Updates documentation for ACL replication.
This commit is contained in:
parent
4a931ae12e
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@ -17,6 +17,7 @@ The following endpoints are supported:
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* [`/v1/acl/info/<id>`](#acl_info): Queries the policy of a given token
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* [`/v1/acl/clone/<id>`](#acl_clone): Creates a new token by cloning an existing token
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* [`/v1/acl/list`](#acl_list): Lists all the active tokens
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* [`/v1/acl/replication`](#acl_replication_status): Checks status of ACL replication
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### <a name="acl_create"></a> /v1/acl/create
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@ -166,3 +167,56 @@ It returns a JSON body like this:
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...
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]
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```
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### <a name="acl_replication_status"></a> /v1/acl/replication
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The endpoint must be hit with a GET. It returns the status of the
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[ACL replication](/docs/internals/acl.html#replication) process in
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the datacenter. This is intended to be used by operators, or by
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automation checking the health of ACL replication.
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By default, the datacenter of the agent is queried; however, the dc can be provided
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using the "?dc=" query parameter.
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It returns a JSON body like this:
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```javascript
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{
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"Enabled": true,
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"Running": true,
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"SourceDatacenter": "dc1",
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"ReplicatedIndex": 1976,
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"LastSuccess": "2016-08-05T06:28:58Z",
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"LastError": "2016-08-05T06:28:28Z"
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}
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```
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`Enabled` reports whether ACL replication is enabled for the datacenter.
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`Running` reports whether the ACL replication process is running. The process
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may take approximately 60 seconds to begin running after a leader election occurs.
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`SourceDatacenter` is the authoritative ACL datacenter that ACLs are being
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replicated from, and will match the
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[`acl_datacenter`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_datacenter) configuration.
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`ReplicatedIndex` is the last index that was successfully replicated. You can
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compare this to the `X-Consul-Index` header returned by the [`/v1/acl/list`](#acl_list)
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endpoint to determine if the replication process has gotten all available
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ACLs. Note that replication runs as a background process approximately every 30
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seconds, and that local updates are rate limited to 100 update/second, so so it
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may take several minutes to perform the initial sync of a large set of ACLs.
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After the initial sync, replica lag should be on the order of about 30 seconds.
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`LastSuccess` is the UTC time of the last successful sync operation. Note that
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since ACL replication is done with a blocking query, this may not update for up
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to 5 minutes if there have been no ACL changes to replicate. A zero value of
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"0001-01-01T00:00:00Z" will be present if no sync has been successful.
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`LastError` is the UTC time of the last error encountered during a sync operation.
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If this time is later than `LastSuccess`, you can assume the replication process
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is not in a good state. A zero value of "0001-01-01T00:00:00Z" will be present if
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no sync has resulted in an error.
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Please see the [ACL replication](/docs/internals/acl.html#replication)
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section of the internals guide for more details.
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@ -351,6 +351,17 @@ Consul will not enable TLS for the HTTP API unless the `https` port has been ass
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token. When you provide a value, it can be any string value. Using a UUID would ensure that it looks
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the same as the other tokens, but isn't strictly necessary.
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* <a name="acl_replication_token"></a><a href="#acl_replication_token">`acl_replication_token`</a> -
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Only used for servers outside the [`acl_datacenter`](#acl_datacenter) running Consul 0.7 or later.
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When provided, this will enable [ACL replication](/docs/internals/acl.html#replication) using this
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token to retrieve and replicate the ACLs to the non-authoritative local datacenter.
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<br><br>
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If there's a partition or other outage affecting the authoritative datacenter, and the
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[`acl_down_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_down_policy) is set to "extend-cache", tokens not
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in the cache can be resolved during the outage using the replicated set of ACLs. Please see the
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[ACL replication](/docs/internals/acl.html#replication) section of the internals guide for more
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details.
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* <a name="acl_token"></a><a href="#acl_token">`acl_token`</a> - When provided, the agent will use this
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token when making requests to the Consul servers. Clients can override this token on a per-request
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basis by providing the "?token" query parameter. When not provided, the empty token, which maps to
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@ -39,14 +39,24 @@ prior versions do not provide a token. This is handled by the special "anonymous
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token. If no token is provided, the rules associated with the anonymous token are
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automatically applied: this allows policy to be enforced on legacy clients.
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ACLs can also act in either a whitelist or blacklist mode depending
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on the configuration of
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[`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy). If the
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default policy is to deny all actions, then token rules can be set to whitelist
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specific actions. In the inverse, the allow all default behavior is a blacklist
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where rules are used to prohibit actions. By default, Consul will allow all
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actions.
