Configuring a basic authentication identity provider
- About identity providers in OKD
- About basic authentication
- Creating the secret
- Creating a config map
- Sample basic authentication CR
- Adding an identity provider to your clusters
- Example Apache HTTPD configuration for basic identity providers
- Basic authentication troubleshooting
Configure a basic-authentication
identity provider for users to log in to OKD with credentials validated against a remote identity provider. Basic authentication is a generic back-end integration mechanism.
About identity providers in OKD
By default, only a kubeadmin
user exists on your cluster. To specify an identity provider, you must create a custom resource (CR) that describes that identity provider and add it to the cluster.
OKD user names containing |
About basic authentication
Basic authentication is a generic back-end integration mechanism that allows users to log in to OKD with credentials validated against a remote identity provider.
Because basic authentication is generic, you can use this identity provider for advanced authentication configurations.
Basic authentication must use an HTTPS connection to the remote server to prevent potential snooping of the user ID and password and man-in-the-middle attacks. |
With basic authentication configured, users send their user name and password to OKD, which then validates those credentials against a remote server by making a server-to-server request, passing the credentials as a basic authentication header. This requires users to send their credentials to OKD during login.
This only works for user name/password login mechanisms, and OKD must be able to make network requests to the remote authentication server. |
User names and passwords are validated against a remote URL that is protected by basic authentication and returns JSON.
A 401
response indicates failed authentication.
A non-200
status, or the presence of a non-empty “error” key, indicates an error:
{"error":"Error message"}
A 200
status with a sub
(subject) key indicates success:
{"sub":"userid"} (1)
1 | The subject must be unique to the authenticated user and must not be able to be modified. |
A successful response can optionally provide additional data, such as:
A display name using the
name
key. For example:{"sub":"userid", "name": "User Name", ...}
An email address using the
email
key. For example:{"sub":"userid", "email":"user@example.com", ...}
A preferred user name using the
preferred_username
key. This is useful when the unique, unchangeable subject is a database key or UID, and a more human-readable name exists. This is used as a hint when provisioning the OKD user for the authenticated identity. For example:{"sub":"014fbff9a07c", "preferred_username":"bob", ...}
Creating the secret
Identity providers use OKD Secret
objects in the openshift-config
namespace to contain the client secret, client certificates, and keys.
Procedure
Create a
Secret
object that contains the key and certificate by using the following command:$ oc create secret tls <secret_name> --key=key.pem --cert=cert.pem -n openshift-config
You can alternatively apply the following YAML to create the secret:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: <secret_name>
namespace: openshift-config
type: kubernetes.io/tls
data:
tls.crt: <base64_encoded_cert>
tls.key: <base64_encoded_key>
Creating a config map
Identity providers use OKD ConfigMap
objects in the openshift-config
namespace to contain the certificate authority bundle. These are primarily used to contain certificate bundles needed by the identity provider.
Procedure
Define an OKD
ConfigMap
object containing the certificate authority by using the following command. The certificate authority must be stored in theca.crt
key of theConfigMap
object.$ oc create configmap ca-config-map --from-file=ca.crt=/path/to/ca -n openshift-config
You can alternatively apply the following YAML to create the config map:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: ca-config-map
namespace: openshift-config
type: Opaque
data:
ca.crt: |
<CA_certificate_PEM>
Sample basic authentication CR
The following custom resource (CR) shows the parameters and acceptable values for a basic authentication identity provider.
Basic authentication CR
apiVersion: config.openshift.io/v1
kind: OAuth
metadata:
name: cluster
spec:
identityProviders:
- name: basicidp (1)
mappingMethod: claim (2)
type: BasicAuth
basicAuth:
url: https://www.example.com/remote-idp (3)
ca: (4)
name: ca-config-map
tlsClientCert: (5)
name: client-cert-secret
tlsClientKey: (6)
name: client-key-secret
1 | This provider name is prefixed to the returned user ID to form an identity name. |
2 | Controls how mappings are established between this provider’s identities and User objects. |
3 | URL accepting credentials in Basic authentication headers. |
4 | Optional: Reference to an OKD ConfigMap object containing the PEM-encoded certificate authority bundle to use in validating server certificates for the configured URL. |
5 | Optional: Reference to an OKD Secret object containing the client certificate to present when making requests to the configured URL. |
6 | Reference to an OKD Secret object containing the key for the client certificate. Required if tlsClientCert is specified. |
Additional resources
- See Identity provider parameters for information on parameters, such as
mappingMethod
, that are common to all identity providers.
