glance/doc/source/policies.rst
Ian Cordasco b159aa8b64 Pass a real image target to the policy enforcer
Previously, every call to policy.enforce passed an empty dictionary as
the target. This prevents operators from using tenant specific
restrictions in their policy.json files since the target will always be
an empty dictionary.

If you try to restrict some actions so an image owner (users with the
correct tenant id) can perform actions, the check categorically fails
because the target is okay is an empty dictionary. By passing the
ImageTarget instance wrapping an Image, we can properly grant access to
the image owner(s) based on tenant (e.g., owner:%(tenant)). Without this
fix, the only check that actually works in glance is a RoleCheck (e.g.,
role:admin).

Partial-bug: 1346648
Implements: blueprint pass-targets-to-policy-enforcer
Change-Id: Id914c478ca7c4dfde3f08028d8b70c623f26b6e9
2015-03-12 01:16:44 +00:00

5.6 KiB

Policies

Glance's public API calls may be restricted to certain sets of users using a policy configuration file. This document explains exactly how policies are configured and what they apply to.

A policy is composed of a set of rules that are used by the policy "Brain" in determining if a particular action may be performed by the authorized tenant.

Constructing a Policy Configuration File

A policy configuration file is a simply JSON object that contain sets of rules. Each top-level key is the name of a rule. Each rule is a string that describes an action that may be performed in the Glance API.

The actions that may have a rule enforced on them are:

  • get_images - List available image entities
    • GET /v1/images
    • GET /v1/images/detail
    • GET /v2/images
  • get_image - Retrieve a specific image entity
    • HEAD /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>
    • GET /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>
    • GET /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>
  • download_image - Download binary image data
    • GET /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>
    • GET /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>/file
  • upload_image - Upload binary image data
    • POST /v1/images
    • PUT /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>
    • PUT /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>/file
  • copy_from - Copy binary image data from URL
    • POST /v1/images
    • PUT /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>
  • add_image - Create an image entity
    • POST /v1/images
    • POST /v2/images
  • modify_image - Update an image entity
    • PUT /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>
    • PUT /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>
  • publicize_image - Create or update images with attribute
    • POST /v1/images with attribute is_public = true
    • PUT /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID> with attribute is_public = true
    • POST /v2/images with attribute visibility = public
    • PUT /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID> with attribute visibility = public
  • delete_image - Delete an image entity and associated binary data
    • DELETE /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>
    • DELETE /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>
  • add_member - Add a membership to the member repo of an image
    • POST /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>/members
  • get_members - List the members of an image
    • GET /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>/members
    • GET /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>/members
  • delete_member - Delete a membership of an image
    • DELETE /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>/members/<MEMBER_ID>
    • DELETE /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>/members/<MEMBER_ID>
  • modify_member - Create or update the membership of an image
    • PUT /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>/members/<MEMBER_ID>
    • PUT /v1/images/<IMAGE_ID>/members
    • POST /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>/members
    • PUT /v2/images/<IMAGE_ID>/members/<MEMBER_ID>
  • manage_image_cache - Allowed to use the image cache management API

To limit an action to a particular role or roles, you list the roles like so :

{
  "delete_image": ["role:admin", "role:superuser"]
}

The above would add a rule that only allowed users that had roles of either "admin" or "superuser" to delete an image.

Writing Rules

Role checks are going to continue to work exactly as they already do. If the role defined in the check is one that the user holds, then that will pass, e.g., role:admin.

To write a generic rule, you need to know that there are three values provided by Glance that can be used in a rule on the left side of the colon (:). Those values are the current user's credentials in the form of:

  • role
  • tenant
  • owner

The left side of the colon can also contain any value that Python can understand, e.g.,:

  • True
  • False
  • "a string"
  • &c.

Using tenant and owner will only work with images. Consider the following rule:

tenant:%(owner)s

This will use the tenant value of the currently authenticated user. It will also use owner from the image it is acting upon. If those two values are equivalent the check will pass. All attributes on an image (as well as extra image properties) are available for use on the right side of the colon. The most useful are the following:

  • owner
  • protected
  • is_public

Therefore, you could construct a set of rules like the following:

{
    "not_protected": "False:%(protected)s",
    "is_owner": "tenant:%(owner)s",
    "is_owner_or_admin": "rule:is_owner or role:admin",
    "not_protected_and_is_owner": "rule:not_protected and rule:is_owner",

    "get_image": "rule:is_owner_or_admin",
    "delete_image": "rule:not_protected_and_is_owner",
    "add_member": "rule:not_protected_and_is_owner"
}

Examples

Example 1. (The default policy configuration)

{
    "default": ""
}

Note that an empty JSON list means that all methods of the Glance API are callable by anyone.

Example 2. Disallow modification calls to non-admins

{
    "default": "",
    "add_image": "role:admin",
    "modify_image": "role:admin",
    "delete_image": "role:admin"
}