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#### ACL Datacenter
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Enforcement is always done by the server nodes. All servers must be configured
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to provide an [`acl_datacenter`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_datacenter) which
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enables ACL enforcement but also specifies the authoritative datacenter. Consul does not
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replicate data cross-WAN and instead relies on [RPC forwarding](/docs/internals/architecture.html)
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to support Multi-Datacenter configurations. However, because requests can be made
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enables ACL enforcement but also specifies the authoritative datacenter. Consul
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relies on [RPC forwarding](/docs/internals/architecture.html) to support
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Multi-Datacenter configurations. However, because requests can be made
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across datacenter boundaries, ACL tokens must be valid globally. To avoid
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replication issues, a single datacenter is considered authoritative and stores
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all the tokens.
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consistency issues, a single datacenter is considered authoritative and stores
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the canonical set of tokens.
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When a request is made to a server in a non-authoritative datacenter server, it
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must be resolved into the appropriate policy. This is done by reading the token
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@ -55,7 +65,9 @@ from the authoritative server and caching the result for a configurable
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of caching is that the cache TTL is an upper bound on the staleness of policy
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that is enforced. It is possible to set a zero TTL, but this has adverse
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performance impacts, as every request requires refreshing the policy via a
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cross-datacenter WAN call.
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cross-datacenter WAN RPC call.
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#### Outages and ACL Replication
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The Consul ACL system is designed with flexible rules to accommodate for an outage
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of the [`acl_datacenter`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_datacenter) or networking
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@ -66,114 +78,46 @@ choices to tune behavior. It is possible to deny or permit all actions or to ign
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cache TTLs and enter a fail-safe mode. The default is to ignore cache TTLs
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for any previously resolved tokens and to deny any uncached tokens.
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ACLs can also act in either a whitelist or blacklist mode depending
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on the configuration of
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[`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy). If the
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default policy is to deny all actions, then token rules can be set to whitelist
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specific actions. In the inverse, the allow all default behavior is a blacklist
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where rules are used to prohibit actions. By default, Consul will allow all
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actions.
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<a name="replication"></a>
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Consul 0.7 added an ACL Replication capability that can allow non-authoritative
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datacenter servers to resolve even uncached tokens. This is enabled by setting an
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[`acl_replication_token`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_replication_token) in the
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configuration on the servers in the non-authoritative datacenters. With replication
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enabled, the servers will maintain a replica of the authoritative datacenter's full
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set of ACLs on the non-authoritative servers.
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### Blacklist mode and `consul exec`
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Replication occurs with a background process that looks for new ACLs approximately
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every 30 seconds. Replicated changes are written at a rate that's throttled to
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100 updates/second, so it may take several minutes to perform the initial sync of
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a large set of ACLs.
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If you set [`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy)
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to `deny`, the `anonymous` token won't have permission to read the default
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`_rexec` prefix; therefore, Consul agents using the `anonymous` token
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won't be able to perform [`consul exec`](/docs/commands/exec.html) actions.
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If there's a partition or other outage affecting the authoritative datacenter,
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and the [`acl_down_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_down_policy)
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is set to "extend-cache", tokens will be resolved during the outage using the
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replicated set of ACLs. An [ACL replication status](http://localhost:4567/docs/agent/http/acl.html#acl_replication_status)
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endpoint is available to monitor the health of the replication process.
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Here's why: the agents need read/write permission to the `_rexec` prefix for
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[`consul exec`](/docs/commands/exec.html) to work properly. They use that prefix
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as the transport for most data.
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Locally-resolved ACLs will be cached using the [`acl_ttl`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_ttl)
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setting of the non-authoritative datacenter, so these entries may persist in the
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cache for up to the TTL, even after the authoritative datacenter comes back online.
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You can enable [`consul exec`](/docs/commands/exec.html) from agents that are not
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configured with a token by allowing the `anonymous` token to access that prefix.
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This can be done by giving this rule to the `anonymous` token:
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ACL replication can also be used to migrate ACLs from one datacenter to another
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using a process like this:
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```javascript
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key "_rexec/" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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```
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1. Enable ACL replication in all datacenters to allow continuation of service
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during the migration, and to populate the target datacenter. Verify replication
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is healthy and caught up to the current ACL index in the target datacenter
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using the [ACL replication status](http://localhost:4567/docs/agent/http/acl.html#acl_replication_status)
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endpoint.
