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Peter Amstutz, 06/20/2017 08:16 PM
Federated identity¶
SeeA person should be able to create an account and get a token from a single identity provider, and use that token to access private/protected resources on multiple Arvados clusters.
Motivating use cases:- A user on cluster B shares a project with a user on cluster A.
- A container running on cluster A reads and writes data on cluster B.
- A user logged in to Workbench A can search/view/download/upload collections at cluster B.
- An organization has 5 clusters, but only one of them has user accounts and roles in its database.
- An on-premise cluster runs containers that use public data stored in the cloud (without mirroring the data locally).
Design sketch¶
Each Arvados client must be able to prove to cluster B that it is authorized by cluster A to act on behalf of a user account which is controlled by cluster A. This must not involve giving enough information to cluster B to act on behalf of the user account: for example, the client cannot simply give cluster B its cluster A token for the purpose of doing a canary query: doing so would allow cluster B to exercise the client's authority on cluster C, D, and E as well.
Protocol idea¶
"Salted tokens": instead of passing its literal token, the client passes the token UUID andHMAC(token, "bbbbb")
when sending a request to cluster B (where "bbbbb" is cluster B's cluster ID / UUID prefix). Cluster B validates the request by passing those two parameters untouched to a "verify request" ("no-op") endpoint at cluster A.
- API server hands out tokens in the form "tokenUUID <delimiter> secret" instead of just the secret part.
- Cluster B figures out cluster A's API endpoint by looking at the "site ID prefix" of the token UUID.
- Cluster B can be configured with a lookup table (clusterID→apiHost) to override the implicit {id}.arvadosapi.com
- Cluster B can be configured to only use the lookup table, i.e., to never use implicit {id}.arvadosapi.com endpoints
(PA) an even simpler approach would be be to contact cluster A to get a scoped token which only allows "GET /users/current" on cluster A but is accepted by cluster B as an [all] token for that user.
Adding permissions¶
There are a few permission-granting cases to consider.
grantor | grantee | object | notes |
user on site A | user on site A | object on site A | (existing permission system) |
user on site A | group on site A | object on site A | (existing permission system) |
user on site A | user or group on site A | object on site B | Client creates a link at site B. Site B asks site A whether the grantee user/group is visible to user A. |
user on site A | user or group on site B | object on site B | Client creates a link at site B. Site B asks site A for a list of groups user A can see, then checks whether (possibly via one of those groups) user A can read the grantee user/group according to site B's local database. |
user on site A | user or group on site B | object on site A | Client creates a link at site A. Site A generates a salted token and uses it to ask site B whether user A can read the grantee user/group. |
(PA) permissions on site B also dictates whether user from A has manage permission on object on B
TODO¶
Things to address
- how to sync groups
- diagrams
- mnemonic cluster names / more concrete examples (including who is reachable on the internet)
- [how] do you get a list of users/groups you can share stuff with?
- clarify what UUIDs look like (some people have A uuids, some have B uuids)
- Cross-cluster delegation
Updated by Peter Amstutz over 7 years ago · 22 revisions