horizon/openstack_auth/backend.py
Radomir Dopieralski 9d98a0c24d Automatically redirect to the password change when it's expired
Unfortunately the only way we can know the user_id at this point is
by parsing the error message.

I also refactored the exceptions in openstack_auth to make them use
different classes (but one common superclass).

Partially implements blueprint: allow-users-change-expired-password

Change-Id: Ieceee09db21040b96577db19bd195dc3799e3892
2019-09-16 12:45:23 +02:00

273 lines
11 KiB
Python

# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
# you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
# You may obtain a copy of the License at
#
# http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
#
# Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
# distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
# WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or
# implied.
# See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
# limitations under the License.
""" Module defining the Django auth backend class for the Keystone API. """
import datetime
import logging
import pytz
from django.conf import settings
from django.utils.module_loading import import_string
from django.utils.translation import ugettext_lazy as _
from openstack_auth import exceptions
from openstack_auth import user as auth_user
from openstack_auth import utils
LOG = logging.getLogger(__name__)
KEYSTONE_CLIENT_ATTR = "_keystoneclient"
# TODO(stephenfin): Subclass 'django.contrib.auth.backends.BaseBackend' once we
# (only) support Django 3.0
class KeystoneBackend(object):
"""Django authentication backend for use with ``django.contrib.auth``."""
def __init__(self):
self._auth_plugins = None
@property
def auth_plugins(self):
if self._auth_plugins is None:
plugins = settings.AUTHENTICATION_PLUGINS
self._auth_plugins = [import_string(p)() for p in plugins]
return self._auth_plugins
def get_user(self, user_id):
"""Returns the current user from the session data.
If authenticated, this return the user object based on the user ID
and session data.
.. note::
This required monkey-patching the ``contrib.auth`` middleware
to make the ``request`` object available to the auth backend class.
"""
if (hasattr(self, 'request') and
user_id == self.request.session["user_id"]):
token = self.request.session['token']
endpoint = self.request.session['region_endpoint']
services_region = self.request.session['services_region']
user = auth_user.create_user_from_token(self.request, token,
endpoint, services_region)
return user
else:
return None
def _check_auth_expiry(self, auth_ref, margin=None):
if not utils.is_token_valid(auth_ref, margin):
msg = _("The authentication token issued by the Identity service "
"has expired.")
LOG.warning("The authentication token issued by the Identity "
"service appears to have expired before it was "
"issued. This may indicate a problem with either your "
"server or client configuration.")
raise exceptions.KeystoneTokenExpiredException(msg)
return True
def _get_auth_backend(self, auth_url, **kwargs):
for plugin in self.auth_plugins:
unscoped_auth = plugin.get_plugin(auth_url=auth_url, **kwargs)
if unscoped_auth:
return plugin, unscoped_auth
else:
msg = _('No authentication backend could be determined to '
'handle the provided credentials.')
LOG.warning('No authentication backend could be determined to '
'handle the provided credentials. This is likely a '
'configuration error that should be addressed.')
raise exceptions.KeystoneNoBackendException(msg)
def authenticate(self, request, auth_url=None, **kwargs):
"""Authenticates a user via the Keystone Identity API."""
LOG.debug('Beginning user authentication')
if not auth_url:
auth_url = settings.OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_URL
auth_url, url_fixed = utils.fix_auth_url_version_prefix(auth_url)
if url_fixed:
LOG.warning("The OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_URL setting points to a v2.0 "
"Keystone endpoint, but v3 is specified as the API "
"version to use by Horizon. Using v3 endpoint for "
"authentication.")
plugin, unscoped_auth = self._get_auth_backend(auth_url, **kwargs)
# the recent project id a user might have set in a cookie
recent_project = None
if request:
# Grab recent_project found in the cookie, try to scope
# to the last project used.
recent_project = request.COOKIES.get('recent_project')
unscoped_auth_ref = plugin.get_access_info(unscoped_auth)
# Check expiry for our unscoped auth ref.
self._check_auth_expiry(unscoped_auth_ref)
domain_name = kwargs.get('user_domain_name', None)
domain_auth, domain_auth_ref = plugin.get_domain_scoped_auth(
unscoped_auth, unscoped_auth_ref, domain_name)
scoped_auth, scoped_auth_ref = plugin.get_project_scoped_auth(
unscoped_auth, unscoped_auth_ref, recent_project=recent_project)
