This page provides an overview of authenticating.
All Kubernetes clusters have two categories of users: service accounts managed by Kubernetes, and normal users.
Normal users are assumed to be managed by an outside, independent service. An admin distributing private keys, a user store like Keystone or Google Accounts, even a file with a list of usernames and passwords. In this regard, Kubernetes does not have objects which represent normal user accounts. Normal users cannot be added to a cluster through an API call.
In contrast, service accounts are users managed by the Kubernetes API. They are
bound to specific namespaces, and created automatically by the API server or
manually through API calls. Service accounts are tied to a set of credentials
stored as Secrets
, which are mounted into pods allowing in-cluster processes
to talk to the Kubernetes API.
API requests are tied to either a normal user or a service account, or are treated
as anonymous requests. This means every process inside or outside the cluster, from
a human user typing kubectl
on a workstation, to kubelets
on nodes, to members
of the control plane, must authenticate when making requests to the API server,
or be treated as an anonymous user.
Kubernetes uses client certificates, bearer tokens, an authenticating proxy, or HTTP basic auth to authenticate API requests through authentication plugins. As HTTP requests are made to the API server, plugins attempt to associate the following attributes with the request:
kube-admin
or jane@example.com
.All values are opaque to the authentication system and only hold significance when interpreted by an authorizer.
You can enable multiple authentication methods at once. You should usually use at least two methods:
When multiple authenticator modules are enabled, the first module to successfully authenticate the request short-circuits evaluation. The API server does not guarantee the order authenticators run in.
The system:authenticated
group is included in the list of groups for all authenticated users.
Integrations with other authentication protocols (LDAP, SAML, Kerberos, alternate x509 schemes, etc) can be accomplished using an authenticating proxy or the authentication webhook.
Client certificate authentication is enabled by passing the --client-ca-file=SOMEFILE
option to API server. The referenced file must contain one or more certificate authorities
to use to validate client certificates presented to the API server. If a client certificate
is presented and verified, the common name of the subject is used as the user name for the
request. As of Kubernetes 1.4, client certificates can also indicate a user’s group memberships
using the certificate’s organization fields. To include multiple group memberships for a user,
include multiple organization fields in the certificate.
For example, using the openssl
command line tool to generate a certificate signing request:
openssl req -new -key jbeda.pem -out jbeda-csr.pem -subj "/CN=jbeda/O=app1/O=app2"
This would create a CSR for the username “jbeda”, belonging to two groups, “app1” and “app2”.
See Managing Certificates for how to generate a client cert.
The API server reads bearer tokens from a file when given the --token-auth-file=SOMEFILE
option on the command line. Currently, tokens last indefinitely, and the token list cannot be
changed without restarting API server.
The token file is a csv file with a minimum of 3 columns: token, user name, user uid, followed by optional group names.
Note:If you have more than one group the column must be double quoted e.g.
token,user,uid,"group1,group2,group3"
When using bearer token authentication from an http client, the API
server expects an Authorization
header with a value of Bearer
THETOKEN
. The bearer token must be a character sequence that can be
put in an HTTP header value using no more than the encoding and
quoting facilities of HTTP. For example: if the bearer token is
31ada4fd-adec-460c-809a-9e56ceb75269
then it would appear in an HTTP
header as shown below.
Authorization: Bearer 31ada4fd-adec-460c-809a-9e56ceb75269
This feature is currently in beta.
To allow for streamlined bootstrapping for new clusters, Kubernetes includes a
dynamically-managed Bearer token type called a Bootstrap Token. These tokens
are stored as Secrets in the kube-system
namespace, where they can be
dynamically managed and created. Controller Manager contains a TokenCleaner
controller that deletes bootstrap tokens as they expire.
The tokens are of the form [a-z0-9]{6}.[a-z0-9]{16}
. The first component is a
Token ID and the second component is the Token Secret. You specify the token
in an HTTP header as follows:
Authorization: Bearer 781292.db7bc3a58fc5f07e
You must enable the Bootstrap Token Authenticator with the
--enable-bootstrap-token-auth
flag on the API Server. You must enable
the TokenCleaner controller via the --controllers
flag on the Controller
Manager. This is done with something like --controllers=*,tokencleaner
.
kubeadm
will do this for you if you are using it to bootstrap a cluster.
