14 KiB
| title | description | weight | keywords | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Authorization | Shows how to set up role-based access control for services in Istio mesh. | 40 |
|
This task covers the activities you might need to perform to set up Istio authorization, also known as Istio Role Based Access Control (RBAC), for services in an Istio mesh. You can read more in authorization and get started with a basic tutorial in Istio Security Basics.
Before you begin
The activities in this task assume that you:
-
Understand authorization concepts.
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Have set up Istio on Kubernetes with authentication enabled by following the instructions in the quick start, this tutorial requires mutual TLS to work. Mutual TLS authentication should be enabled in the installation steps.
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Deploy the Bookinfo sample application.
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In this task, we will enable access control based on Service Accounts, which are cryptographically authenticated in the mesh. In order to give different microservices different access privileges, we will create some service accounts and redeploy Bookinfo microservices running under them.
Run the following command to
- Create service account
bookinfo-productpage, and redeploy the serviceproductpagewith the service account. - Create service account
bookinfo-reviews, and redeploy the servicesreviews(deploymentsreviews-v2andreviews-v3) with the service account.
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl apply -f <(istioctl kube-inject -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/bookinfo-add-serviceaccount.yaml@) {{< /text >}}
- Create service account
If you are using a namespace other than
default, usekubectl -n namespace ...to specify the namespace.
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There is a major update to RBAC in Istio 1.0. Please make sure to remove any existing RBAC configuration before continuing.
- Run the following commands to disable the old RBAC functionality, these are no longer needed in Istio 1.0:
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl delete authorization requestcontext -n istio-system $ kubectl delete rbac handler -n istio-system $ kubectl delete rule rbaccheck -n istio-system {{< /text >}}
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Run the following commands to remove any existing RBAC policies:
You could keep existing policies but you will need to make some changes to the
constraintsandpropertiesfield in the policy, see constraints and properties for the list of supported keys inconstraintsandproperties.
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl delete servicerole --all $ kubectl delete servicerolebinding --all {{< /text >}}
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Point your browser at the Bookinfo
productpage(http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage). You should see:- The "Book Details" section in the lower left part of the page, including type, pages, publisher, etc.
- The "Book Reviews" section in the lower right part of the page.
If you refresh the page several times, you should see different versions of reviews shown in the product page, presented in a round robin style (red stars, black stars, no stars)
Enabling Istio authorization
Run the following command to enable Istio authorization for the default namespace:
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/rbac-config-ON.yaml@ {{< /text >}}
Point your browser at the Bookinfo productpage (http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage). Now you should see
"RBAC: access denied". This is because Istio authorization is "deny by default", which means that you need to
explicitly define access control policy to grant access to any service.
There may be some delays due to caching and other propagation overhead.
Namespace-level access control
Using Istio authorization, you can easily setup namespace-level access control by specifying all (or a collection of) services in a namespace are accessible by services from another namespace.
In our Bookinfo sample, the productpage, reviews, details, ratings services are deployed in the default namespace.
The Istio components like istio-ingressgateway service are deployed in the istio-system namespace. We can define a policy that
any service in the default namespace that has the app label set to one of the values of
productpage, details, reviews, or ratings
is accessible by services in the same namespace (i.e., default) and services in the istio-system namespace.
Run the following command to create a namespace-level access control policy:
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/namespace-policy.yaml@ {{< /text >}}
The policy does the following:
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Creates a
ServiceRoleservice-viewerwhich allows read access to any service in thedefaultnamespace that has theapplabel set to one of the valuesproductpage,details,reviews, orratings. Note that there is a constraint\ specifying that the services must have one of the listedapplabels.{{< text yaml >}} apiVersion: "rbac.istio.io/v1alpha1" kind: ServiceRole metadata: name: service-viewer namespace: default spec: rules:
- services: ["*"]
methods: ["GET"]
constraints:
- key: "destination.labels[app]" values: ["productpage", "details", "reviews", "ratings"] {{< /text >}}
- services: ["*"]
methods: ["GET"]
constraints:
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Creates a
ServiceRoleBindingthat assign theservice-viewerrole to all services in theistio-systemanddefaultnamespaces.{{< text yaml >}} apiVersion: "rbac.istio.io/v1alpha1" kind: ServiceRoleBinding metadata: name: bind-service-viewer namespace: default spec: subjects:
- properties: source.namespace: "istio-system"
- properties: source.namespace: "default" roleRef: kind: ServiceRole name: "service-viewer" {{< /text >}}
You can expect to see output similar to the following:
{{< text plain >}} servicerole "service-viewer" created servicerolebinding "bind-service-viewer" created {{< /text >}}
Now if you point your browser at Bookinfo's productpage (http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage). You should see the "Bookinfo Sample" page,
with the "Book Details" section in the lower left part and the "Book Reviews" section in the lower right part.
There may be some delays due to caching and other propagation overhead.
Cleanup namespace-level access control
Remove the following configuration before you proceed to the next task:
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/namespace-policy.yaml@ {{< /text >}}
Service-level access control
This task shows you how to set up service-level access control using Istio authorization. Before you start, please make sure that:
- You have enabled Istio authorization.
- You have removed namespace-level authorization policy.