Adding an identity provider to your clusters
After you install your cluster, add an identity provider to it so your users can authenticate.
Prerequisites
Create an OKD cluster.
Create the custom resource (CR) for your identity providers.
You must be logged in as an administrator.
Procedure
Apply the defined CR:
$ oc apply -f </path/to/CR>
If a CR does not exist,
oc apply
creates a new CR and might trigger the following warning:Warning: oc apply should be used on resources created by either oc create —save-config or oc apply
. In this case you can safely ignore this warning.Log in to the cluster as a user from your identity provider, entering the password when prompted.
$ oc login -u <username>
Confirm that the user logged in successfully, and display the user name.
$ oc whoami
Example Apache HTTPD configuration for basic identity providers
The basic identify provider (IDP) configuration in OKD 4 requires that the IDP server respond with JSON for success and failures. You can use CGI scripting in Apache HTTPD to accomplish this. This section provides examples.
Example /etc/httpd/conf.d/login.conf
<VirtualHost *:443>
# CGI Scripts in here
DocumentRoot /var/www/cgi-bin
# SSL Directives
SSLEngine on
SSLCipherSuite PROFILE=SYSTEM
SSLProxyCipherSuite PROFILE=SYSTEM
SSLCertificateFile /etc/pki/tls/certs/localhost.crt
SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/pki/tls/private/localhost.key
# Configure HTTPD to execute scripts
ScriptAlias /basic /var/www/cgi-bin
# Handles a failed login attempt
ErrorDocument 401 /basic/fail.cgi
# Handles authentication
<Location /basic/login.cgi>
AuthType Basic
AuthName "Please Log In"
AuthBasicProvider file
AuthUserFile /etc/httpd/conf/passwords
Require valid-user
</Location>
</VirtualHost>
Example /var/www/cgi-bin/login.cgi
#!/bin/bash
echo "Content-Type: application/json"
echo ""
echo '{"sub":"userid", "name":"'$REMOTE_USER'"}'
exit 0
Example /var/www/cgi-bin/fail.cgi
#!/bin/bash
echo "Content-Type: application/json"
echo ""
echo '{"error": "Login failure"}'
exit 0
File requirements
These are the requirements for the files you create on an Apache HTTPD web server:
login.cgi
andfail.cgi
must be executable (chmod +x
).login.cgi
andfail.cgi
must have proper SELinux contexts if SELinux is enabled:restorecon -RFv /var/www/cgi-bin
, or ensure that the context ishttpd_sys_script_exec_t
usingls -laZ
.login.cgi
is only executed if your user successfully logs in perRequire and Auth
directives.fail.cgi
is executed if the user fails to log in, resulting in anHTTP 401
response.
Basic authentication troubleshooting
The most common issue relates to network connectivity to the backend server. For simple debugging, run curl
commands on the master. To test for a successful login, replace the <user>
and <password>
in the following example command with valid credentials. To test an invalid login, replace them with false credentials.
$ curl --cacert /path/to/ca.crt --cert /path/to/client.crt --key /path/to/client.key -u <user>:<password> -v https://www.example.com/remote-idp
Successful responses
A 200
status with a sub
(subject) key indicates success:
{"sub":"userid"}
The subject must be unique to the authenticated user, and must not be able to be modified.
A successful response can optionally provide additional data, such as:
A display name using the
name
key:{"sub":"userid", "name": "User Name", ...}
An email address using the
email
key:{"sub":"userid", "email":"user@example.com", ...}
A preferred user name using the
preferred_username
key:{"sub":"014fbff9a07c", "preferred_username":"bob", ...}
The
preferred_username
key is useful when the unique, unchangeable subject is a database key or UID, and a more human-readable name exists. This is used as a hint when provisioning the OKD user for the authenticated identity.
Failed responses
A
401
response indicates failed authentication.A non-
200
status or the presence of a non-empty “error” key indicates an error:{"error":"Error message"}