The authenticator authenticates as system:bootstrap:<Token ID>
. It is
included in the system:bootstrappers
group. The naming and groups are
intentionally limited to discourage users from using these tokens past
bootstrapping. The user names and group can be used (and are used by kubeadm
)
to craft the appropriate authorization policies to support bootstrapping a
cluster.
Please see Bootstrap Tokens for in depth
documentation on the Bootstrap Token authenticator and controllers along with
how to manage these tokens with kubeadm
.
Basic authentication is enabled by passing the --basic-auth-file=SOMEFILE
option to API server. Currently, the basic auth credentials last indefinitely,
and the password cannot be changed without restarting API server. Note that basic
authentication is currently supported for convenience while we finish making the
more secure modes described above easier to use.
The basic auth file is a csv file with a minimum of 3 columns: password, user name, user id. In Kubernetes version 1.6 and later, you can specify an optional fourth column containing comma-separated group names. If you have more than one group, you must enclose the fourth column value in double quotes (“). See the following example:
password,user,uid,"group1,group2,group3"
When using basic authentication from an http client, the API server expects an Authorization
header
with a value of Basic BASE64ENCODED(USER:PASSWORD)
.
A service account is an automatically enabled authenticator that uses signed bearer tokens to verify requests. The plugin takes two optional flags:
--service-account-key-file
A file containing a PEM encoded key for signing bearer tokens.
If unspecified, the API server’s TLS private key will be used.--service-account-lookup
If enabled, tokens which are deleted from the API will be revoked.Service accounts are usually created automatically by the API server and
associated with pods running in the cluster through the ServiceAccount
Admission Controller. Bearer tokens are
mounted into pods at well-known locations, and allow in-cluster processes to
talk to the API server. Accounts may be explicitly associated with pods using the
serviceAccountName
field of a PodSpec
.
Note:serviceAccountName
is usually omitted because this is done automatically.
apiVersion: apps/v1 # this apiVersion is relevant as of Kubernetes 1.9
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: nginx-deployment
namespace: default
spec:
replicas: 3
template:
metadata:
# ...
spec:
serviceAccountName: bob-the-bot
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginx:1.7.9
Service account bearer tokens are perfectly valid to use outside the cluster and
can be used to create identities for long standing jobs that wish to talk to the
Kubernetes API. To manually create a service account, simply use the kubectl
create serviceaccount (NAME)
command. This creates a service account in the
current namespace and an associated secret.
kubectl create serviceaccount jenkins
serviceaccount "jenkins" created
Check an associated secret:
kubectl get serviceaccounts jenkins -o yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
# ...
secrets:
- name: jenkins-token-1yvwg
The created secret holds the public CA of the API server and a signed JSON Web Token (JWT).
kubectl get secret jenkins-token-1yvwg -o yaml
apiVersion: v1
data:
ca.crt: (APISERVER'S CA BASE64 ENCODED)
namespace: ZGVmYXVsdA==
token: (BEARER TOKEN BASE64 ENCODED)
kind: Secret
metadata:
# ...
type: kubernetes.io/service-account-token
Note: Values are base64 encoded because secrets are always base64 encoded.
The signed JWT can be used as a bearer token to authenticate as the given service account. See above for how the token is included in a request. Normally these secrets are mounted into pods for in-cluster access to the API server, but can be used from outside the cluster as well.
Service accounts authenticate with the username system:serviceaccount:(NAMESPACE):(SERVICEACCOUNT)
,
and are assigned to the groups system:serviceaccounts
and system:serviceaccounts:(NAMESPACE)
.
WARNING: Because service account tokens are stored in secrets, any user with read access to those secrets can authenticate as the service account. Be cautious when granting permissions to service accounts and read capabilities for secrets.
OpenID Connect is a flavor of OAuth2 supported by some OAuth2 providers, notably Azure Active Directory, Salesforce, and Google. The protocol’s main extension of OAuth2 is an additional field returned with the access token called an ID Token. This token is a JSON Web Token (JWT) with well known fields, such as a user’s email, signed by the server.
