« Keystone with OpenID Connect » : différence entre les versions

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(Une version intermédiaire par le même utilisateur non affichée)
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=== Configuration ===
=== Configuration ===


* Follow instructions found at https://docs.openstack.org/kolla-ansible/latest/contributor/setup-identity-provider.html#configuring-kolla-ansible-to-use-the-identity-provider (''client_secret'' can be a random string as ''public'' was selected for the Keycloak client access type)
* Follow instructions found at https://docs.openstack.org/kolla-ansible/latest/contributor/setup-identity-provider.html#configuring-kolla-ansible-to-use-the-identity-provider (''client_secret'' can be a random string as ''Client authentication'' and ''Authorization'' are off for the Keycloak client)
* Replace ''new_realm'' with the actual keycloak realm ('''cloud.ld''' in this guide)
* Replace ''new_realm'' with the actual keycloak realm ('''cloud.ld''' in this guide)
* As a result, here is a ''globals.yml'' example settings for ''keystone_identity_providers'' :
* As a result, here is a ''globals.yml'' example settings for ''keystone_identity_providers'' :
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<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
kolla-ansible deploy -i multinode --tags keystone
$ kolla-ansible deploy -i multinode --tags keystone
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


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<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
openstack group create --domain cloud.ld teria
$ openstack group create --domain cloud.ld teria
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


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<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
openstack project create --description 'Teria' --domain cloud.ld teria
$ openstack project create --description 'Teria' --domain cloud.ld teria
openstack role add --group teria --project teria member
$ openstack role add --group teria --project teria member
</syntaxhighlight>
</syntaxhighlight>


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export OS_ACCESS_TOKEN_ENDPOINT=https://sso.paris.ld/auth/realms/cloud.ld/protocol/openid-connect/token
export OS_ACCESS_TOKEN_ENDPOINT=https://sso.paris.ld/auth/realms/cloud.ld/protocol/openid-connect/token


openstack user show chris
$ openstack user show chris
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Field              | Value                                                                                    |
| Field              | Value                                                                                    |
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<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
<syntaxhighlight lang="bash">
cat > testrc << 'EOF'
$ cat > testrc << 'EOF'
#!/usr/bin/env bash
#!/usr/bin/env bash
_output=$(mktemp)
_output=$(mktemp)
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EOF
EOF


source testrc
$ source testrc


To authenticate please go to: https://sso.paris.ld/realms/cloud.ld/device?user_code=UWSY-YHZL
To authenticate please go to: https://sso.paris.ld/realms/cloud.ld/device?user_code=UWSY-YHZL
<TOKEN>
<TOKEN>


openstack user show chris
$ openstack user show chris
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Field              | Value                                                                                    |
| Field              | Value                                                                                    |

Dernière version du 16 octobre 2024 à 15:17

Configure an external Keycloak to provide authentication for Keystone
The objective is to identify users and allow them to find their projects in Openstack.

Keycloak client and user configuration

This guide assumes you already have a working Keycloak server with a realm named cloud.ld.
What is covered here is how to :

  • create a client in Keycloak for Keystone
  • configure this client
  • creation of groups (one Keycloak group per Openstack project)
  • create a user

Client creation and settings

  • Got to your Keycloak admin console and configure a new client (click Create)
Keycloak admin console
  • Let's assume your client is named Keystone
    • Leave Root URL & Home URL empty
    • The FQDN for Valid Redirect URIs should match the value of kolla_external_fqdn. If your kolla_internal_fqdn is par1.cloud.ld, then your Valid Redirect URIs should be https://par1.cloud.ld:5000/redirect_uri. You can also add the URI of your Horizon dashboard
    • Client authentication and Authorization must be off
    • Standard Flow Enabled, Implicit Flow Enabled and Direct Access Grants Enabled must be on. OAuth 2.0 Device Authorization Grant is optional
    • In advanced settings, choose S256 for Proof Key for Code Exchange Code Challenge Method (required for PKCE)
Keycloak client access settings
Keycloak client capability config
Keycloak client advanced settings

Client mappers

Add the following mappers to the new client :

  • groups via Add mapper -> By configuration button and select Group Membership. (cf below for configuration details)
  • email via Add mapper -> From predifined mappers button and select email
  • username via Add mapper -> From predifined mappers button and select username
Keycloak client mappers
Keycloak client, Group Membership

Creation of groups

One Keycloak group is created per Openstack project (Manage -> Groups).

Creation of user

Create one user, fill its username, email and affect one (or more) group(s) to this user (Manage -> Users).

Kolla-ansible configuration and deployment

Configuration

keystone_identity_providers:
  - name: "cloud.ld"
    openstack_domain: "cloud.ld"
    protocol: "openid"
    identifier: "https://sso.paris.ld/auth/realms/cloud.ld"
    public_name: "Authenticate via cloud.ld"
    attribute_mapping: "attribute_mapping_keycloak_cloud_ld"
    metadata_folder: "/etc/keycloak/meta-idp"
    certificate_file: "/etc/keycloak/certs/LdJnukYBN53JwEI8A-ITtmkW-544_RZe-jvQ0q0NCUGk.pem"
keystone_identity_mappings:
  - name: "attribute_mapping_keycloak_cloud_ld"
    file: "/etc/keycloak/attr_map/attribute_mapping.json"
keystone_federation_oidc_jwks_uri: "https://sso.paris.ld/auth/realms/cloud.ld/protocol/openid-connect/certs"
  • Use the following attribute mapping file (attribute_mapping.json) :
[
  {
    "local": [
      {
        "user": {
          "name": "{0}",
          "email": "{1}",
          "domain": {
            "name": "cloud.ld"
          }
        }
      },
      {
        "groups": "{2}",
        "domain": {
          "name": "cloud.ld"
        }
      }
    ],
    "remote": [
      {
        "type": "OIDC-preferred_username"
      },
      {
        "type": "OIDC-email"
      },
      {
        "type": "OIDC-groups"
      }
    ]
  }
]