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2. Turn down the old authoritative datacenter servers.
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3. Rolling restart the servers in the target datacenter and change the
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`acl_datacenter` configuration to itself. This will automatically turn off
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replication and will enable the datacenter to start acting as the authoritative
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datacenter, using its replicated ACLs from before.
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3. Rolling restart the servers in other datacenters and change their `acl_datacenter`
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configuration to the target datacenter.
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Alternatively, you can, of course, add an explicit
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[`acl_token`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_token) to each agent, giving it access
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to that prefix.
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### Blacklist mode and Service Discovery
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If your [`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy) is
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set to `deny`, the `anonymous` token will be unable to read any service
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information. This will cause the service discovery mechanisms in the REST API
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and the DNS interface to return no results for any service queries. This is
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because internally the API's and DNS interface consume the RPC interface, which
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will filter results for services the token has no access to.
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You can allow all services to be discovered, mimicing the behavior of pre-0.6.0
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releases, by configuring this ACL rule for the `anonymous` token:
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```
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service "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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```
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Note that the above will allow access for reading service information only. This
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level of access allows discovering other services in the system, but is not
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enough to allow the agent to sync its services and checks into the global
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catalog during [anti-entropy](/docs/internals/anti-entropy.html).
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The most secure way of handling service registration and discovery is to run
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Consul 0.6+ and issue tokens with explicit access for the services or service
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prefixes which are expected to run on each agent.
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### Blacklist mode and Events
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Similar to the above, if your
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[`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy) is set to
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`deny`, the `anonymous` token will have no access to allow firing user events.
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This deviates from pre-0.6.0 builds, where user events were completely
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unrestricted.
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Events have their own first-class expression in the ACL syntax. To restore
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access to user events from arbitrary agents, configure an ACL rule like the
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following for the `anonymous` token:
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```
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event "" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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```
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As always, the more secure way to handle user events is to explicitly grant
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access to each API token based on the events they should be able to fire.
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### Blacklist mode and Prepared Queries
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After Consul 0.6.3, significant changes were made to ACLs for prepared queries,
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including a new `query` ACL policy. See [Prepared Query ACLs](#prepared_query_acls) below for more details.
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### Blacklist mode and Keyring Operations
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Consul 0.6 and later supports securing the encryption keyring operations using
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ACL's. Encryption is an optional component of the gossip layer. More information
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about Consul's keyring operations can be found on the [keyring
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command](/docs/commands/keyring.html) documentation page.
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If your [`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy) is
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set to `deny`, then the `anonymous` token will not have access to read or write
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to the encryption keyring. The keyring policy is yet another first-class citizen
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in the ACL syntax. You can configure the anonymous token to have free reign over
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the keyring using a policy like the following:
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```
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keyring = "write"
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```
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Encryption keyring operations are sensitive and should be properly secured. It
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is recommended that instead of configuring a wide-open policy like above, a
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per-token policy is applied to maximize security.
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### Bootstrapping ACLs
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#### Bootstrapping ACLs
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Bootstrapping the ACL system is done by providing an initial [`acl_master_token`
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configuration](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_master_token) which will be created
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@ -187,8 +131,7 @@ for all servers. Once this is done, restart the current leader to force a leader
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## Rule Specification
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A core part of the ACL system is a rule language which is used to describe the policy
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that must be enforced. Consul supports ACLs for both [K/Vs](/intro/getting-started/kv.html)
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and [services](/intro/getting-started/services.html).
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that must be enforced.
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Key policies are defined by coupling a prefix with a policy. The rules are enforced
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using a longest-prefix match policy: Consul picks the most specific policy possible. The
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@ -309,7 +252,108 @@ This is equivalent to the following JSON input:
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}
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```
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## Services and Checks with ACLs
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## Building ACL Policies
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#### Blacklist mode and `consul exec`
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If you set [`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy)
|
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to `deny`, the `anonymous` token won't have permission to read the default
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`_rexec` prefix; therefore, Consul agents using the `anonymous` token
|
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won't be able to perform [`consul exec`](/docs/commands/exec.html) actions.
|
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|
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Here's why: the agents need read/write permission to the `_rexec` prefix for
|
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[`consul exec`](/docs/commands/exec.html) to work properly. They use that prefix
|
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as the transport for most data.
|
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|
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You can enable [`consul exec`](/docs/commands/exec.html) from agents that are not
|
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configured with a token by allowing the `anonymous` token to access that prefix.