To identify the user, the authenticator uses the id_token
(not the access_token
)
from the OAuth2 token response
as a bearer token. See above for how the token
is included in a request.
access_token
, id_token
and a refresh_token
kubectl
, use your id_token
with the --token
flag or add it directly to your kubeconfig
kubectl
sends your id_token
in a header called Authorization to the API serverid_token
hasn’t expiredkubectl
kubectl
provides feedback to the userSince all of the data needed to validate who you are is in the id_token
, Kubernetes doesn’t need to
“phone home” to the identity provider. In a model where every request is stateless this provides a very scalable
solution for authentication. It does offer a few challenges:
id_token
can’t be revoked, it’s like a certificate so it should be short-lived (only a few minutes) so it can be very annoying to have to get a new token every few minutes.kubectl proxy
command or a reverse proxy that injects the id_token
.To enable the plugin, configure the following flags on the API server:
Parameter | Description | Example | Required |
---|---|---|---|
--oidc-issuer-url |
URL of the provider which allows the API server to discover public signing keys. Only URLs which use the https:// scheme are accepted. This is typically the provider’s discovery URL without a path, for example “https://accounts.google.com" or “https://login.salesforce.com". This URL should point to the level below .well-known/openid-configuration |
If the discovery URL is https://accounts.google.com/.well-known/openid-configuration , the value should be https://accounts.google.com |
Yes |
--oidc-client-id |
A client id that all tokens must be issued for. | kubernetes | Yes |
--oidc-username-claim |
JWT claim to use as the user name. By default sub , which is expected to be a unique identifier of the end user. Admins can choose other claims, such as email or name , depending on their provider. However, claims other than email will be prefixed with the issuer URL to prevent naming clashes with other plugins. |
sub | No |
--oidc-username-prefix |
Prefix prepended to username claims to prevent clashes with existing names (such as system: users). For example, the value oidc: will create usernames like oidc:jane.doe . If this flag isn’t provided and --oidc-user-claim is a value other than email the prefix defaults to ( Issuer URL )# where ( Issuer URL ) is the value of --oidc-issuer-url . The value - can be used to disable all prefixing. |
oidc: |
No |
--oidc-groups-claim |
JWT claim to use as the user’s group. If the claim is present it must be an array of strings. | groups | No |
--oidc-groups-prefix |
Prefix prepended to group claims to prevent clashes with existing names (such as system: groups). For example, the value oidc: will create group names like oidc:engineering and oidc:infra . |
oidc: |
No |
--oidc-required-claim |
A key=value pair that describes a required claim in the ID Token. If set, the claim is verified to be present in the ID Token with a matching value. Repeat this flag to specify multiple claims. | claim=value |
No |
--oidc-ca-file |
The path to the certificate for the CA that signed your identity provider’s web certificate. Defaults to the host’s root CAs. | /etc/kubernetes/ssl/kc-ca.pem |
No |
Importantly, the API server is not an OAuth2 client, rather it can only be
configured to trust a single issuer. This allows the use of public providers,
such as Google, without trusting credentials issued to third parties. Admins who
wish to utilize multiple OAuth clients should explore providers which support the
azp
(authorized party) claim, a mechanism for allowing one client to issue
tokens on behalf of another.
Kubernetes does not provide an OpenID Connect Identity Provider. You can use an existing public OpenID Connect Identity Provider (such as Google, or others). Or, you can run your own Identity Provider, such as CoreOS dex, Keycloak, CloudFoundry UAA, or Tremolo Security’s OpenUnison.
For an identity provider to work with Kubernetes it must:
A note about requirement #3 above, requiring a CA signed certificate. If you deploy your own identity provider (as opposed to one of the cloud providers like Google or Microsoft) you MUST have your identity provider’s web server certificate signed by a certificate with the CA
flag set to TRUE
, even if it is self signed. This is due to GoLang’s TLS client implementation being very strict to the standards around certificate validation. If you don’t have a CA handy, you can use this script from the CoreOS team to create a simple CA and a signed certificate and key pair.
Or you can use this similar script that generates SHA256 certs with a longer life and larger key size.
