[openstack-dev] [keystone] Inherited domain roles

David Chadwick d.w.chadwick at kent.ac.uk
Wed Jun 19 19:56:10 UTC 2013


hI Henry

looking to the ICEy future, would the following work (and be simpler)?

On 19/06/2013 16:47, Henry Nash wrote:
> Hi
>
> So I don't doubt there are many ways of articulating the targeted
> objects - and a more comprehensive solution might involve the mapping
> you mention (although that's definitely not a Havana discussion!).
>
> We do, however, have an existing serious hole in our current apis &
> policy protection that limits the ability of a cloud provider to
> delegate admin responsibility for a domain to a customer,

There is a specific role created for that domain, call it adminX, and 
this role is assigned to the customer

  while still
> ensuring they maintain certain roles over all projects created in

not sure what you mean by maintain certain roles. Do you mean administer 
the roles in the domain? and if so, CRUD the roles or only 
assign/de-assign users to roles.

> that customer domain (without the ability of the customer admin
> removing them!).

So the privilege that is NOT assigned to role adminX is to delete 
certain roles, but the privilege to assign and remove users from these 
roles is given to it.

The privilege to CRUD these certain roles remains with the cloud 
provider role, whilst adminX can crud other roles.

I am trying to understand your use case so as to try to design a cleaner 
model for it

