AUTHENTICATION_PLUGINS
AVAILABLE_REGIONS
DEFAULT_SERVICE_REGIONS
OPENSTACK_API_VERSIONS
OPENSTACK_ENDPOINT_TYPE
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_ADMIN_ROLES
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DEFAULT_DOMAIN
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DOMAIN_CHOICES
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DOMAIN_DROPDOWN
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_MULTIDOMAIN_SUPPORT
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_URL
OPENSTACK_SSL_CACERT
OPENSTACK_SSL_NO_VERIFY
OPENSTACK_TOKEN_HASH_ALGORITHM
OPENSTACK_TOKEN_HASH_ENABLED
PASSWORD_EXPIRES_WARNING_THRESHOLD_DAYS
POLICY_FILES
POLICY_FILES_PATH
SECURE_PROXY_ADDR_HEADER
SESSION_TIMEOUT
TOKEN_DELETION_DISABLED
TOKEN_TIMEOUT_MARGIN
WEBROOT
Django OpenStack Auth is configured through Django settings.py
file.
In most cases it is used combined with the OpenStack Dashboard,
so the settings file will be local/local_settings.py
file
in your OpenStack Dashboard deployment.
This page covers the configuration options referred by Django OpenStack Auth.
Some settings are also referred to by Horizon. Configure them carefully.
AUTHENTICATION_PLUGINS
¶Default: ['openstack_auth.plugin.password.PasswordPlugin', 'openstack_auth.plugin.token.TokenPlugin']
A list of authentication plugins to be used. In most cases, there is no need to configure this.
AVAILABLE_REGIONS
¶Default: None
A list of tuples which define multiple regions. The tuple format is
('http://{{ keystone_host }}:5000/v2.0', '{{ region_name }}')
. If any regions
are specified the login form will have a dropdown selector for authenticating
to the appropriate region, and there will be a region switcher dropdown in
the site header when logged in.
You should also define OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_URL
to indicate which of
the regions is the default one.
DEFAULT_SERVICE_REGIONS
¶Default: {}
The default service region is set on a per-endpoint basis, meaning that once the user logs into some Keystone endpoint, if a default service region is defined for it in this setting and exists within Keystone catalog, it will be set as the initial service region in this endpoint. By default it is an empty dictionary because upstream can neither predict service region names in a specific deployment, nor tell whether this behavior is desired. The key of the dictionary is a full url of a Keystone endpoint with version suffix, the value is a region name.
Example:
DEFAULT_SERVICE_REGIONS = {
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_URL: 'RegionOne'
}
OPENSTACK_API_VERSIONS
¶Default:
{
"identity": 2.0,
...,
}
Overrides for OpenStack API versions. Use this setting to force the
OpenStack dashboard to use a specific API version for a given service API.
Django OpenStack Auth refers to only the "identity"
entry.
The current valid values are “2.0” or “3”.
Note
See Horizon settings for the full description of this setting.
OPENSTACK_ENDPOINT_TYPE
¶Default: "publicURL"
A string which specifies the endpoint type to use for the endpoints in the
Keystone service catalog. The default value for all services except for
identity is "publicURL"
. The default value for the identity service is
"internalURL"
.
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_ADMIN_ROLES
¶Default: ["admin"]
The list of roles that have administrator privileges in this OpenStack
installation. This check is very basic and essentially only works with
keystone v2.0 and v3 with the default policy file. The setting assumes there
is a common admin
like role(s) across services. Example uses of this
setting are:
admin
role to cloud-admin
["admin", "cloud-admin", "net-op"]
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DEFAULT_DOMAIN
¶Default: "Default"
Overrides the default domain used when running on single-domain model with Keystone V3. All entities will be created in the default domain.
Note
This value must be the name of the default domain, NOT the ID.
Also, you will most likely have a value in the keystone policy file like
"cloud_admin": "rule:admin_required and domain_id:<your domain id>"
.
This value must be the name of the domain whose ID is specified there.
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DOMAIN_CHOICES
¶New in version 12.0.0(Pike).
Default:
(
('Default', 'Default'),
)
If OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DOMAIN_DROPDOWN is enabled, this option can be used to set the available domains to choose from. This is a list of pairs whose first value is the domain name and the second is the display name.
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_DOMAIN_DROPDOWN
¶New in version 12.0.0(Pike).
Default: False
Set this to True if you want available domains displayed as a dropdown menu on
the login screen. It is strongly advised NOT to enable this for public clouds,
as advertising enabled domains to unauthenticated customers irresponsibly
exposes private information. This should only be used for private clouds where
the dashboard sits behind a corporate firewall.
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_MULTIDOMAIN_SUPPORT
¶Default: False
Set this to True if running on multi-domain model. When this is enabled, it will require user to enter the Domain name in addition to username for login.
OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_URL
¶Default: "http://%s:5000/v2.0" % OPENSTACK_HOST
The full URL for the Keystone endpoint used for authentication. Unless you are using HTTPS, running your Keystone server on a nonstandard port, or using a nonstandard URL scheme you shouldn’t need to touch this setting.
OPENSTACK_SSL_CACERT
¶Default: None
When unset or set to None
the default CA certificate on the system is used
for SSL verification.
When set with the path to a custom CA certificate file, this overrides use of the default system CA certificate. This custom certificate is used to verify all connections to openstack services when making API calls.
OPENSTACK_SSL_NO_VERIFY
¶Default: False
Disable SSL certificate checks in the OpenStack clients (useful for self-signed certificates).
OPENSTACK_TOKEN_HASH_ALGORITHM
¶Default: "md5"
The hash algorithm to use for authentication tokens. This must match the hash algorithm that the identity (Keystone) server and the auth_token middleware are using. Allowed values are the algorithms supported by Python’s hashlib library.