Setup instructions for specific systems:
The first option is to use the kubectl oidc
authenticator, which sets the id_token
as a bearer token for all requests and refreshes the token once it expires. After you’ve logged into your provider, use kubectl to add your id_token
, refresh_token
, client_id
, and client_secret
to configure the plugin.
Providers that don’t return an id_token
as part of their refresh token response aren’t supported by this plugin and should use “Option 2” below.
kubectl config set-credentials USER_NAME \
--auth-provider=oidc \
--auth-provider-arg=idp-issuer-url=( issuer url ) \
--auth-provider-arg=client-id=( your client id ) \
--auth-provider-arg=client-secret=( your client secret ) \
--auth-provider-arg=refresh-token=( your refresh token ) \
--auth-provider-arg=idp-certificate-authority=( path to your ca certificate ) \
--auth-provider-arg=id-token=( your id_token )
As an example, running the below command after authenticating to your identity provider:
kubectl config set-credentials mmosley \
--auth-provider=oidc \
--auth-provider-arg=idp-issuer-url=https://oidcidp.tremolo.lan:8443/auth/idp/OidcIdP \
--auth-provider-arg=client-id=kubernetes \
--auth-provider-arg=client-secret=1db158f6-177d-4d9c-8a8b-d36869918ec5 \
--auth-provider-arg=refresh-token=q1bKLFOyUiosTfawzA93TzZIDzH2TNa2SMm0zEiPKTUwME6BkEo6Sql5yUWVBSWpKUGphaWpxSVAfekBOZbBhaEW+VlFUeVRGcluyVF5JT4+haZmPsluFoFu5XkpXk5BXqHega4GAXlF+ma+vmYpFcHe5eZR+slBFpZKtQA= \
--auth-provider-arg=idp-certificate-authority=/root/ca.pem \
--auth-provider-arg=id-token=eyJraWQiOiJDTj1vaWRjaWRwLnRyZW1vbG8ubGFuLCBPVT1EZW1vLCBPPVRybWVvbG8gU2VjdXJpdHksIEw9QXJsaW5ndG9uLCBTVD1WaXJnaW5pYSwgQz1VUy1DTj1rdWJlLWNhLTEyMDIxNDc5MjEwMzYwNzMyMTUyIiwiYWxnIjoiUlMyNTYifQ.eyJpc3MiOiJodHRwczovL29pZGNpZHAudHJlbW9sby5sYW46ODQ0My9hdXRoL2lkcC9PaWRjSWRQIiwiYXVkIjoia3ViZXJuZXRlcyIsImV4cCI6MTQ4MzU0OTUxMSwianRpIjoiMm96US15TXdFcHV4WDlHZUhQdy1hZyIsImlhdCI6MTQ4MzU0OTQ1MSwibmJmIjoxNDgzNTQ5MzMxLCJzdWIiOiI0YWViMzdiYS1iNjQ1LTQ4ZmQtYWIzMC0xYTAxZWU0MWUyMTgifQ.w6p4J_6qQ1HzTG9nrEOrubxIMb9K5hzcMPxc9IxPx2K4xO9l-oFiUw93daH3m5pluP6K7eOE6txBuRVfEcpJSwlelsOsW8gb8VJcnzMS9EnZpeA0tW_p-mnkFc3VcfyXuhe5R3G7aa5d8uHv70yJ9Y3-UhjiN9EhpMdfPAoEB9fYKKkJRzF7utTTIPGrSaSU6d2pcpfYKaxIwePzEkT4DfcQthoZdy9ucNvvLoi1DIC-UocFD8HLs8LYKEqSxQvOcvnThbObJ9af71EwmuE21fO5KzMW20KtAeget1gnldOosPtz1G5EwvaQ401-RPQzPGMVBld0_zMCAwZttJ4knw
