mirror of https://github.com/status-im/consul.git
140 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
140 lines
6.5 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: ACL Auth Methods
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description: >-
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An auth method is a component in Consul that performs authentication against a
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trusted external party to authorize the creation of an ACL tokens usable
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within the local datacenter.
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---
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# ACL Auth Methods
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-> **1.5.0+:** Auth methods only exist in Consul versions 1.5.0 and newer.
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An auth method is a component in Consul that performs authentication against a
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trusted external party to authorize the creation of an ACL tokens usable within
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the local datacenter.
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## Overview
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Without an auth method a trusted operator is critically involved in the
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creation and secure introduction of each ACL token to every application that
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needs one, while ensuring that the policies assigned to these tokens follow the
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principle of least-privilege.
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When running in environments such as a public cloud or when supervised by a
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cluster scheduler, applications may already have access to uniquely identifying
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credentials that were delivered securely by the platform. Consul auth method
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integrations allow for these credentials to be used to create ACL tokens with
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properly-scoped policies without additional operator intervention.
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In Consul 1.5.0 the focus is around simplifying the creation of tokens with the
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privileges necessary to participate in a [Connect](/docs/connect)
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service mesh with minimal operator intervention.
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## Supported Types
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| Types | Consul Version |
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| ------------------------------------------------- | --------------------------------- |
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| [`kubernetes`](/docs/security/acl/auth-methods/kubernetes) | 1.5.0+ |
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| [`jwt`](/docs/security/acl/auth-methods/jwt) | 1.8.0+ |
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| [`oidc`](/docs/security/acl/auth-methods/oidc) | 1.8.0+ <EnterpriseAlert inline /> |
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| [`aws-iam`](/docs/security/acl/auth-methods/aws-iam) | 1.12.0+ |
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## Operator Configuration
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An operator needs to configure each auth method that is to be trusted by
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using the API or command line before they can be used by applications.
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- **Authentication** - One or more **auth methods** should be configured with
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details about how to authenticate application credentials. Successful
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validation of application credentials will return a set of trusted identity
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attributes (such as a username). These can be managed with the `consul acl auth-method` subcommands or the corresponding [API
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endpoints](/api-docs/acl/auth-methods). The specific details of
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configuration are type dependent and described in their own documentation
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pages.
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- **Authorization** - One or more **binding rules** must be configured to define
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how to translate trusted identity attributes from each auth method into
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privileges assigned to the ACL token that is created. These can be managed
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with the `consul acl binding-rule` subcommands or the corresponding [API
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endpoints](/api-docs/acl/binding-rules).
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-> **Note** - To configure auth methods in any connected secondary datacenter,
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[ACL token replication](/docs/agent/config/config-files#acl_enable_token_replication)
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must be enabled. Auth methods require the ability to create local tokens which
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is restricted to the primary datacenter and any secondary datacenters with ACL
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token replication enabled.
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## Binding Rules
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Binding rules allow an operator to express a systematic way of automatically
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linking [roles](/docs/security/acl/acl-roles) and [service
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identities](/docs/security/acl/acl-roles#service-identities) to newly created
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tokens without operator intervention.
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Successful authentication with an auth method returns a set of trusted
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identity attributes corresponding to the authenticated identity. Those
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attributes are matched against all configured binding rules for that auth
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method to determine what privileges to grant the the Consul ACL token it will
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ultimately create.
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Each binding rule is composed of two portions:
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- **Selector** - A logical query that must match the trusted identity
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attributes for the binding rule to be applicable to a given login attempt.
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The syntax uses github.com/hashicorp/go-bexpr which is shared with the [API
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filtering feature](/api-docs/features/filtering). For example:
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`"serviceaccount.namespace==default and serviceaccount.name!=vault"`
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- **Bind Type and Name** - A binding rule can bind a token to a
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[role](/docs/security/acl/acl-roles) or to a [service
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identity](/docs/security/acl/acl-roles#service-identities) by name. The name
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can be specified with a plain string or the bind name can be lightly
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templated using [HIL syntax](https://github.com/hashicorp/hil) to interpolate
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the same values that are usable by the `Selector` syntax. For example:
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`"dev-${serviceaccount.name}"`
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When multiple binding rules match, then all roles and service identities are
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jointly linked to the token created by the login process.
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## Overall Login Process
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Applications are responsible for exchanging their auth method specific secret
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bearer token for a Consul ACL token by using the login process:
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![diagram of auth method login](/img/auth-methods.svg)
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1. Applications use the `consul login` subcommand or the [login API
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endpoint](/api-docs/acl#login-to-auth-method) to authenticate to a
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specific auth method using their local Consul client. Applications provide
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both the name of the auth method and a secret bearer token during login.
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2. The Consul client forwards login requests to the leading Consul server.
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3. The Consul leader then uses auth method specific mechanisms to validate the
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provided bearer token credentials.
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4. Successful validation returns trusted identity attributes to the Consul
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leader.
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5. The Consul leader consults the configured set of binding rules associated
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with the specified auth method and selects only those rules that match the
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trusted identity attributes.
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6. The Consul leader uses the matching binding rules to generate a list of
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roles and service identities and assigns them to a token created exclusively
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in the _local_ datacenter. If none are generated the login attempt fails.
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7. The relevant `SecretID` and remaining details about the token are returned to
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the originating Consul client.
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8. The Consul client returns the token details back to the application.
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9. (later) Applications SHOULD use the `consul logout` subcommand or the
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[logout API endpoint](/api-docs/acl#logout-from-auth-method) to destroy
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their token when it is no longer required.
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For more details about specific auth methods and how to configure them, click
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on the name of the auth method type in the sidebar.
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