There are two types of image properties in Glance:
Access to meta properties through Glance’s public API calls may be restricted to certain sets of users, using a property protections configuration file.
This document explains exactly how property protections are configured and what they apply to.
A property protections configuration file follows the format of the Glance API
configuration file, which consists of sections, led by a [section]
header
and followed by name = value
entries. Each section header is a regular
expression matching a set of properties to be protected.
Note
Section headers must compile to a valid regular expression, otherwise glance api service will not start. Regular expressions will be handled by python’s re module which is PERL like.
Each section describes four key-value pairs, where the key is one of
create/read/update/delete
, and the value is a comma separated list of user
roles that are permitted to perform that operation in the Glance API.
If any of the keys are not specified, then the glance api service will
not start successfully.
In the list of user roles, @
means all roles and !
means no role.
If both @ and ! are specified for the same rule then the glance api service
will not start
Note
Only one policy rule is allowed per property operation. If multiple are specified, then the glance api service will not start.
The path to the file should be specified in the [DEFAULT]
section of
glance-api.conf
as follows.
property_protection_file=/path/to/file
If this config value is not specified, property protections are not enforced. If the path is invalid, glance api service will not start successfully.
The file may use either roles or policies to describe the property protections.
The config value should be specified in the [DEFAULT]
section of
glance-api.conf
as follows.
property_protection_rule_format=<roles|policies>
The default value for property_protection_rule_format
is roles
.
Property protections are applied in the order specified in the configuration
file. This means that if for example you specify a section with [.*]
at
the top of the file, all proceeding sections will be ignored.
If a property does not match any of the given rules, all operations will be disabled for all roles.
If an operation is misspelled or omitted, that operation will be disabled for all roles.
Disallowing read
operations will also disallow update/delete
operations.
A successful HTTP request will return status 200 OK
. If the user is not
permitted to perform the requested action, 403 Forbidden
will be returned.
Note
The Glance Registry Service and its APIs have been DEPRECATED in the Queens release and are subject to removal at the beginning of the ‘S’ development cycle, following the OpenStack standard deprecation policy.
For more information, see the Glance specification document Actually Deprecate the Glance Registry.
Property protections will still be honoured if
X-glance-registry-Purge-props
is set to True
. That is, if you request
to modify properties with this header set to True
, you will not be able to
delete or update properties for which you do not have the relevant permissions.
Properties which are not included in the request and for which you do have
delete permissions will still be removed.
Example 1. Limit all property interactions to admin only.
[.*] create = admin read = admin update = admin delete = admin
Example 2. Allow both admins and users with the billing role to read
and modify properties prefixed with x_billing_code_
. Allow admins to
read and modify any properties.
[^x_billing_code_.*] create = admin,billing read = admin, billing update = admin,billing delete = admin,billing [.*] create = admin read = admin update = admin delete = admin
Example 3. Limit all property interactions to admin only using policy rule context_is_admin defined in policy.json.
[.*] create = context_is_admin read = context_is_admin update = context_is_admin delete = context_is_admin
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