Which would produce the below configuration:
users:
- name: mmosley
user:
auth-provider:
config:
client-id: kubernetes
client-secret: 1db158f6-177d-4d9c-8a8b-d36869918ec5
id-token: eyJraWQiOiJDTj1vaWRjaWRwLnRyZW1vbG8ubGFuLCBPVT1EZW1vLCBPPVRybWVvbG8gU2VjdXJpdHksIEw9QXJsaW5ndG9uLCBTVD1WaXJnaW5pYSwgQz1VUy1DTj1rdWJlLWNhLTEyMDIxNDc5MjEwMzYwNzMyMTUyIiwiYWxnIjoiUlMyNTYifQ.eyJpc3MiOiJodHRwczovL29pZGNpZHAudHJlbW9sby5sYW46ODQ0My9hdXRoL2lkcC9PaWRjSWRQIiwiYXVkIjoia3ViZXJuZXRlcyIsImV4cCI6MTQ4MzU0OTUxMSwianRpIjoiMm96US15TXdFcHV4WDlHZUhQdy1hZyIsImlhdCI6MTQ4MzU0OTQ1MSwibmJmIjoxNDgzNTQ5MzMxLCJzdWIiOiI0YWViMzdiYS1iNjQ1LTQ4ZmQtYWIzMC0xYTAxZWU0MWUyMTgifQ.w6p4J_6qQ1HzTG9nrEOrubxIMb9K5hzcMPxc9IxPx2K4xO9l-oFiUw93daH3m5pluP6K7eOE6txBuRVfEcpJSwlelsOsW8gb8VJcnzMS9EnZpeA0tW_p-mnkFc3VcfyXuhe5R3G7aa5d8uHv70yJ9Y3-UhjiN9EhpMdfPAoEB9fYKKkJRzF7utTTIPGrSaSU6d2pcpfYKaxIwePzEkT4DfcQthoZdy9ucNvvLoi1DIC-UocFD8HLs8LYKEqSxQvOcvnThbObJ9af71EwmuE21fO5KzMW20KtAeget1gnldOosPtz1G5EwvaQ401-RPQzPGMVBld0_zMCAwZttJ4knw
idp-certificate-authority: /root/ca.pem
idp-issuer-url: https://oidcidp.tremolo.lan:8443/auth/idp/OidcIdP
refresh-token: q1bKLFOyUiosTfawzA93TzZIDzH2TNa2SMm0zEiPKTUwME6BkEo6Sql5yUWVBSWpKUGphaWpxSVAfekBOZbBhaEW+VlFUeVRGcluyVF5JT4+haZmPsluFoFu5XkpXk5BXq
name: oidc
Once your id_token
expires, kubectl
will attempt to refresh your id_token
using your refresh_token
and client_secret
storing the new values for the refresh_token
and id_token
in your .kube/config
.
--token
OptionThe kubectl
command lets you pass in a token using the --token
option. Simply copy and paste the id_token
into this option:
kubectl --token=eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiJ9.eyJpc3MiOiJodHRwczovL21sYi50cmVtb2xvLmxhbjo4MDQzL2F1dGgvaWRwL29pZGMiLCJhdWQiOiJrdWJlcm5ldGVzIiwiZXhwIjoxNDc0NTk2NjY5LCJqdGkiOiI2RDUzNXoxUEpFNjJOR3QxaWVyYm9RIiwiaWF0IjoxNDc0NTk2MzY5LCJuYmYiOjE0NzQ1OTYyNDksInN1YiI6Im13aW5kdSIsInVzZXJfcm9sZSI6WyJ1c2VycyIsIm5ldy1uYW1lc3BhY2Utdmlld2VyIl0sImVtYWlsIjoibXdpbmR1QG5vbW9yZWplZGkuY29tIn0.f2As579n9VNoaKzoF-dOQGmXkFKf1FMyNV0-va_B63jn-_n9LGSCca_6IVMP8pO-Zb4KvRqGyTP0r3HkHxYy5c81AnIh8ijarruczl-TK_yF5akjSTHFZD-0gRzlevBDiH8Q79NAr-ky0P4iIXS8lY9Vnjch5MF74Zx0c3alKJHJUnnpjIACByfF2SCaYzbWFMUNat-K1PaUk5-ujMBG7yYnr95xD-63n8CO8teGUAAEMx6zRjzfhnhbzX-ajwZLGwGUBT4WqjMs70-6a7_8gZmLZb2az1cZynkFRj2BaCkVT3A2RrjeEwZEtGXlMqKJ1_I2ulrOVsYx01_yD35-rw get nodes
Webhook authentication is a hook for verifying bearer tokens.
