Our tools noticed that keystone links to https://docs.openstack.org/keystone/latest/admin/identity-domain-specific-config.html which does not exist anymore. The page was removed but the link to it was not changed. Replace this and similar links with internal links that will work even if files are moved - and can be verified, thus sphinx will error in case of broken targets. These changes include a few other fixes for broken keystone links, e.g. to renamed anchors. For the include files in admin/configuration.rst and admin/federation/configure_federation.rst: Rename them to *inc. The files were published twice (as separate files and on this page) and thus referencing failed. Renaming avoids this. Also, put doctree outside of html tree so that it does not get published. Change-Id: I3d07637b0046cc88a66bcb51a0a4fe7c146c1549
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Create and manage services and service users
Service Catalog
OpenStack services can be discovered when registered in keystone's service catalog. The service catalog can be managed as either a static file template or as a dynamic database table.
File-based Service
Catalog (templated.Catalog)
The templated catalog is an in-memory backend initialized from a
read-only template_file. Choose this option only if you
know that your service catalog will not change very much over time.
Note
Attempting to change your service catalog against this driver will
result in HTTP 501 Not Implemented errors. This is the
expected behavior. If you want to use these commands, you must instead
use the SQL-based Service Catalog driver.
keystone.conf example:
[catalog]
driver = templated
template_file = /opt/stack/keystone/etc/default_catalog.templatesThe value of template_file is expected to be an absolute
path to your service catalog configuration. An example
template_file is included in keystone, however you should
create your own to reflect your deployment.
SQL-based Service Catalog
(sql.Catalog)
A dynamic database-backed driver fully supporting persistent configuration.
keystone.conf example:
[catalog]
driver = sqlNote
A template_file does not need to be defined for the sql based catalog.
To build your service catalog using this driver, see the built-in help:
$ openstack --help
$ openstack service create --help
$ openstack endpoint create --helpCreate a service
List the available services:
$ openstack service list +----------------------------------+----------+------------+ | ID | Name | Type | +----------------------------------+----------+------------+ | 9816f1faaa7c4842b90fb4821cd09223 | cinder | volume | | 1250f64f31e34dcd9a93d35a075ddbe1 | cinderv2 | volumev2 | | da8cf9f8546b4a428c43d5e032fe4afc | ec2 | ec2 | | 5f105eeb55924b7290c8675ad7e294ae | glance | image | | dcaa566e912e4c0e900dc86804e3dde0 | keystone | identity | | 4a715cfbc3664e9ebf388534ff2be76a | nova | compute | | 1aed4a6cf7274297ba4026cf5d5e96c5 | novav21 | computev21 | | bed063c790634c979778551f66c8ede9 | neutron | network | | 6feb2e0b98874d88bee221974770e372 | s3 | s3 | +----------------------------------+----------+------------+To create a service, run this command:
$ openstack service create --name SERVICE_NAME --description SERVICE_DESCRIPTION SERVICE_TYPE- The arguments are:
-
service_name: the unique name of the new service.service_type: the service type, such asidentity,compute,network,image,object-storeor any other service identifier string.service_description: the description of the service.
For example, to create a
swiftservice of typeobject-store, run this command:$ openstack service create --name swift --description "object store service" object-store +-------------+----------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +-------------+----------------------------------+ | description | object store service | | enabled | True | | id | 84c23f4b942c44c38b9c42c5e517cd9a | | name | swift | | type | object-store | +-------------+----------------------------------+To get details for a service, run this command:
$ openstack service show SERVICE_TYPE|SERVICE_NAME|SERVICE_IDFor example:
$ openstack service show object-store +-------------+----------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +-------------+----------------------------------+ | description | object store service | | enabled | True | | id | 84c23f4b942c44c38b9c42c5e517cd9a | | name | swift | | type | object-store | +-------------+----------------------------------+
Create an endpoint
Once a service is created, register it at an endpoint:
$ openstack endpoint create nova public http://example.com/compute/v2.1 +--------------+----------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +--------------+----------------------------------+ | enabled | True | | id | c219aa779e90403eb4a78cf0aa7d38b1 | | interface | public | | region | None | | region_id | None | | service_id | 0f5da035b8e94629bf35e7ec1703a8eb | | service_name | nova | | service_type | compute | | url | http://example.com/compute/v2.1 | +--------------+----------------------------------+
Delete a service
To delete a specified service, specify its ID.
$ openstack service delete SERVICE_TYPE|SERVICE_NAME|SERVICE_ID
For example:
$ openstack service delete object-store
Service users
To authenticate users against the Identity service, you must create a service user for each OpenStack service. For example, create a service user for the Compute, Block Storage, and Networking services.
To configure the OpenStack services with service users, create a project for all services and create users for each service. Assign the admin role to each service user and project pair. This role enables users to validate tokens and authenticate and authorize other user requests.
Create service users
Create a project for the service users. Typically, this project is named
service, but choose any name you like:$ openstack project create service --domain default +-------------+----------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +-------------+----------------------------------+ | description | None | | domain_id | e601210181f54843b51b3edff41d4980 | | enabled | True | | id | 3e9f3f5399624b2db548d7f871bd5322 | | is_domain | False | | name | service | | parent_id | e601210181f54843b51b3edff41d4980 | +-------------+----------------------------------+Create service users for the relevant services for your deployment. For example:
$ openstack user create nova --password Sekr3tPass +---------------------+----------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +---------------------+----------------------------------+ | domain_id | default | | enabled | True | | id | 95ec3e1d5dd747f5a512d261731d29c7 | | name | nova | | options | {} | | password_expires_at | None | +---------------------+----------------------------------+Assign the admin role to the user-project pair.
$ openstack role add --project service --user nova admin +-------+----------------------------------+ | Field | Value | +-------+----------------------------------+ | id | 233109e756c1465292f31e7662b429b1 | | name | admin | +-------+----------------------------------+
Configuring service tokens
A lot of operations in OpenStack require communication between multiple services on behalf of the user. For example, the Image service storing the user's images in the Object Storage service. If the image is significantly large, the operation might fail due to the user's token having expired during upload.
In the above scenarios, the Image service will attach both the user's token and its own token (called the service token), as per the diagram below.
+----------------+
| User |
+-------+--------+
| Access Image Data Request
| X-AUTH-TOKEN: <end user token>
|
+-------v---------+
| Glance |
+-------+---------+
| Access Image Data Request
| X-AUTH-TOKEN: <original end user token>
| X-SERVICE-TOKEN: <glance service user token>
|
+-------v---------+
| Swift |
+-----------------+
When a service receives a call from another service, it validates
that the token has the appropriate roles for a service user. This is
configured in each individual service configuration, under the section
[keystone_authtoken].
If the service token is valid, the operation will be allowed even if the user's token has expired.
The service_token_roles option is the list of roles that
the service token must contain to be a valid service token. In the
previous steps, we have assigned the admin role to service users, so set the option
to that and set service_token_roles_required to
true.
[keystone_authtoken]
service_token_roles = admin
service_token_roles_required = trueFor more information regarding service tokens, please see the
keystonemiddleware release
notes.