regards

David

  This is the use case I am trying to solve first and
> foremost.  This is a subset of the general problem, and using the
> domain as the container to specify applying to all current and future
> projects (which I call inheritance) is, I believe, the most
> appropriate.  However, as we agreed, this should be an extension,
> since we are likely to settle on a more comprehensive re-write of
> these APIs for IceHouse.
>
> As per the keystone IRC meeting, I have now done the following:
>
> 1) Removed all mention of multiple target objects (and hence
> inheritance) from the newly proposed GET /role-assignment API (that
> replaces the various broken ones we have removed from the spec).
> This updated API is now available for review at:
> https://review.openstack.org/#/c/32394/8
>
> 2) Moved the "inherit roles from parent domain" extension to role
> assignment setting to an extension.  This API is available for review
> at: https://review.openstack.org/#/c/29781/15
>
> I think this is a good way to proceed, unless anyone has significant
> objections.
>
> Henry On 19 Jun 2013, at 15:36, Adam Young wrote:
>
>> The more I think about it, the more I think that tying the
>> inheritance to the domain assignment is the wrong solution.
>>
>> David/Kristy originally had the Mapping blueprint and patch.  It
>> contained the ability to provide arbitrary rules for mapping from
>> the identity attributes to the roles.  I think that it is time to
>> implement that.
>>
>> It would be more correct to say that all users in a specific group
>> (fetched out of Identity/LDAP) would get a specific role in a
>> project than to say that a user with a domain role should therefore
>> inherit a role in all projects.
>>
>> When creating a scoped token, we need to query a subset of the
>> users identity information.  I think that the right direction for
>> this query to flow would be:
>>
>> project->roles->role-mappings->groups
>>
>> as opposed to what we do now, which is to do a global query: give
>> me all groups for this user and select which ones apply.  For
>> LDAP/SQL Identity backends we want to trigger the miniaml query
>> which is "let me know if the user is in groups G1, G2, G3..."  as
>> those are the groups that potentially apply to role assignments for
>> this project.
>>
>>
>> So I'd like to redefine the problem definition here:
>>
>> "Provide a mechanism by which role assignments can be specified for
>> more than one project."  One such rule would obviously be "all
>> projects in  domain D1"
>>
>> But it should be based on groups, not on domain role assignments.
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> On 06/10/2013 11:41 AM, David Chadwick wrote:
>>>
>>>
>>> On 10/06/2013 16:02, Henry Nash wrote:
>>>> Hi David,
>>>>
>>>> I wasn't suggesting that we encode "inhertitness" in the name,
>>>> just that if you want to have a role that is non-inherited and
>>>> one that is inherited that relate to the same type of
>>>> permission, then since role name must be globally unique, then
>>>> the two roles must have different names....hence potentially
>>>> leading to the complication in the policy file.
>>>
>>> I dont see why different role names would lead to complications
>>> in the policy file, since policies are there to assign different
>>> permissions to different roles.
>>>
>>> What can happen is that policy files can get very large and
>>> complex, but that can happen regardless of whether roles are
>>> inherited or not, and mistakes can be made by assigning the wrong
>>> roles to users or the wrong permissions to roles, but again this
>>> is independent of the role definition.
>>>
>>> regards
>>>
>>> David
>>>>
>>>> Henry On 10 Jun 2013, at 15:57, David Chadwick wrote:
>>>>
>>>>> Hi Henry
>>>>>
>>>>> on the definition of inherited roles, I dont think this
>>>>> should be part of the role name, but rather, each role should
>>>>> have meta information attached to it, in its role table
>>>>> definition, that indicates the properties of the role
>>>>> definition. In this way, you can make the role definition
>>>>> extensible by adding new columns to the table as and when
>>>>> needed e.g. if in future you want to have global roles
>>>>> inherited by domains, you add a new column, say
>>>>> GlobalToDomain, which could be a boolean with a default value
>>>>> of false, and with a value true indicating that it is
>>>>> inherited from global to domain. All pre-existing roles would
>>>>> not be of this type, and therefore all pre-existing code
>>>>> would work without this new inheritance.
>>>>>
>>>>> I would not alter the role-user assignment API as this
>>>>> should simply specify the role and user and project. The code
>>>>> may need enhancing in the future, if new types of inheritance
>>>>> are added, in order to cater for cases where the role is
>>>>> wrongly specified by the administrator i.e. it does not apply
>>>>> to the project in question through lack of inheritance.
>>>>>
>>>>> regards
>>>>>
>>>>> David
>>>>>
>>>>> On 08/06/2013 11:38, Henry Nash wrote:
>>>>>> So on the idea of using the role def for inheritance
>>>>>> definition, there were a couple of things that concerned me
>>>>>> about it:
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 1) While it definitely can simply the api changes required
>>>>>> for the current requirements, I worry that we are passing
>>>>>> the complexity on to the creation of the policy file.
>>>>>> Since the role names of an inherited and non-inherited role
>>>>>> will obviously have to be different, is there a danger that
>>>>>> policy files end up with lots of rules that have "role:
>>>>>> xxxx and role: xxxx_inherited"?  I guess we can make the
>>>>>> argument that since (with today's requirements at least)
>>>>>> the only objects that will end of inheriting an assignment
>>>>>> will be projects, the likelihood is that the api lines in
>>>>>> the policy file that contains inherited and non-inherited
>>>>>> will be different, hence avoiding the problem. However, if,
>>>>>> in the future, we were to expand inheritance to support all
>>>>>> domains, or all projects in all domains, then this problem
>>>>>> would arise for domain-relevant apis lines in the policy
>>>>>> file.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> 2) If, again, in the future we support inheritance across