--authentication-token-webhook-config-file
a configuration file describing how to access the remote webhook service.--authentication-token-webhook-cache-ttl
how long to cache authentication decisions. Defaults to two minutes.The configuration file uses the kubeconfig
file format. Within the file, clusters
refers to the remote service and
users
refers to the API server webhook. An example would be:
# Kubernetes API version
apiVersion: v1
# kind of the API object
kind: Config
# clusters refers to the remote service.
clusters:
- name: name-of-remote-authn-service
cluster:
certificate-authority: /path/to/ca.pem # CA for verifying the remote service.
server: https://authn.example.com/authenticate # URL of remote service to query. Must use 'https'.
# users refers to the API server's webhook configuration.
users:
- name: name-of-api-server
user:
client-certificate: /path/to/cert.pem # cert for the webhook plugin to use
client-key: /path/to/key.pem # key matching the cert
# kubeconfig files require a context. Provide one for the API server.
current-context: webhook
contexts:
- context:
cluster: name-of-remote-authn-service
user: name-of-api-sever
name: webhook
When a client attempts to authenticate with the API server using a bearer token
as discussed above,
the authentication webhook POSTs a JSON-serialized authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1
TokenReview
object containing the token
to the remote service. Kubernetes will not challenge a request that lacks such a header.
Note that webhook API objects are subject to the same versioning compatibility rules
as other Kubernetes API objects. Implementers should be aware of looser
compatibility promises for beta objects and check the “apiVersion” field of the
request to ensure correct deserialization. Additionally, the API server must
enable the authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1
API extensions group (--runtime-config=authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1=true
).
The POST body will be of the following format:
{
"apiVersion": "authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "TokenReview",
"spec": {
"token": "(BEARERTOKEN)"
}
}
The remote service is expected to fill the status
field of
the request to indicate the success of the login. The response body’s spec
field is ignored and may be omitted. A successful validation of the bearer
token would return:
{
"apiVersion": "authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "TokenReview",
"status": {
"authenticated": true,
"user": {
"username": "janedoe@example.com",
"uid": "42",
"groups": [
"developers",
"qa"
],
"extra": {
"extrafield1": [
"extravalue1",
"extravalue2"
]
}
}
}
}
An unsuccessful request would return:
{
"apiVersion": "authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "TokenReview",
"status": {
"authenticated": false
}
}
HTTP status codes can be used to supply additional error context.
The API server can be configured to identify users from request header values, such as X-Remote-User
.
It is designed for use in combination with an authenticating proxy, which sets the request header value.
--requestheader-username-headers
Required, case-insensitive. Header names to check, in order, for the user identity. The first header containing a value is used as the username.--requestheader-group-headers
1.6+. Optional, case-insensitive. “X-Remote-Group” is suggested. Header names to check, in order, for the user’s groups. All values in all specified headers are used as group names.--requestheader-extra-headers-prefix
1.6+. Optional, case-insensitive. “X-Remote-Extra-” is suggested. Header prefixes to look for to determine extra information about the user (typically used by the configured authorization plugin). Any headers beginning with any of the specified prefixes have the prefix removed. The remainder of the header name is lowercased and percent-decoded and becomes the extra key, and the header value is the extra value.Note: Prior to 1.11.3 (and 1.10.7, 1.9.11), the extra key could only contain characters which were legal in HTTP header labels.
For example, with this configuration:
--requestheader-username-headers=X-Remote-User
--requestheader-group-headers=X-Remote-Group
--requestheader-extra-headers-prefix=X-Remote-Extra-
this request:
GET / HTTP/1.1
X-Remote-User: fido
X-Remote-Group: dogs
X-Remote-Group: dachshunds
X-Remote-Extra-Acme.com%2Fproject: some-project
X-Remote-Extra-Scopes: openid
X-Remote-Extra-Scopes: profile
would result in this user info:
name: fido
groups:
- dogs
- dachshunds
extra:
acme.com/project:
- some-project
scopes:
- openid
- profile
In order to prevent header spoofing, the authenticating proxy is required to present a valid client certificate to the API server for validation against the specified CA before the request headers are checked. WARNING: do not reuse a CA that is used in a different context unless you understand the risks and the mechanisms to protect the CA’s usage.
