Security Groups¶
Security groups are sets of IP filter rules that are applied to all servers, which define networking access to the server. Group rules are project-specific; project members can edit the default rules for their group and add new rule sets.
All projects have a default
security group which is applied to any port
that has no other security group defined. Unless you change the default, this
security group denies all incoming traffic and allows only outgoing traffic
from your instance.
It’s important to note early on that security groups and their quota are resources of the networking service, Neutron. They are modelled as an attribute of ports rather than servers. With this said, Nova provides utility APIs that allow users to add and remove security groups from all ports attached to a server. In addition, it is possible to specify security groups to configure for newly created ports when creating a new server, and to retrieve the combined set of security groups for all ports attached to a server.
Note
Nova previously provided its own security group APIs. These were proxy APIs for Neutron APIs and have been deprecated since microversion 2.36.
Usage¶
Security group-related operations can be broken down into three categories: operations on security groups and security group rules themselves, operations on ports, and operations on servers.
Security group and security group rule operations
By default, security groups can be created by any project member. For example:
$ openstack security group create --description <description> ... <name>
Tip
When adding a new security group, you should pick a descriptive but brief
name. This name shows up in brief descriptions of the servers that use it
where the longer description field often does not. For example, seeing that
a server is using security group http
is much easier to understand
than bobs_group
or secgrp1
.
Security groups are really only containers for rules. Security group rules define the actual IP filter rules that will be applied. Security groups deny everything by default, so rules indicate what is allowed. Typically, a security group rule will be configured with the following attributes: an IP protocol (one of ICMP, TCP, or UDP), a destination port or port range, and a remote IP range (in CIDR format). You create security group rules by specifying these attributes and the security group to which the rules should be added. For example:
$ openstack security group rule create \
--protocol <protocol> --dst-port <port-range> \
--remote-ip <ip-address> \
<group>
Note
The <port-range>
argument takes the form of port
or
from-port:to-port
. This specifies the range of local ports that
connections are allowed to access, not the source and destination ports
of the connection.
Alternatively, rather than specifying a remote IP range, you can specify a
remote security group. A remote group will allow requests with the specified
protocol(s) and port(s) from any server with said port. If you create a
security group rule with remote group foo
and apply the security group to
server bar
, bar
will be able to receive matching traffic from any other
server with security group foo
. Security group rules with remote security
groups are created in much the same way as security group rules with remote
IPs. For example:
$ openstack security group rule create \
--protocol <protocol> --dst-port <port-range> \
--remote-group <remote-group> \
<group>
Once created, both security groups and security group rules can be listed. For example:
$ openstack security group list
$ openstack security group rule list <group>
Likewise, you can inspect an individual security group or security group rule. For example:
$ openstack security group show <group>
$ openstack security group rule show <group> <rule>
Finally, you can delete security groups. This will delete both the security group and associated security group rules. For example:
$ openstack security group delete <group>
Alternatively, you can delete individual rules from an existing group. For example:
$ openstack security group rule delete <rule>
Port operations
Security groups are an attribute of ports. By default, Neutron will assign the
default
security group to all newly created ports. It is possible to
disable this behavior. For example:
$ openstack port create --no-security-group ... <name>
It is possible to specify different security groups when creating a new port. For example:
$ openstack port create --security-group <group> ... <name>
Note
If you specify a security group when creating the port, the default
security group will not be added to the port. If you wish to add the
default
security group, you will need to specify this also.
Additional security groups can also be added or removed from existing ports. For example:
$ openstack port set --security-group <group> ... <port>
$ openstack port unset --security-group <group> ... <port>
It is also possible to remove all security groups from a port. For example:
$ openstack port set --no-security-group <port>
Server operations
It is possible to manipulate and configure security groups on an server-wide basis. When you create a new server, networks can be either automatically allocated (a feature known as “Get me a network”) or manually configured. In both cases, attaching a network to a server results in the creation of a port. It is possible to specify one or more security groups to assign to these ports. For example:
$ openstack server create --security-group <group> ... <name>
Important
These security groups will only apply to automatically created ports. They
will not apply to any pre-created ports attached to the server at boot.
If no security group is specified, the default
security group for the
current project will be used. It is not possible to specify that no
security group should be applied to automatically created ports. If you
wish to remove the default
security group from a server’s ports, you
will need to use pre-created ports or remove the security group after the
server has been created.
Once a server has been created, it is possible to add or remove a security group from all ports attached to the server. For example:
$ openstack server add security group <server> <group>
$ openstack server remove security group <server> <group>
Note
Unless customised, the default
security group allows egress traffic
from the server. If you remove this group and do not allow egress traffic
via another security group, your server will no longer be able to
communicate with the metadata service.
It is also possible to view the security groups associated with a server. For example:
$ openstack server show -f value -c security_groups
Important
As security groups are an attribute of ports rather than servers, this
value is the combined set of security groups assigned to all ports.
Different ports may have different sets of security groups. You can inspect
the port with openstack port show
to see the exact security groups
assigned to an individual port.
