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using-client-keystone-auth.md

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Table of Contents generated with DocToc

Keystone client-go credential plugin usage

Overview

k8s.io/client-go and tools using it such as kubectl and kubelet are able to execute an external command to receive user credentials.

This feature allows client side integrations with authentication using Keystone API, that is not natively supported by k8s.io/client-go. The plugin implements the protocol specific logic, then returns opaque credentials to use. This credential plugin use cases require a server side component with support for the webhook token authenticator to interpret the credential format produced by the client plugin. The webhook authenticator is provided by k8s-keystone-auth binary

Example use case

In a hypothetical use case, an organization would run an external service that exchanges OpenStack Keystone credentials for user specific, signed tokens. The service would also be capable of responding to webhook token authenticator requests to validate the tokens. Users would be required to install a credential plugin on their workstation.

To authenticate against the API:

  • The user issues a kubectl command.
  • Credential plugin prompts the user for Keystone credentials, exchanges credentials with external service for a token.
  • Credential plugin returns token to client-go, which uses it as a bearer token against the API server.
  • API server uses the webhook token authenticator to submit the token to the Keystone service.
  • Keystone service verifies the token and returns the user's username and groups.

Configuration

The credential plugin is configured through kubectl config files as part of the user fields.

apiVersion: v1
kind: Config
users:
- name: my-user
  user:
    exec:
      # Command to execute. Required.
      command: "client-keystone-auth"

      # API version to use when encoding and decoding the ExecCredentials
      # resource. Required.
      #
      # The API version returned by the plugin MUST match the version encoded.
      apiVersion: "client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1"

      # Environment variables to set when executing the plugin. Optional.
      env:
      - name: "OS_USERNAME"
        value: "admin"
      - name: "OS_PASSWORD"
        value: "passw0rd"
      - name: "OS_PROJECT_NAME"
        value: "myproject"

      # Arguments to pass when executing the plugin. Optional.
      args:
      - "--domain-name=default"
      - "--keystone-url=https://127.0.0.1/identity"
clusters:
- name: my-cluster
  cluster:
    server: "https://172.17.4.100:6443"
    certificate-authority: "/etc/kubernetes/ca.pem"
contexts:
- name: my-cluster
  context:
    cluster: my-cluster
    user: my-user
current-context: my-cluster

Relative command paths are interpreted as relative to the directory of the config file. If KUBECONFIG is set to /home/jane/kubeconfig and the exec command is ./bin/client-keystone-auth, the binary /home/jane/bin/client-keystone-auth is executed.

- name: my-user
  user:
    exec:
      # Path relative to the directory of the kubeconfig
      command: "./bin/client-keystone-auth"
      apiVersion: "client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1"

Input and output formats

The executed command prints an ExecCredential object to stdout. k8s.io/client-go authenticates against the Kubernetes API using the returned credentials in the status.

When run from an interactive session, stdin is exposed directly to the plugin. The plugin uses a TTY check to determine if it's appropriate to prompt a user interactively.

When the plugin is executed from an interactive session, stdin and stderr are directly exposed to the plugin so it can prompt the user for input for interactive logins.

To authenticate in Keystone from an interactive session, the user needs to provide the address domain name, user name, password, and, optionally, a project name. These values can be specified using environment variables (OS_AUTH_URL, OS_DOMAIN_NAME, OS_USERNAME, OS_PASSWORD and OS_PROJECT_NAME), or through command arguments (--keystone-url, --domain-name, --user-name, --password and --project-name), respectively. If they are not specified, the user will be prompted to enter them at the time of the interactive session. It is also possible to authenticate with Keystone Application Credentials. In this case, the user needs to provide the id or the name of the Application Credential, and the Secret. The environment variables are OS_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_ID,OS_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_NAME and OS_APPLICATION_CREDENTIAL_SECRET and the command line arguments are --application-credential-name, --application-credential-id and --application-credential-secret.

When responding to a 401 HTTP status code (indicating invalid credentials), this object will include metadata about the response.

{
  "apiVersion": "client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1",
  "kind": "ExecCredential",
  "spec": {
    "response": {
      "code": 401,
      "header": {},
    },
    "interactive": true
  }
}

The executed command prints an ExecCredential to stdout. This objects contains a bearer token as token and the expiry of the token formatted as a RFC3339 timestamp as expirationTimestamp. k8s.io/client-go will then use the returned bearer token in the status when authenticating against the Kubernetes API.

{
  "apiVersion": "client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1",
  "kind": "ExecCredential",
  "status": {
    "token": "my-bearer-token",
    "expirationTimestamp": "2018-03-05T17:30:20-08:00"
  }
}

References

More details about Kubernetes Authentication Webhook using Bearer Tokens is at : https://kubernetes.io/docs/admin/authentication/#webhook-token-authentication

Client-go credential plugins documentation is at: https://kubernetes.io/docs/admin/authentication/#client-go-credential-plugins