Setup authentication

This guide explains how to enable ssl and setup authentication.

SSL

SSL is not strictly required for authentication but higly recommended. Inmanta uses bearer tokens for authorizing users and services. These tokens should be kept private and are visible in plain-text in the request headers without SSL.

Setting a private key and a public key in the server configuration enables SSL on the server. The two options to set are server.ssl-cert-file and server.ssl-key-file.

For each of the transport configurations (compiler, agent, rpc client, …) ssl has to be enabled: agent_rest_transport, cmdline_rest_transport and compiler_rest_transport.

The client needs to trust the SSL certificate of the server. When a self-signed SSL cert is used on the server, either add the CA cert to the trusted certificates of the system running the agent or configure the ssl-ca-cert-file option in the transport configuration.

For example for an agent this is agent_rest_transport.ssl and agent_rest_transport.ssl-ca-cert-file

Autostarted agents and compiles on the server also use SSL to communicate with the server. This requires either for the server SSL certificate to be trusted by the OS or by setting server.ssl-ca-cert-file. The server will use this value to set compiler_rest_transport.ssl-ca-cert-file and server.ssl-ca-cert-file for the compiler and the agents.

Authentication

Inmanta authentication uses JSON Web Tokens for authentication (bearer token). Inmanta issues tokens for service to service interaction (agent to server, compiler to server, cli to server and 3rd party API interactions). For user interaction through the dashboard Inmanta uses 3rd party auth brokers. Currently the dashboard only supports redirecting users to keycloak for authentication.

Inmanta expects a token of which it can validate the signature. Inmanta can verify both symmetric signatures with HS256 and asymmetric signatures with RSA (RS256). Tokens it signs itself for other processes are always signed using HS256. There are no key distribution issues because the server is both the signing and the validating party.

The server also provides limited authorization by checking for inmanta specific claims inside the token. All inmanta claims are prefixed with urn:inmanta:. These claims are:

  • urn:inmanta:ct A required comma delimited list of client types for which this client is authenticated. Each API call has a one or more allowed client types. The list of valid client types (ct) are:

    • agent
    • compiler
    • api (cli, dashboard, 3rd party service)
  • urn:inmanta:env An optional claim. When this claim is present the token is scoped to this inmanta environment. All tokens that the server generates for agents and compilers have this claim present to limit their access to the environment they belong to.

Setup server auth

The server requests authentication for all API calls when server.auth is set to true. When authentication is enabled all other components require a valid token.

Warning

When multiple servers are used in a HA setup, each server requires the same configuration (SSL enabled and private keys).

In the server configuration multiple token providers (issuers) can be configured (See JWT auth configuration). Inmanta requires at least one issuer with the HS256 algorithm. The server uses this to sign tokens it issues itself. This provider is indicated with sign set to true. Inmanta issues tokens for compilers the servers runs itself and for autostarted agents.

Compilers, cli and agents that are not started by the server itself, require a token in their transport configuration. This token is configured with the token option in the groups agent_rest_transport, cmdline_rest_transport and compiler_rest_transport.

A token can be retrieved either with inmanta-cli token create or under Settings of the environment in the dashboard.

Generating a new token in the dashboard.

Generating a new token in the dashboard.

Configure an external issuer (See External authentication providers) for dashboard access to bootstrap access to the create token api call. When no external issuer is available and dashboard access is not required, the inmanta-cli token bootstrap command can be used to create a token that has access to everything. However, it expires after 3600s for security reasons.

For this command to function, it requires the issuers configuration with sign=true to be available for the cli command.

JWT auth configuration

The server searches for configuration sections that start with auth_jwt_, after the last _ an id has to be present. This section expects the following keys:

  • algorithm: The algorithm used for this key. Only HS256 and RS256 are supported.
  • sign: Whether the server can use this key to sign JWT it issues. Only one section may have this set to true.
  • client_types: The client types from the urn:inmanta:ct claim that can be valided and/or signed with this key.
  • key: The secret key used by symmetric algorithms such as HS256. Generate the key with a secure prng with minimal length equal to the length of the HMAC (For HS256 == 256). The key should be a urlsafe base64 encoded bytestring without padding. (see below of a command to generate such a key)
  • expire: The default expire for tokens issued with this key (when sign = true). Use 0 for tokens that do not expire.
  • issuer: The url of the issuer that should match for tokens to be valid (also used to sign this). The default value is https://localhost:8888/ This value is used to match auth_jwt_* sections configuration with JWT tokens. Make sure this is unique.
  • audience: The audience for tokens, as per RFC this should match or the token is rejected.
  • jwks_uri: The uri to the public key information. This is required for algorithm RS256. The keys are loaded the first time a token needs to be verified after a server restart. There is not key refresh mechanism.

