298610 --os-storage-url=http://127.0.0.1:8080/v1/AUTH_test list container1
README.md

Swiftkerbauth

Kerberos authentication filter

Carsten Clasohm implemented a new authentication filter for swift that uses Kerberos tickets for single sign on authentication, and grants administrator permissions based on the users group membership in a directory service like Red Hat Enterprise Linux Identity Management or Microsoft Active Directory.