Example¶
Let’s look through a worked example of creating security groups for a deployment of 3 web server hosts and 2 database hosts. First, we’ll configure the security group that will allow HTTP traffic to the web server hosts.
$ openstack security group create \
--description "Allows Web traffic anywhere on the Internet." \
web
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| created_at | 2016-11-03T13:50:53Z |
| description | Allows Web traffic anywhere on the Internet. |
| headers | |
| id | c0b92b20-4575-432a-b4a9-eaf2ad53f696 |
| name | web |
| project_id | 5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1 |
| project_id | 5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1 |
| revision_number | 1 |
| rules | created_at='2016-11-03T13:50:53Z', direction='egress', ethertype='IPv4', id='4d8cec94-e0ee-4c20-9f56-8fb67c21e4df', |
| | project_id='5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1', revision_number='1', updated_at='2016-11-03T13:50:53Z' |
| | created_at='2016-11-03T13:50:53Z', direction='egress', ethertype='IPv6', id='31be2ad1-be14-4aef-9492-ecebede2cf12', |
| | project_id='5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1', revision_number='1', updated_at='2016-11-03T13:50:53Z' |
| updated_at | 2016-11-03T13:50:53Z |
+-----------------+--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
Once created, we can add a new group rule to allow ingress HTTP traffic on port 80:
$ openstack security group rule create \
--protocol tcp --dst-port 80:80 --remote-ip 0.0.0.0/0 \
web
+-------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+-------------------+--------------------------------------+
| created_at | 2016-11-06T14:02:00Z |
| description | |
| direction | ingress |
| ethertype | IPv4 |
| headers | |
| id | 2ba06233-d5c8-43eb-93a9-8eaa94bc9eb5 |
| port_range_max | 80 |
| port_range_min | 80 |
| project_id | 5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1 |
| project_id | 5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1 |
| protocol | tcp |
| remote_group_id | None |
| remote_ip_prefix | 0.0.0.0/0 |
| revision_number | 1 |
| security_group_id | c0b92b20-4575-432a-b4a9-eaf2ad53f696 |
| updated_at | 2016-11-06T14:02:00Z |
+-------------------+--------------------------------------+
You can create complex rule sets by creating additional rules. In this instance we want to pass both HTTP and HTTPS traffic so we’ll add an additional rule:
$ openstack security group rule create \
--protocol tcp --dst-port 443:443 --remote-ip 0.0.0.0/0 \
web
+-------------------+--------------------------------------+
| Field | Value |
+-------------------+--------------------------------------+
| created_at | 2016-11-06T14:09:20Z |
| description | |
| direction | ingress |
| ethertype | IPv4 |
| headers | |
| id | 821c3ef6-9b21-426b-be5b-c8a94c2a839c |
| port_range_max | 443 |
| port_range_min | 443 |
| project_id | 5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1 |
| project_id | 5669caad86a04256994cdf755df4d3c1 |
| protocol | tcp |
| remote_group_id | None |
| remote_ip_prefix | 0.0.0.0/0 |
| revision_number | 1 |
| security_group_id | c0b92b20-4575-432a-b4a9-eaf2ad53f696 |
| updated_at | 2016-11-06T14:09:20Z |
+-------------------+--------------------------------------+
Note
Despite only outputting the newly added rule, this operation is additive (both rules are created and enforced).
That’s one security group wrapped up. Next, the database hosts. These are
running MySQL and we would like to both restrict traffic to the relevant port
(3306
in this case) and to restrict ingress traffic to requests from
the web server hosts. While we could specify a CIDR for the IP addresses of the
web servers, a preferred solution is to configure a source group. This will
allow us to dynamically add and remove web server hosts with the web
security group applied without needing to modify the security group for the
database hosts. Let’s create the security group and the necessary rule:
$ openstack security group create database
$ openstack security group rule create \
--protocol tcp --dst-port 3306 --remote-group web \
database
The database
rule will now allows access to MySQL’s default port from any
server that uses the web
group.
Now that we’ve created the security group and rules, let’s list them to verify everything:
$ openstack security group list
+--------------------------------------+----------+-------------+
| Id | Name | Description |
+--------------------------------------+----------+-------------+
| 73580272-d8fa-4927-bd55-c85e43bc4877 | default | default |
| c0b92b20-4575-432a-b4a9-eaf2ad53f696 | web | web server |
| 40e1e336-e207-494f-a3ec-a3c222336b22 | database | database |
+--------------------------------------+----------+-------------+
We can also inspect the rules for the security group. Let’s look at the web
security group:
$ openstack security group rule list web
+--------------------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------------+-----------------------+
| ID | IP Protocol | IP Range | Port Range | Remote Security Group |
+--------------------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------------+-----------------------+
| 2ba06233-d5c8-43eb-93a9-8eaa94bc9eb5 | tcp | 0.0.0.0/0 | 80:80 | None |
| 821c3ef6-9b21-426b-be5b-c8a94c2a839c | tcp | 0.0.0.0/0 | 443:443 | None |
+--------------------------------------+-------------+-----------+-----------------+-----------------------+
Assuming everything looks correct, you can now use these security groups when creating your new servers.