|
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This can be done by giving this rule to the `anonymous` token:
|
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|
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```javascript
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key "_rexec/" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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```
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Alternatively, you can, of course, add an explicit
|
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[`acl_token`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_token) to each agent, giving it access
|
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to that prefix.
|
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|
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#### Blacklist mode and Service Discovery
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|
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If your [`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy) is
|
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set to `deny`, the `anonymous` token will be unable to read any service
|
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information. This will cause the service discovery mechanisms in the REST API
|
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and the DNS interface to return no results for any service queries. This is
|
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because internally the API's and DNS interface consume the RPC interface, which
|
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will filter results for services the token has no access to.
|
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|
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You can allow all services to be discovered, mimicing the behavior of pre-0.6.0
|
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releases, by configuring this ACL rule for the `anonymous` token:
|
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|
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```
|
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service "" {
|
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policy = "read"
|
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}
|
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```
|
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|
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Note that the above will allow access for reading service information only. This
|
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level of access allows discovering other services in the system, but is not
|
||||
enough to allow the agent to sync its services and checks into the global
|
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catalog during [anti-entropy](/docs/internals/anti-entropy.html).
|
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|
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The most secure way of handling service registration and discovery is to run
|
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Consul 0.6+ and issue tokens with explicit access for the services or service
|
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prefixes which are expected to run on each agent.
|
||||
|
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#### Blacklist mode and Events
|
||||
|
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Similar to the above, if your
|
||||
[`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy) is set to
|
||||
`deny`, the `anonymous` token will have no access to allow firing user events.
|
||||
This deviates from pre-0.6.0 builds, where user events were completely
|
||||
unrestricted.
|
||||
|
||||
Events have their own first-class expression in the ACL syntax. To restore
|
||||
access to user events from arbitrary agents, configure an ACL rule like the
|
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following for the `anonymous` token:
|
||||
|
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```
|
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event "" {
|
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policy = "write"
|
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}
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
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As always, the more secure way to handle user events is to explicitly grant
|
||||
access to each API token based on the events they should be able to fire.
|
||||
|
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#### Blacklist mode and Prepared Queries
|
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|
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After Consul 0.6.3, significant changes were made to ACLs for prepared queries,
|
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including a new `query` ACL policy. See [Prepared Query ACLs](#prepared_query_acls) below for more details.
|
||||
|
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#### Blacklist mode and Keyring Operations
|
||||
|
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Consul 0.6 and later supports securing the encryption keyring operations using
|
||||
ACL's. Encryption is an optional component of the gossip layer. More information
|
||||
about Consul's keyring operations can be found on the [keyring
|
||||
command](/docs/commands/keyring.html) documentation page.
|
||||
|
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If your [`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy) is
|
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set to `deny`, then the `anonymous` token will not have access to read or write
|
||||
to the encryption keyring. The keyring policy is yet another first-class citizen
|
||||
in the ACL syntax. You can configure the anonymous token to have free reign over
|
||||
the keyring using a policy like the following:
|
||||
|
||||
```
|
||||
keyring = "write"
|
||||
```
|
||||
|
||||
Encryption keyring operations are sensitive and should be properly secured. It
|
||||
is recommended that instead of configuring a wide-open policy like above, a
|
||||
per-token policy is applied to maximize security.
|
||||
|
||||
#### Services and Checks with ACLs
|
||||
|
||||
Consul allows configuring ACL policies which may control access to service and
|
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check registration. In order to successfully register a service or check with
|
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|
@ -330,7 +374,7 @@ methods of configuring ACL tokens to use for registration events:
|
|||
[HTTP API](/docs/agent/http.html) for operations that require them.
|
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<a name="discovery_acls"></a>
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## Restricting service discovery with ACLs
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#### Restricting service discovery with ACLs
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In Consul 0.6, the ACL system was extended to support restricting read access to
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service registrations. This allows tighter access control and limits the ability
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@ -413,7 +457,7 @@ Capturing ACL Tokens is analogous to
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Token is similar to the complementary `SECURITY INVOKER` attribute.
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||||
<a name="prepared_query_acl_changes"></a>
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||||
#### ACL Implementation Changes
|
||||
#### ACL Implementation Changes for Prepared Queries
|
||||
|
||||
Prepared queries were originally introduced in Consul 0.6.0, and ACL behavior remained
|
||||
unchanged through version 0.6.3, but was then changed to allow better management of the
|
||||
|
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Reference in New Issue