# Abort if there are no projects for this user and a valid domain
# token has not been obtained
#
# The valid use cases for a user login are:
# Keystone v2: user must have a role on a project and be able
# to obtain a project scoped token
# Keystone v3: 1) user can obtain a domain scoped token (user
# has a role on the domain they authenticated to),
# only, no roles on a project
# 2) user can obtain a domain scoped token and has
# a role on a project in the domain they
# authenticated to (and can obtain a project scoped
# token)
# 3) user cannot obtain a domain scoped token, but can
# obtain a project scoped token
if not scoped_auth_ref and domain_auth_ref:
# if the user can't obtain a project scoped token, set the scoped
# token to be the domain token, if valid
scoped_auth = domain_auth
scoped_auth_ref = domain_auth_ref
elif not scoped_auth_ref and not domain_auth_ref:
msg = _('You are not authorized for any projects or domains.')
raise exceptions.KeystoneNoProjectsException(msg)
# Check expiry for our new scoped token.
self._check_auth_expiry(scoped_auth_ref)
# We want to try to use the same region we just logged into
# which may or may not be the default depending upon the order
# keystone uses
region_name = None
id_endpoints = scoped_auth_ref.service_catalog.\
get_endpoints(service_type='identity')
for id_endpoint in [cat for cat in id_endpoints['identity']]:
if auth_url in id_endpoint.values():
region_name = id_endpoint['region']
break
interface = settings.OPENSTACK_ENDPOINT_TYPE
endpoint = scoped_auth_ref.service_catalog.url_for(
service_type='identity',
interface=interface,
region_name=region_name)
# If we made it here we succeeded. Create our User!
unscoped_token = unscoped_auth_ref.auth_token
user = auth_user.create_user_from_token(
request,
auth_user.Token(scoped_auth_ref, unscoped_token=unscoped_token),
endpoint,
services_region=region_name)
if request is not None:
# if no k2k providers exist then the function returns quickly
utils.store_initial_k2k_session(auth_url, request, scoped_auth_ref,
unscoped_auth_ref)
request.session['unscoped_token'] = unscoped_token
if domain_auth_ref:
# check django session engine, if using cookies, this will not
# work, as it will overflow the cookie so don't add domain
# scoped token to the session and put error in the log
if utils.using_cookie_backed_sessions():
LOG.error('Using signed cookies as SESSION_ENGINE with '
'OPENSTACK_KEYSTONE_MULTIDOMAIN_SUPPORT is '
'enabled. This disables the ability to '
'perform identity operations due to cookie size '
'constraints.')
else:
request.session['domain_token'] = domain_auth_ref
request.user = user
timeout = settings.SESSION_TIMEOUT
token_life = user.token.expires - datetime.datetime.now(pytz.utc)
session_time = min(timeout, int(token_life.total_seconds()))
request.session.set_expiry(session_time)
keystone_client_class = utils.get_keystone_client().Client
session = utils.get_session()
scoped_client = keystone_client_class(session=session,
auth=scoped_auth)
# Support client caching to save on auth calls.
setattr(request, KEYSTONE_CLIENT_ATTR, scoped_client)
LOG.debug('Authentication completed.')
return user
def get_group_permissions(self, user, obj=None):
"""Returns an empty set since Keystone doesn't support "groups"."""
# Keystone V3 added "groups". The Auth token response includes the
# roles from the user's Group assignment. It should be fine just
# returning an empty set here.
return set()
def get_all_permissions(self, user, obj=None):
"""Returns a set of permission strings that the user has.
This permission available to the user is derived from the user's
Keystone "roles".
The permissions are returned as ``"openstack.{{ role.name }}"``.
"""
if user.is_anonymous or obj is not None:
return set()
# TODO(gabrielhurley): Integrate policy-driven RBAC
# when supported by Keystone.
role_perms = {utils.get_role_permission(role['name'])
for role in user.roles}
services = []
for service in user.service_catalog:
try:
service_type = service['type']
except KeyError:
continue
service_regions = [utils.get_endpoint_region(endpoint) for endpoint
in service.get('endpoints', [])]
if user.services_region in service_regions:
services.append(service_type.lower())
service_perms = {"openstack.services.%s" % service
for service in services}
return role_perms | service_perms
def has_perm(self, user, perm, obj=None):
"""Returns True if the given user has the specified permission."""
if not user.is_active:
return False
return perm in self.get_all_permissions(user, obj)
def has_module_perms(self, user, app_label):
"""Returns True if user has any permissions in the given app_label.
Currently this matches for the app_label ``"openstack"``.
"""
if not user.is_active:
return False
for perm in self.get_all_permissions(user):
if perm[:perm.index('.')] == app_label:
return True
return False