Configuring the Identity service (keystone) (optional)¶
Customize your keystone deployment in
/etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
.
Securing keystone communication with SSL certificates¶
The OpenStack-Ansible project provides the ability to secure keystone
communications with self-signed or user-provided SSL certificates. By default,
self-signed certificates are in use. However, you can
provide your own certificates by using the following Ansible variables in
/etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
:
keystone_user_ssl_cert: # Path to certificate
keystone_user_ssl_key: # Path to private key
keystone_user_ssl_ca_cert: # Path to CA certificate
Note
If you are providing certificates, keys, and CA file for a
CA without chain of trust (or an invalid/self-generated ca), the variables
keystone_service_internaluri_insecure
and
keystone_service_adminuri_insecure
should be set to True
.
Refer to Securing services with SSL certificates for more information on these configuration options and how you can provide your own certificates and keys to use with keystone.
Implementing LDAP (or Active Directory) backends¶
You can use the built-in keystone support for services if you already have LDAP or Active Directory (AD) infrastructure on your deployment. Keystone uses the existing users, groups, and user-group relationships to handle authentication and access control in an OpenStack deployment.
Note
We do not recommend configuring the default domain in keystone to use LDAP or AD identity backends. Create additional domains in keystone and configure either LDAP or active directory backends for that domain.
This is critical in situations where the identity backend cannot be reached due to network issues or other problems. In those situations, the administrative users in the default domain would still be able to authenticate to keystone using the default domain which is not backed by LDAP or AD.
You can add domains with LDAP backends by adding variables in
/etc/openstack_deploy/user_variables.yml
. For example, this dictionary
adds a new keystone domain called Users
that is backed by an LDAP server:
keystone_ldap:
Users:
url: "ldap://10.10.10.10"
user: "root"
password: "secrete"
Adding the YAML block above causes the keystone playbook to create a
/etc/keystone/domains/keystone.Users.conf
file within each keystone service
container that configures the LDAP-backed domain called Users
.
You can create more complex configurations that use LDAP filtering and consume LDAP as a read-only resource. The following example shows how to apply these configurations:
keystone_ldap:
MyCorporation:
url: "ldaps://ldap.example.com"
user_tree_dn: "ou=Users,o=MyCorporation"
group_tree_dn: "cn=openstack-users,ou=Users,o=MyCorporation"
user_objectclass: "inetOrgPerson"
user_id_attribute: "cn"
user_name_attribute: "uid"
user_filter: "(groupMembership=cn=openstack-users,ou=Users,o=MyCorporation)"
In the MyCorporation example above, keystone uses the LDAP server as a
read-only resource. The configuration also ensures that keystone filters the
list of possible users to the ones that exist in the
cn=openstack-users,ou=Users,o=MyCorporation
group.
Horizon offers multi-domain support that can be enabled with an Ansible variable during deployment:
horizon_keystone_multidomain_support: True
Enabling multi-domain support in horizon adds the Domain
input field on
the horizon login page and it adds other domain-specific features in the
keystone section.
More details regarding valid configuration for the LDAP Identity backend can be found in the Keystone Developer Documentation and the OpenStack Administrator Guide.