Configuring Keystone for Tokenless Authorization¶
Note
This feature is experimental and unsupported in Liberty.
Definitions¶
- X.509 Tokenless Authorization: Provides a means to authorize client operations within Keystone by using an X.509 SSL client certificate without having to issue a token. For details, please refer to the specs Tokenless Authorization with X.509 Client SSL Certificate
Prerequisites¶
Keystone must be running in a web container with https enabled; tests have been done with Apache/2.4.7 running on Ubuntu 14.04 . Please refer to running-keystone-in-httpd and apache-certificate-and-key-installation as references for this setup.
Apache Configuration¶
To enable X.509 tokenless authorization, SSL has to be enabled and configured
in the Apache virtual host file. The Client authentication attribute
SSLVerifyClient
should be set as optional
to allow other token
authentication methods and attribute SSLOptions
needs to set as
+StdEnvVars
to allow certificate attributes to be passed. The following
is the sample virtual host file used for the testing.
<VirtualHost *:443>
WSGIScriptAlias / /var/www/cgi-bin/keystone/main
ErrorLog /var/log/apache2/keystone.log
LogLevel debug
CustomLog /var/log/apache2/access.log combined
SSLEngine on
SSLCertificateFile /etc/apache2/ssl/apache.cer
SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/apache2/ssl/apache.key
SSLCACertificatePath /etc/apache2/capath
SSLOptions +StdEnvVars
SSLVerifyClient optional
</VirtualHost>
Keystone Configuration¶
The following options can be defined in keystone.conf:
trusted_issuer
- The multi-str list of trusted issuers to further filter the certificates that are allowed to participate in the X.509 tokenless authorization. If the option is absent then no certificates will be allowed. The naming format for the attributes of a Distinguished Name(DN) must be separated by a comma and contain no spaces; however spaces are allowed for the value of an attribute, like ‘L=San Jose’ in the example below. This configuration option may be repeated for multiple values. Please look at the sample below.protocol
- The protocol name for the X.509 tokenless authorization along with the option issuer_attribute below can look up its corresponding mapping. It defaults tox509
.issuer_attribute
- The issuer attribute that is served as an IdP ID for the X.509 tokenless authorization along with the protocol to look up its corresponding mapping. It is the environment variable in the WSGI environment that references to the Issuer of the client certificate. It defaults toSSL_CLIENT_I_DN
.
This is a sample configuration for two trusted_issuer and a protocol set
to x509
.
[tokenless_auth]
trusted_issuer = emailAddress=mary@abc.com,CN=mary,OU=eng,O=abc,L=San Jose,ST=California,C=US
trusted_issuer = emailAddress=john@openstack.com,CN=john,OU=keystone,O=openstack,L=Sunnyvale,ST=California,C=US
protocol = x509
Setup Mapping¶
Like federation, X.509 tokenless authorization also utilizes the mapping
mechanism to formulate an identity. The identity provider must correspond
to the issuer of the X.509 SSL client certificate. The protocol for the
given identity is x509
by default, but can be configurable.
Create an Identity Provider (IdP)¶
In order to create an IdP, the issuer DN in the client certificate needs to be provided. The following sample is what a generic issuer DN looks like in a certificate.
E=john@openstack.com
CN=john
OU=keystone
O=openstack
L=Sunnyvale
S=California
C=US
The issuer DN should be constructed as a string that contains no spaces
and have the right order separated by commas like the example below.
Please be aware that emailAddress
and ST
should be used instead
of E
and S
that are shown in the above example. The following is
the sample Python code used to create the IdP ID.
import hashlib
issuer_dn = 'emailAddress=john@openstack.com,CN=john,OU=keystone,
O=openstack,L=Sunnyvale,ST=California,C=US'
hashed_idp = hashlib.sha256(issuer_dn)
idp_id = hashed_idp.hexdigest()
print(idp_id)
The output of the above Python code will be the IdP ID and the following sample curl command should be sent to keystone to create an IdP with the newly generated IdP ID.
curl -k -s -X PUT -H "X-Auth-Token: <TOKEN>" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"identity_provider": {"description": "Stores keystone IDP identities.","enabled": true}}' \
https://<HOSTNAME>:<PORT>/v3/OS-FEDERATION/identity_providers/<IdP ID>
Create a Map¶
A mapping needs to be created to map the Subject DN
in the client
certificate as a user to yield a valid local user if the user’s type
defined as local
in the mapping. For example, the client certificate
has Subject DN
as CN=alex,OU=eng,O=nice-network,L=Sunnyvale,
ST=California,C=US
, in the following examples, user_name
will be
mapped to``alex`` and domain_name
will be mapped to nice-network
.