Point your browser at the Bookinfo productpage (http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage). You should see "RBAC: access denied".
We will incrementally add access permission to the services in the Bookinfo sample.
Step 1. allowing access to the productpage service
In this step, we will create a policy that allows external requests to access the productpage service via Ingress.
Run the following command:
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/productpage-policy.yaml@ {{< /text >}}
The policy does the following:
-
Creates a
ServiceRoleproductpage-viewerwhich allows read access to theproductpageservice.{{< text yaml >}} apiVersion: "rbac.istio.io/v1alpha1" kind: ServiceRole metadata: name: productpage-viewer namespace: default spec: rules:
- services: ["productpage.default.svc.cluster.local"] methods: ["GET"] {{< /text >}}
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Creates a
ServiceRoleBindingbind-productpager-viewerwhich assigns theproductpage-viewerrole to all users and services.{{< text yaml >}} apiVersion: "rbac.istio.io/v1alpha1" kind: ServiceRoleBinding metadata: name: bind-productpager-viewer namespace: default spec: subjects:
- user: "*" roleRef: kind: ServiceRole name: "productpage-viewer" {{< /text >}}
Point your browser at the Bookinfo productpage (http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage). Now you should see the "Bookinfo Sample"
page. But there are errors Error fetching product details and Error fetching product reviews on the page. These errors
are expected because we have not granted the productpage service access to the details and reviews services. We will fix the errors
in the following steps.
There may be some delays due to caching and other propagation overhead.
Step 2. allowing access to the details and reviews services
We will create a policy to allow the productpage service to access the details and reviews services. Note that in the
setup step, we created the bookinfo-productpage service account for the productpage service. This
bookinfo-productpage service account is the authenticated identify for the productpage service.
Run the following command:
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/details-reviews-policy.yaml@ {{< /text >}}
The policy does the following:
-
Creates a
ServiceRoledetails-reviews-viewerwhich allows access to thedetailsandreviewsservices.{{< text yaml >}} apiVersion: "rbac.istio.io/v1alpha1" kind: ServiceRole metadata: name: details-reviews-viewer namespace: default spec: rules:
- services: ["details.default.svc.cluster.local", "reviews.default.svc.cluster.local"] methods: ["GET"] {{< /text >}}
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Creates a
ServiceRoleBindingbind-details-reviewswhich assigns thedetails-reviews-viewerrole to thecluster.local/ns/default/sa/bookinfo-productpageservice account (representing theproductpageservice).{{< text yaml >}} apiVersion: "rbac.istio.io/v1alpha1" kind: ServiceRoleBinding metadata: name: bind-details-reviews namespace: default spec: subjects:
- user: "cluster.local/ns/default/sa/bookinfo-productpage" roleRef: kind: ServiceRole name: "details-reviews-viewer" {{< /text >}}
Point your browser at the Bookinfo productpage (http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage). Now you should see the "Bookinfo Sample"
page with "Book Details" on the lower left part, and "Book Reviews" on the lower right part. However, in the "Book Reviews" section,
there is an error Ratings service currently unavailable. This is because "reviews" service does not have permission to access
"ratings" service. To fix this issue, you need to grant the reviews service access to the ratings service.
We will show how to do that in the next step.
There may be some delays due to caching and other propagation overhead.
Step 3. allowing access to the ratings service
We will create a policy to allow the reviews service to access the ratings service. Note that in the
setup step, we created a bookinfo-reviews service account for the reviews service. This
service account is the authenticated identify for the reviews service.
Run the following command to create a policy that allows the reviews service to access the ratings service.
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl apply -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/ratings-policy.yaml@ {{< /text >}}
The policy does the following:
-
Creates a
ServiceRoleratings-viewer\which allows access to theratingsservice.{{< text yaml >}} apiVersion: "rbac.istio.io/v1alpha1" kind: ServiceRole metadata: name: ratings-viewer namespace: default spec: rules:
- services: ["ratings.default.svc.cluster.local"] methods: ["GET"] {{< /text >}}
-
Creates a
ServiceRoleBindingbind-ratingswhich assignsratings-viewerrole to thecluster.local/ns/default/sa/bookinfo-reviewsservice account, which represents thereviewsservice.{{< text yaml >}} apiVersion: "rbac.istio.io/v1alpha1" kind: ServiceRoleBinding metadata: name: bind-ratings namespace: default spec: subjects:
- user: "cluster.local/ns/default/sa/bookinfo-reviews" roleRef: kind: ServiceRole name: "ratings-viewer" {{< /text >}}
Point your browser at the Bookinfo productpage (http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage). Now you should see
the "black" and "red" ratings in the "Book Reviews" section.
There may be some delays due to caching and other propagation overhead.
Cleanup
-
Remove Istio authorization policy configuration:
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/ratings-policy.yaml@ $ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/details-reviews-policy.yaml@ $ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/productpage-policy.yaml@ {{< /text >}}
Alternatively, you can delete all
ServiceRoleandServiceRoleBindingresources by running the following commands:{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl delete servicerole --all $ kubectl delete servicerolebinding --all {{< /text >}}
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Disable Istio authorization:
{{< text bash >}} $ kubectl delete -f @samples/bookinfo/platform/kube/rbac/rbac-config-ON.yaml@ {{< /text >}}