>>>>>> all domains/projects - would we need to more fine grained
>>>>>> control of the inheritance?  For instance, we want a role
>>>>>> that was inherited by all domains, but not the projects in
>>>>>> each domain? Perhaps, one could imagine expanding the
>>>>>> role-def to somehow indicate this (maybe rather than just
>>>>>> having a simple "inherited" boolean, we specify
>>>>>> "project_inherited", to which we could, in the future, add
>>>>>> "domain_inherited"?).  We also have the problem of how you
>>>>>> assign such a role?  I guess you would still need some kind
>>>>>> of modification to the assignment APIs to indicate "all
>>>>>> domains" (perhaps the "domains/*" that was suggested)?
>>>>>>
>>>>>> I'd be interested in views on the above - I'm Ok fi we
>>>>>> decide that role-def is the right way to go, but want to
>>>>>> make sure we clearly understand how we would expand this in
>>>>>> the future.
>>>>>>
>>>>>> Henry On 7 Jun 2013, at 18:12, Dolph Mathews wrote:
>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On Thu, Jun 6, 2013 at 5:48 AM, David Chadwick
>>>>>>> <d.w.chadwick at kent.ac.uk
>>>>>>> <mailto:d.w.chadwick at kent.ac.uk>> wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hi Henry
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> My take on this is that whether a role is automatically
>>>>>>> inheritable or not should be an attribute of the role
>>>>>>> itself, and should be independent of who the role is
>>>>>>> assigned to. Therefore when the role is initially
>>>>>>> defined, it should be stated by the Keystone admin
>>>>>>> whether it is an inherited role or not.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Role assignment is a separate issue and should not be
>>>>>>> confused with the basic definition of the role. Role
>>>>>>> assignment should simply be a matter of naming the
>>>>>>> subject (domain, project or user) and the role. If you
>>>>>>> dont want the role to be inherited then use a
>>>>>>> non-inheritable role.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The problem with all the APIs below is that they conflate
>>>>>>> role definition and role assignment together in the same
>>>>>>> API call. There should be no need to have user_ids in the
>>>>>>> definition of a role. Similarly there should be no
>>>>>>> mention of inherited in the assignment of a role to a
>>>>>>> user.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> regards
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> David
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> +1; I really like the simplicity of this approach, and
>>>>>>> it sounds like something we can migrate to easily (e.g.
>>>>>>> default inheritable=False for existing roles). Then
>>>>>>> global role assignments would follow an API like:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> GET /users/{user_id}/roles  # list global roles HEAD
>>>>>>> /users/{user_id}/roles/{inheritable_role_id}  # check if
>>>>>>> a global role is assigned PUT
>>>>>>> /users/{user_id}/roles/{inheritable_role_id}  # assign a
>>>>>>> global role DELETE
>>>>>>> /users/{user_id}/roles/{inheritable_role_id} # revoke a
>>>>>>> global role
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> where a non-inheritable role assigned a user without a
>>>>>>> domain or project for context wouldn't make any sense. In
>>>>>>> fact, assigning an inheritable role to a user on a
>>>>>>> project wouldn't be very useful (as it wouldn't inherit
>>>>>>> to anything in the core API), but I don't see a reason to
>>>>>>> deny it.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> On 05/06/2013 15:31, Henry Nash wrote:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Hi
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> As per the discussion during the keystone IRC meeting
>>>>>>> yesterday, I have been reviewing the proposals for this
>>>>>>> functionality.  There have been two objections to the
>>>>>>> current proposal (which can be found here:
>>>>>>> https://review.openstack.org/#__/c/29781/10
>>>>>>> <https://review.openstack.org/#/c/29781/10>), which are:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> 1) The api changes should allow for a logical, generic
>>>>>>> future extension for support of inherited roles across
>>>>>>> all domains etc., should we chose to go that route 2) The
>>>>>>> use of a single api to list the various grants, filtered
>>>>>>> by a query string if necessary.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> My proposal for handling these two objections is as
>>>>>>> follows:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> 1) API extensions.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> There are several aspects of inherited roles that we are
>>>>>>> trying to cement, which are:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> a) The are dynamic - i.e. this isn't a case of a short
>>>>>>> hand for saying add this role to all the current projects
>>>>>>> in the domain - rather it is a role assignment that is
>>>>>>> attached to the domain but is added to the effective
>>>>>>> roles of any project (now and in the future) that exists
>>>>>>> in this domain b) The are separate from a role that is on
>>>>>>> the domain itself - i.e.  we need to ensure that we keep
>>>>>>> separate inherited and non-inherited roles. c) Maintain
>>>>>>> the philosophy that If you can create a role assignment
>>>>>>> with a given API, there should be an equivalent to read
>>>>>>> it back and delete it (i.e. you mustn't have the case
>>>>>>> where, for instance you can list a grant, but can't
>>>>>>> delete it at the conceptual level)
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The current proposal had been to do this by adding an
>>>>>>> "inherited" component of the url for create, check and
>>>>>>> delete grants to a domain, e.g.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> PUT
>>>>>>> /domains/{domain_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles/{role_id}
>>>>>>> PUT
>>>>>>> /domains/{domain_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles/{role_id}/__inherited
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>
>>>>>>>