And it has user’s type
set to local
. If user’s type
is not
defined, it defaults to ephemeral
.
Please refer to mod_ssl for the detailed mapping attributes.
{
"mapping": {
"rules": [
{
"local": [
{
"user": {
"name": "{0}",
"domain": {
"name": "{1}"
},
"type": "local"
}
}
],
"remote": [
{
"type": "SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_CN"
},
{
"type": "SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_O"
}
]
}
]
}
}
When user’s type
is not defined or set to ephemeral
, the mapped user
does not have to be a valid local user but the mapping must yield at least
one valid local group. For example:
{
"mapping": {
"rules": [
{
"local": [
{
"user": {
"name": "{0}",
"type": "ephemeral"
}
},
{
"group": {
"id": "12345678"
}
}
],
"remote": [
{
"type": "SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_CN"
}
]
}
]
}
}
The following sample curl command should be sent to keystone to create a mapping with the provided mapping ID. The mapping ID is user designed and it can be any string as opposed to IdP ID.
curl -k -s -H "X-Auth-Token: <TOKEN>" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"mapping": {"rules": [{"local": [{"user": {"name": "{0}","type": "ephemeral"}},{"group": {"id": "<GROUPID>"}}],"remote": [{"type": "SSL_CLIENT_S_DN_CN"}]}]}}' \
-X PUT https://<HOSTNAME>:<PORT>/v3/OS-FEDERATION/mappings/<MAPPING ID>
Create a Protocol¶
The name of the protocol will be the one defined in keystone.conf as
protocol
which defaults to x509
. The protocol name is user designed
and it can be any name as opposed to IdP ID.
A protocol name and an IdP ID will uniquely identify a mapping.
The following sample curl command should be sent to keystone to create a protocol with the provided protocol name that is defined in keystone.conf.
curl -k -s -H "X-Auth-Token: <TOKEN>" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-d '{"protocol": {"mapping_id": "<MAPPING ID>"}}' \
-X PUT https://<HOSTNAME>:<PORT>/v3/OS-FEDERATION/identity_providers/<IdP ID>/protocols/<PROTOCOL NAME>
Setup auth_token
middleware¶
In order to use auth_token
middleware as the service client for X.509
tokenless authorization, both configurable options and scope information
will need to be setup.
Configurable Options¶
The following configurable options in auth_token
middleware
should set to the correct values:
auth_protocol
- Set tohttps
.certfile
- Set to the full path of the certificate file.keyfile
- Set to the full path of the private key file.cafile
- Set to the full path of the trusted CA certificate file.
Scope Information¶
The scope information will be passed from the headers with the following header attributes to:
X-Project-Id
- If specified, its the project scope.X-Project-Name
- If specified, its the project scope.X-Project-Domain-Id
- If specified, its the domain of project scope.X-Project-Domain-Name
- If specified, its the domain of project scope.X-Domain-Id
- If specified, its the domain scope.X-Domain-Name
- If specified, its the domain scope.
Test It Out with cURL¶
Once the above configurations have been setup, the following curl command can be used for token validation.
curl -v -k -s -X GET --cert /<PATH>/x509client.crt \
--key /<PATH>/x509client.key \
--cacert /<PATH>/ca.crt \
-H "X-Project-Name: <PROJECT-NAME>" \
-H "X-Project-Domain-Id: <PROJECT-DOMAIN-ID>" \
-H "X-Subject-Token: <TOKEN>" \
https://<HOST>:<PORT>/v3/auth/tokens | python -mjson.tool
Details of the Options¶
--cert
- The client certificate that will be presented to Keystone. TheIssuer
in the certificate along with the definedprotocol
in keystone.conf will uniquely identify the mapping. TheSubject
in the certificate will be mapped to the valid local user from the identified mapping.--key
- The corresponding client private key.--cacert
- It can be the Apache server certificate or its issuer (signer) certificate.X-Project-Name
- The project scope needs to be passed in the header.X-Project-Domain-Id
- Its the domain of project scope.X-Subject-Token
- The token to be validated.