Redeploy Keystone

With kolla-ansible configured, this is done with :

$ kolla-ansible deploy -i multinode --tags keystone

Patch keystone containers

This is the ugliest part... From Kolla Keystone containers (quay.io/openstack.kolla/keystone:2023.2-rocky-9), using openstack-cli with OpenID connect does not work and results in HTTP 502 errors ...
Apache in these containers is crashing (segfault) as soon as you run an openstack-cli command with OpenID connect.
The solution is to upgrade mod_auth_openidc in these containers to a more recent version (e.g. 2.4.15).
You can grab the RPM from https://github.com/OpenIDC/mod_auth_openidc/releases ; be careful, hiredis is a required dependency (you can grab it from https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/9/Everything/x86_64/Packages/h/hiredis-1.0.2-1.el9.x86_64.rpm)
So ... For each keystone container :

docker cp mod_auth_openidc-2.4.15.1-1.el9.x86_64.rpm keystone:/tmp
docker cp hiredis-1.0.2-1.el9.x86_64.rpm keystone:/tmp
docker exec -it -u root keystone yum -y localinstall /tmp/hiredis-1.0.2-1.el9.x86_64.rpm
docker exec -it -u root keystone yum -y upgrade /tmp/mod_auth_openidc-2.4.15.1-1.el9.x86_64.rpm
docker exec -it -u root keystone rm -f /tmp/*.rpm
docker restart keystone

Openstack group and project configuration

As explained above, Keycloak users are mapped to specific groups and these groups correspond to projects in Openstack.

Group creation

Let's create a group named teria :

$ openstack group create --domain cloud.ld teria

Project creation and project affectation

A project named teria is created with the group teria as member.

$ openstack project create --description 'Teria' --domain cloud.ld teria
$ openstack role add --group teria --project teria member

Test !

AUTH_TYPE v3oidcpassword

v3oidcpassword requires entering the user's Keycloak password

export OS_AUTH_URL=https://auth.cloud.ld:13000/v3
export OS_PROJECT_NAME="teria"
export OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME="cloud.ld"
export OS_USERNAME="chris"
export OS_PASSWORD=<Keycloak_user_chris_password>
export OS_INTERFACE=public
export OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=3
export OS_CACERT=/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt
export OS_AUTH_TYPE=v3oidcpassword
export OS_CLIENT_ID=keystone
export OS_CLIENT_SECRET=<some_random_string_can_be_null>
export OS_IDENTITY_PROVIDER=cloud.ld
export OS_PROTOCOL=openid
export OS_ACCESS_TOKEN_ENDPOINT=https://sso.paris.ld/auth/realms/cloud.ld/protocol/openid-connect/token

$ openstack user show chris
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Field               | Value                                                                                    |
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| domain_id           | 09badf2ac3cf4486bac93e02fc3d73d7                                                         |
| email               | chris@cloud.ld                                                                           |
| enabled             | True                                                                                     |
| federated           | [{'idp_id': 'cloud.ld', 'protocols': [{'protocol_id': 'openid', 'unique_id': 'chris'}]}] |
| id                  | 1029524718feb03078319e57ebfa4e7051787f8dd3ec3cce215e5c44cdab09bb                         |
| name                | chris                                                                                    |
| options             | {}                                                                                       |
| password_expires_at | None                                                                                     |
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+

AUTH_TYPE v3oidcdeviceauthz

With this method, a URL is offered to the user. When the URL is opened in a web browser, the user identifies themselves via Keycloak then a Keystone token (with a validity of 24 hours) is given in the shell

$ cat > testrc << 'EOF'
#!/usr/bin/env bash
_output=$(mktemp)
export OS_AUTH_URL=https://auth.cloud.ld:13000
export OS_IDENTITY_API_VERSION=3
export OS_CACERT=/etc/pki/tls/certs/ca-bundle.crt
export OS_PROJECT_NAME="teria"
export OS_PROJECT_DOMAIN_NAME="cloud.ld"
export OS_AUTH_TYPE="v3token"
unset OS_TOKEN
$(which python3) -u $(which openstack) token issue -f value -c id \
--os-auth-type v3oidcdeviceauthz \
--os-identity-provider cloud.ld \
--os-protocol openid \
--os-discovery-endpoint https://sso.paris.ld/realms/cloud.ld/.well-known/openid-configuration \
--os-client-id keystone \
--os-code-challenge-method 'S256' | tee -a $_output
if [ -s $_output ]; then
  export OS_TOKEN=$(tail -1 $_output) 
fi
rm -f $_output
EOF

$ source testrc

To authenticate please go to: https://sso.paris.ld/realms/cloud.ld/device?user_code=UWSY-YHZL
<TOKEN>

$ openstack user show chris
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| Field               | Value                                                                                    |
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+
| domain_id           | 09badf2ac3cf4486bac93e02fc3d73d7                                                         |
| email               | chris@cloud.ld                                                                           |
| enabled             | True                                                                                     |
| federated           | [{'idp_id': 'cloud.ld', 'protocols': [{'protocol_id': 'openid', 'unique_id': 'chris'}]}] |
| id                  | 1029524718feb03078319e57ebfa4e7051787f8dd3ec3cce215e5c44cdab09bb                         |
| name                | chris                                                                                    |
| options             | {}                                                                                       |
| password_expires_at | None                                                                                     |
+---------------------+------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------+