* Drop image sharing blurb from authentication docs. * Link to authentication page from api page Related to bp glance-folsom-docs-cleanup Change-Id: Idac46a78f79fac0c673f6a9b91c1f44df7b705b4
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Glance Authentication With Keystone
Glance may optionally be integrated with Keystone. Setting this up is relatively straightforward, as the Keystone distribution includes the necessary middleware. Once you have installed Keystone and edited your configuration files, newly created images will have their owner attribute set to the tenant of the authenticated users, and the is_public attribute will cause access to those images for which it is false to be restricted to only the owner.
Note
The exception is those images for which owner is set to null, which may only be done by those users
having the Admin
role. These images may still be accessed
by the public, but will not appear in the list of public images. This
allows the Glance Registry owner to publish images for beta testing
without allowing those images to show up in lists, potentially confusing
users.
Configuring the Glance servers to use Keystone
Keystone is integrated with Glance through the use of middleware. The
default configuration files for both the Glance API and the Glance
Registry use a single piece of middleware called
unauthenticated-context
, which generates a request context
containing blank authentication information. In order to configure
Glance to use Keystone, the authtoken
and
context
middlewares must be deployed in place of the
unauthenticated-context
middleware. The
authtoken
middleware performs the authentication token
validation and retrieves actual user authentication information. It can
be found in the Keystone distribution.
Configuring Glance API to use Keystone
Configuring Glance API to use Keystone is relatively straight
forward. The first step is to ensure that declarations for the two
pieces of middleware exist in the glance-api-paste.ini
.
Here is an example for authtoken
:
[filter:authtoken]
paste.filter_factory = keystone.middleware.auth_token:filter_factory
auth_host = 127.0.0.1
auth_port = 35357
auth_protocol = http
admin_user = glance_admin
admin_tenant_name = service_admins
admin_password = password1234
The actual values for these variables will need to be set depending
on your situation. For more information, please refer to the Keystone
documentation on the auth_token
middleware, but in
short:
- Those variables beginning with
auth_
point to the Keystone Admin service. This information is used by the middleware to actually query Keystone about the validity of the authentication tokens. - The admin auth credentials (
admin_user
,admin_tenant_name
,admin_password
) will be used to retrieve an admin token. That token will be used to authorize user tokens behind the scenes.
Finally, to actually enable using Keystone authentication, the application pipeline must be modified. By default, it looks like:
[pipeline:glance-api]
pipeline = versionnegotiation unauthenticated-context apiv1app
Your particular pipeline may vary depending on other options, such as
the image cache. This must be changed by replacing
unauthenticated-context
with authtoken
and
context
:
[pipeline:glance-api]
pipeline = versionnegotiation authtoken context apiv1app
Configuring Glance Registry to use Keystone
Configuring Glance Registry to use Keystone is also relatively
straight forward. The same middleware needs to be added to
glance-registry-paste.ini
as was needed by Glance API; see
above for an example of the authtoken
configuration.
Again, to enable using Keystone authentication, the appropriate application pipeline must be selected. By default, it looks like:
[pipeline:glance-registry-keystone]
pipeline = authtoken context registryapp
To enable the above application pipeline, in your main
glance-registry.conf
configuration file, select the
appropriate deployment flavor by adding a flavor
attribute
in the paste_deploy
group:
[paste_deploy]
flavor = keystone
Note
If your authentication service uses a role other than
admin
to identify which users should be granted admin-level
privileges, you must define it in the admin_role
config
attribute in both glance-registry.conf
and
glance-api.conf
.
Configuring the Glance Client to use Keystone
Once the Glance API and Registry servers have been configured to use
Keystone, you will need to configure the Glance client
(bin/glance
) to use Keystone as well. Like the other
OpenStack projects, this is done through a common set of environment
variables. These credentials may may alternatively be specified using
the following switches to the bin/glance
command:
- OS_USERNAME=<USERNAME>, -I <USERNAME>, --os_username=<USERNAME>
User name used to acquire an authentication token
- OS_PASSWORD=<PASSWORD>, -K <PASSWORD>, --os_password=<PASSWORD>
Password used to acquire an authentication token
- OS_TENANT_NAME=<TENANT_NAME> -T <TENANT_NAME>, --os_tenant_name=<TENANT_NAME>
Tenant name
- OS_AUTH_URL=<AUTH_URL>, -N <AUTH_URL>, --os_auth_url=<AUTH_URL>
Authentication endpoint
- OS_REGION_NAME=<REGION_NAME>, -R <REGION_NAME>, --os_region_name=<REGION_NAME>
Used to select a specific region while authenticating against Keystone
Or, if a pre-authenticated token is preferred, the following option allows the client-side interaction with keystone to be bypassed (useful if a long sequence of commands is being scripted):
- OS_TOKEN=<TOKEN>, -A <TOKEN>, --os_auth_token=<TOKEN>
User's authentication token that identifies the client to the glance server. This is not an admin token.
In general the command line switch takes precedence over the corresponding OS* environment variable, if both are set.