--requestheader-client-ca-file
Required. PEM-encoded certificate bundle. A valid client certificate must be presented and validated against the certificate authorities in the specified file before the request headers are checked for user names.--requestheader-allowed-names
Optional. List of Common Name values (CNs). If set, a valid client certificate with a CN in the specified list must be presented before the request headers are checked for user names. If empty, any CN is allowed.When enabled, requests that are not rejected by other configured authentication methods are
treated as anonymous requests, and given a username of system:anonymous
and a group of
system:unauthenticated
.
For example, on a server with token authentication configured, and anonymous access enabled,
a request providing an invalid bearer token would receive a 401 Unauthorized
error.
A request providing no bearer token would be treated as an anonymous request.
In 1.5.1-1.5.x, anonymous access is disabled by default, and can be enabled by
passing the --anonymous-auth=true
option to the API server.
In 1.6+, anonymous access is enabled by default if an authorization mode other than AlwaysAllow
is used, and can be disabled by passing the --anonymous-auth=false
option to the API server.
Starting in 1.6, the ABAC and RBAC authorizers require explicit authorization of the
system:anonymous
user or the system:unauthenticated
group, so legacy policy rules
that grant access to the *
user or *
group do not include anonymous users.
A user can act as another user through impersonation headers. These let requests manually override the user info a request authenticates as. For example, an admin could use this feature to debug an authorization policy by temporarily impersonating another user and seeing if a request was denied.
Impersonation requests first authenticate as the requesting user, then switch to the impersonated user info.
The following HTTP headers can be used to performing an impersonation request:
Impersonate-User
: The username to act as.Impersonate-Group
: A group name to act as. Can be provided multiple times to set multiple groups. Optional. Requires “Impersonate-User”Impersonate-Extra-( extra name )
: A dynamic header used to associate extra fields with the user. Optional. Requires “Impersonate-User”. In order to be preserved consistently, ( extra name )
should be lower-case, and any characters which aren’t legal in HTTP header labels MUST be utf8 and percent-encoded.Note: Prior to 1.11.3 (and 1.10.7, 1.9.11),( extra name )
could only contain characters which were legal in HTTP header labels.
An example set of headers:
Impersonate-User: jane.doe@example.com
Impersonate-Group: developers
Impersonate-Group: admins
Impersonate-Extra-dn: cn=jane,ou=engineers,dc=example,dc=com
Impersonate-Extra-acme.com%2Fproject: some-project
Impersonate-Extra-scopes: view
Impersonate-Extra-scopes: development
When using kubectl
set the --as
flag to configure the Impersonate-User
header, set the --as-group
flag to configure the Impersonate-Group
header.
kubectl drain mynode
Error from server (Forbidden): User "clark" cannot get nodes at the cluster scope. (get nodes mynode)
Set the --as
and --as-group
flag:
kubectl drain mynode --as=superman --as-group=system:masters
node/mynode cordoned
node/mynode drained
To impersonate a user, group, or set extra fields, the impersonating user must have the ability to perform the “impersonate” verb on the kind of attribute being impersonated (“user”, “group”, etc.). For clusters that enable the RBAC authorization plugin, the following ClusterRole encompasses the rules needed to set user and group impersonation headers:
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
name: impersonator
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["users", "groups", "serviceaccounts"]
verbs: ["impersonate"]
Extra fields are evaluated as sub-resources of the resource “userextras”. To allow a user to use impersonation headers for the extra field “scopes,” a user should be granted the following role:
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
name: scopes-impersonator
rules:
# Can set "Impersonate-Extra-scopes" header.
- apiGroups: ["authentication.k8s.io"]
resources: ["userextras/scopes"]
verbs: ["impersonate"]
The values of impersonation headers can also be restricted by limiting the set
of resourceNames
a resource can take.