An example configuration is:

[auth_jwt_default]
algorithm=HS256
sign=true
client_types=agent,compiler
key=rID3kG4OwGpajIsxnGDhat4UFcMkyFZQc1y3oKQTPRs
expire=0
issuer=https://localhost:8888/
audience=https://localhost:8888/

To generate a secure key symmetric key and encode it correctly use the following command:

openssl rand 32 | python3 -c "import sys; import base64; print(base64.urlsafe_b64encode(sys.stdin.buffer.read()).decode().rstrip('='));"

External authentication providers

Inmanta supports all external authentication providers that support JWT tokens with RS256 or HS256. These providers need to add a claims that indicate the allowed client type (urn:inmanta:ct). Currently, the dashboard only has support for keycloak. However, each provider that can insert custom (private) claims should work. The dashboard now relies on the keycloak js library to implement the OAuth2 implicit flow, required to obtain a JWT.

Tip

All patches to support additional providers such as Auth0 are welcome. Alternativelyr contact Inmanta NV for custom integration services.

Keycloak configuration

The dashboard has out of the box support for authentication with Keycloak. Install keycloak and create an initial login as decribed in the Keycloak documentation and login with admin credentials.

This guide was made based on Keycloak 3.3

If inmanta is configured to use SSL, the authentication provider should also use SSL. Otherwise, the dashboard will not be able to fetch user information from the authentication provider.

Step 1: Optionally create a new realm

Create a new realm if you want to use keycloak for other purposes (it is an SSO solution) than Inmanta authentication. Another reason to create a new realm (or not) is that the master realm also provides the credentials to configure keycloak itself.

For example call the realm inmanta

../_images/kc_realm.png

Create a new realm

../_images/kc_add_realm.png

Specify a name for the realm

Step 2: Add a new client to keycloak

Make sure the correct realm is active (the name is shown in the title of the left sidebar) to which you want to add a new client.

../_images/kc_start.png

The start page of a realm. Here you can edit names, policies, … of the realm. The defaults are sufficient for inmanta authentication. This shows the inmanta realm.

Go to client and click create on the right hand side of the screen.

../_images/kc_clients.png

Clients in the master realm. Click the create button to create an inmanta client.

Provide an id for the client and make sure that the client protocol is openid-connect and click save.

../_images/kc_new_client.png

Create client screen

After clicking save, keycloak opens the configuration of the client. Modify the client to allow implicit flows and add vallid callback URLs. As a best practice, also add the allowed origins. See the screenshot below as an example.

../_images/kc_client_details.png

Allow implicits flows (others may be disabled) and configure allowed callback urls of the dashboard.

Add a mapper to add custom claims to the issued tokens for the API client type. Open de mappers tab of your new client and click add.

../_images/kc_mappers.png

Add a custom mapper to the client to include :urn:inmanta:ct

Select hardcoded claim, enter :urn:inmanta:ct as claim name and api as claim value and string as type. It should only be added to the access token.

../_images/kc_ct_mapper.png

Add the ct claim to all access tokens for this client.

Step 3: Configure inmanta server

Go to the installation tab and select JSON format in the select box. This JSON string provides you with the details to configure the server correctly to redirect dashboard users to this keycloak instance and to valide the tokens issued by keycloak.

../_images/kc_install.png

Show the correct configuration parameters in JSON format.

Add a keycloak configuration parameters to the dashboard section of the server configuration file. (/etc/inmanta/server.cfg in most installs.) This section should already contain enabled=true and the path to the dashboard source.

Add the realm, auth_url and client_id to the dashboard section. Use the parameters from the installation json file created by keycloak.

[dashboard]
enabled=true
path=/opt/inmanta/dashboard

# keycloack specific configuration
realm=master
auth_url=http://localhost:8080/auth
client_id=inmanta

Warning

In a real setup, the url should contain public names instead of localhost, otherwise logins will only work on the machine that hosts inmanta server.

Configure a auth_jwt_ block (for example auth_jwt_keycloak) and configure it to valide the tokens keycloak issues.

[auth_jwt_keycloak]
algorithm=RS256
sign=false
client_types=api
issuer=http://localhost:8080/auth/realms/master
audience=inmanta
jwks_uri=http://localhost:8080/auth/realms/master/protocol/openid-connect/certs

Set the algorithm to RS256, sign should be false and client_types should be limited to api only. Next set the issuer to the correct value (watch out for the realm). Set the audience to the value of the resource key in the json file. Finally, set the jwks_uri so the server knows how to fetch the public keys to verify the signature on the tokens. (inmanta server needs to be able to access this url).

Both the correct url for the issuer and the jwks_uri is also defined in the openid-configuration endpoint of keycloack. For the examples above this url is http://localhost:8080/auth/realms/master/.well-known/openid-configuration (http://www.keycloak.org/docs/3.3/securing_apps/topics/oidc/oidc-generic.html)

Warning

When the certificate of keycloak is not trusted by the system on which inmanta is installed, set validate_cert to false in the auth_jwt_keycloak block for keycloak.