GET /domains/{domain_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles/{role_id}
>>>>>>> GET
>>>>>>> /domains/{domain_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles/{role_id}/__inherited
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>
>>>>>>>
DELETE /domains/{domain_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles/{role_id}
>>>>>>> DELETE
>>>>>>> /domains/{domain_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles/{role_id}/__inherited
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>
>>>>>>>
etc.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> A counter proposal has been made to expand this, along
>>>>>>> this lines of:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Role applicable to all projects within a domain PUT
>>>>>>> /domains/{domain_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles/{role_id}/__projects
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>
>>>>>>>
Roles inherited by all projects in all domains
>>>>>>> PUT /usrs/{user_id}/roles/{role___id}/projects
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Roles inherited by all domains, at the domain level PUT
>>>>>>> /usrs/{user_id}/roles/{role___id}/domains
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> While I understand the desire to have extensibility if we
>>>>>>> wish to provide more "global-ness" of roles, I think the
>>>>>>> above proposal is less clear about whether these
>>>>>>> assignments are dynamic (see item a) above).  How about
>>>>>>> this as a counter proposal:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Role applicable inherited by all projects within a domain
>>>>>>> (this is the same as the current proposal) PUT
>>>>>>> /domains/{domain_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles/{role_id}/__inherited
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>
>>>>>>>
Roles inherited by all projects in all domains - if we were to
>>>>>>> ever support this (not part of the current proposal) PUT
>>>>>>> /domains/users/{user_id}/__roles/{role_id}/inherited
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Roles inherited by all domains, at the domain level - if
>>>>>>> we were to ever support this (not part of the current
>>>>>>> proposal) PUT
>>>>>>> /domains/users/{user_id}/__roles/{role_id}/inherited
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> To go along with the above, you would have the respective
>>>>>>> GET, CHECK & DELETE versions of those apis.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> 2) Single vs multiple apis I think this comment is
>>>>>>> actually misplaced in the gerrit review, and is intended
>>>>>>> to directed at the api extensions I proposed to allow the
>>>>>>> list of a users "effective" roles on a project (i.e.
>>>>>>> directly assigned, those by virtue of group membership
>>>>>>> and inheritance from the parent domain).  For this, I
>>>>>>> proposed adding an optional "effective" query parameter
>>>>>>> to each of:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> List user's roles on project: `GET
>>>>>>> /projects/{project_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles List
>>>>>>> group's roles on project: `GET
>>>>>>> /projects/{project_id}/groups/__{group_id}/roles Check
>>>>>>> user's role on project: `GET
>>>>>>> /projects/{project_id}/users/{__user_id}/role/{role_id}
>>>>>>> Check group's roles on project: `GET
>>>>>>> /projects/{project_id}/groups/__{group_id}/role/{role_id}
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
e.g. GET
>>>>>>> /projects/{project_id}/users/{__user_id}/roles?effective
>>>>>>> ...would get you the effective roles the user has on
>>>>>>> that project, as opposed to only the directly assigned
>>>>>>> ones if you issue the call without the "effective" query
>>>>>>> parameter.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Dolph and I had already been discussing that the existing
>>>>>>> v3 api of:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> GET /users/{user_id}/roles
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> ...which is meant to return all the role assignments for
>>>>>>> a user, but is in fact broken in the current Grizzly code
>>>>>>> (it always returns an error).  So I agree with the
>>>>>>> proposal that we should scrap the "effective" query
>>>>>>> parameter for the specific list/check calls for the
>>>>>>> project - and instead properly implement the "get all
>>>>>>> assignments for a user" call. I propose the amended spec
>>>>>>> for this call is:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> #### List a user's effective role assignments: `GET
>>>>>>> /users/{user_id}/role-__assignments`
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> query_string: page (optional) query_string: per_page
>>>>>>> (optional, default 30) query_string: id, project_id,
>>>>>>> domain_id
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Response:
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Status: 200 OK
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> [ { "id": "--role-id--", "name": "--role-name--",
>>>>>>> "project_id": "--project-id--", "source": { "direct":
>>>>>>> true,  (optional) "domain_inherited: "--domain-id--",
>>>>>>> (optional) "group_membership: "--group-id--" (optional) }
>>>>>>> }, { "domain_id": "--domain-id--", "id": "--role-id--",
>>>>>>> "name": "--role-name--", "source": { "direct": true,
>>>>>>> (optional) "group_membership: "--group-id--" (optional) }
>>>>>>> } ]
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> The "source" structure must have at least one of the
>>>>>>> values given above (and could have more than one, e.g.
>>>>>>> both domain_inherited and global_membership for a project
>>>>>>> where the role is due to a group role that is inherited
>>>>>>> from the domain). If were even to support global roles
>>>>>>> across all domains, then we would extend the "source
>>>>>>> structure" accordingly.   I'm open to other options for
>>>>>>> the above format. however, so comments welcome.
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Does this sounds like a reasonable plan overall?
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>> Henry
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
>>>>>>>
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