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
name: limited-impersonator
rules:
# Can impersonate the user "jane.doe@example.com"
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["users"]
verbs: ["impersonate"]
resourceNames: ["jane.doe@example.com"]
# Can impersonate the groups "developers" and "admins"
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["groups"]
verbs: ["impersonate"]
resourceNames: ["developers","admins"]
# Can impersonate the extras field "scopes" with the values "view" and "development"
- apiGroups: ["authentication.k8s.io"]
resources: ["userextras/scopes"]
verbs: ["impersonate"]
resourceNames: ["view", "development"]
Kubernetes v1.11
beta
k8s.io/client-go
and tools using it such as kubectl
and kubelet
are able to execute an
external command to receive user credentials.
This feature is intended for client side integrations with authentication protocols not natively
supported by k8s.io/client-go
(LDAP, Kerberos, OAuth2, SAML, etc.). The plugin implements the
protocol specific logic, then returns opaque credentials to use. Almost all credential plugin
use cases require a server side component with support for the webhook token authenticator
to interpret the credential format produced by the client plugin.
In a hypothetical use case, an organization would run an external service that exchanges LDAP credentials for user specific, signed tokens. The service would also be capable of responding to webhook token authenticator requests to validate the tokens. Users would be required to install a credential plugin on their workstation.
To authenticate against the API:
kubectl
command.TokenReview
to the external service.Credential plugins are configured through kubectl config files as part of the user fields.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Config
users:
- name: my-user
user:
exec:
# Command to execute. Required.
command: "example-client-go-exec-plugin"
# API version to use when decoding the ExecCredentials resource. Required.
#
# The API version returned by the plugin MUST match the version listed here.
#
# To integrate with tools that support multiple versions (such as client.authentication.k8s.io/v1alpha1),
# set an environment variable or pass an argument to the tool that indicates which version the exec plugin expects.
apiVersion: "client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1"
# Environment variables to set when executing the plugin. Optional.
env:
- name: "FOO"
value: "bar"
# Arguments to pass when executing the plugin. Optional.
args:
- "arg1"
- "arg2"
clusters:
- name: my-cluster
cluster:
server: "https://172.17.4.100:6443"
certificate-authority: "/etc/kubernetes/ca.pem"
contexts:
- name: my-cluster
context:
cluster: my-cluster
user: my-user
current-context: my-cluster
Relative command paths are interpreted as relative to the directory of the config file. If
KUBECONFIG is set to /home/jane/kubeconfig
and the exec command is ./bin/example-client-go-exec-plugin
,
the binary /home/jane/bin/example-client-go-exec-plugin
is executed.
- name: my-user
user:
exec:
# Path relative to the directory of the kubeconfig
command: "./bin/example-client-go-exec-plugin"
apiVersion: "client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1"
The executed command prints an ExecCredential
object to stdout
. k8s.io/client-go
authenticates against the Kubernetes API using the returned credentials in the status
.
When run from an interactive session, stdin
is exposed directly to the plugin. Plugins should use a
TTY check to determine if it’s
appropriate to prompt a user interactively.
To use bearer token credentials, the plugin returns a token in the status of the ExecCredential
.
{
"apiVersion": "client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "ExecCredential",
"status": {
"token": "my-bearer-token"
}
}
Alternatively, a PEM-encoded client certificate and key can be returned to use TLS client auth.
If the plugin returns a different certificate and key on a subsequent call, k8s.io/client-go
will close existing connections with the server to force a new TLS handshake.
If specified, clientKeyData
and clientCertificateData
must both must be present.
clientCertificateData
may contain additional intermediate certificates to send to the server.
{
"apiVersion": "client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "ExecCredential",
"status": {
"clientCertificateData": "-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----\n...\n-----END CERTIFICATE-----",
"clientKeyData": "-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----\n...\n-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----"
}
}
Optionally, the response can include the expiry of the credential formatted as a RFC3339 timestamp. Presence or absence of an expiry has the following impact:
If an expiry is omitted, the bearer token and TLS credentials are cached until the server responds with a 401 HTTP status code or until the process exits.
{
"apiVersion": "client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1",
"kind": "ExecCredential",
"status": {
"token": "my-bearer-token",
"expirationTimestamp": "2018-03-05T17:30:20-08:00"
}
}
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