OPENSTACK_TOKEN_HASH_ENABLED
¶(Deprecated)
Default: True
Hashing tokens from Keystone keeps the Horizon session data smaller, but it doesn’t work in some cases when using PKI tokens. Uncomment this value and set it to False if using PKI tokens and there are 401 errors due to token hashing.
This option is now marked as “deprecated” and will be removed in Ocata or a later release. PKI tokens currently work with hashing, and Keystone will soon deprecate usage of PKI tokens.
PASSWORD_EXPIRES_WARNING_THRESHOLD_DAYS
¶Default: -1
Password will have an expiration date when using keystone v3 and enabling the
feature. This setting allows you to set the number of days that the user will
be alerted prior to the password expiration. Once the password expires keystone
will deny the access and users must contact an admin to change their password.
Setting this value to N
days means the user will be alerted when the
password expires in less than N+1
days. -1
disables the feature.
POLICY_FILES
¶Default: {'identity': 'keystone_policy.json', 'compute': 'nova_policy.json'}
This should essentially be the mapping of the contents of POLICY_FILES_PATH
to service types. When policy.json files are added to POLICY_FILES_PATH
,
they should be included here too.
POLICY_FILES_PATH
¶Default: os.path.join(ROOT_PATH, "conf")
Specifies where service based policy files are located. These are used to define the policy rules actions are verified against.
SECURE_PROXY_ADDR_HEADER
¶Default: False
If horizon is behind a proxy server and the proxy is configured, the IP address
from request is passed using header variables inside the request. The header
name depends on a proxy or a load-balancer. This setting specifies the name of
the header with remote IP address. The main use is for authentication log
(success or fail) displaing the IP address of the user.
The commom value for this setting is HTTP_X_REAL_IP
or
HTTP_X_FORWARDED_FOR
.
If not present, then REMOTE_ADDR
header is used. (REMOTE_ADDR
is the
field of Django HttpRequest object which contains IP address of the client.)
SESSION_TIMEOUT
¶Default: "3600"
This SESSION_TIMEOUT
is a method to supercede the token timeout with a
shorter horizon session timeout (in seconds). So if your token expires in
60 minutes, a value of 1800 will log users out after 30 minutes.
TOKEN_DELETION_DISABLED
¶Default: False
This setting allows deployers to control whether a token is deleted on log out. This can be helpful when there are often long running processes being run in the Horizon environment.
TOKEN_TIMEOUT_MARGIN
¶Default: 0
A time margin in seconds to subtract from the real token’s validity. An example usage is that the token can be valid once the middleware passed, and invalid (timed-out) during a view rendering and this generates authorization errors during the view rendering. By setting this value to some smaller seconds, you can avoid token expiration during a view rendering.
WEBROOT
¶Default: "/"
Specifies the location where the access to the dashboard is configured in the web server.
For example, if you’re accessing the Dashboard via
https://<your server>/dashboard, you would set this to "/dashboard/"
.
Note
Additional settings may be required in the config files of your webserver
of choice. For example to make "/dashboard/"
the web root in Apache,
the "sites-available/horizon.conf"
requires a couple of additional
aliases set:
Alias /dashboard/static %HORIZON_DIR%/static
Alias /dashboard/media %HORIZON_DIR%/openstack_dashboard/static
Apache also requires changing your WSGIScriptAlias to reflect the desired
path. For example, you’d replace /
with /dashboard
for the
alias.
WEBSSO_ENABLED
¶Default: False
Enables keystone web single-sign-on if set to True. For this feature to work, make sure that you are using Keystone V3 and Django OpenStack Auth V1.2.0 or later.
WEBSSO_INITIAL_CHOICE
¶Default: "credentials"
Determines the default authentication mechanism. When user lands on the login page, this is the first choice they will see.
WEBSSO_CHOICES
¶Default:
(
("credentials", _("Keystone Credentials")),
("oidc", _("OpenID Connect")),
("saml2", _("Security Assertion Markup Language"))
)
This is the list of authentication mechanisms available to the user. It
includes Keystone federation protocols such as OpenID Connect and SAML, and
also keys that map to specific identity provider and federation protocol
combinations (as defined in WEBSSO_IDP_MAPPING
). The list of choices is
completely configurable, so as long as the id remains intact. Do not remove
the credentials mechanism unless you are sure. Once removed, even admins will
have no way to log into the system via the dashboard.
WEBSSO_IDP_MAPPING
¶Default: {}
A dictionary of specific identity provider and federation protocol combinations. From the selected authentication mechanism, the value will be looked up as keys in the dictionary. If a match is found, it will redirect the user to a identity provider and federation protocol specific WebSSO endpoint in keystone, otherwise it will use the value as the protocol_id when redirecting to the WebSSO by protocol endpoint.
Example:
WEBSSO_CHOICES = (
("credentials", _("Keystone Credentials")),
("oidc", _("OpenID Connect")),
("saml2", _("Security Assertion Markup Language")),
("acme_oidc", "ACME - OpenID Connect"),
("acme_saml2", "ACME - SAML2")
)
WEBSSO_IDP_MAPPING = {
"acme_oidc": ("acme", "oidc"),
"acme_saml2": ("acme", "saml2")
}
Note
The value is expected to be a tuple formatted as: (<idp_id>, <protocol_id>).
KEYSTONE_PROVIDER_IDP_NAME
¶Default: Local Keystone
The Keystone Provider drop down uses Keystone to Keystone federation to switch between Keystone service providers. This sets display name for Identity Provider (dropdown display name).
KEYSTONE_PROVIDER_IDP_ID
¶Default:: localkeystone
This ID is used for only for comparison with the service provider IDs. This ID should not match any service provider IDs.
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