373 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
373 lines
12 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Roles
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description: >-
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This topic describes roles within the access control list (ACL) system. A role is a named set of policies and service identities.
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They enable you to reuse policies by decoupling the policies from the token distributed to team members.
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---
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# Roles
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A role is a collection of policies that your ACL administrator can link to a token.
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They enable you to reuse policies by decoupling the policies from the token distributed to team members.
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Instead, the token is linked to the role, which is able to hold several policies that can be updated asynchronously without distributing new tokens to users.
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As a result, roles can provide a more convenient authentication infrastrcture than creating unique policies and tokens for each requester.
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## Workflow Overview
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Roles are configurations linking several policies to a token. The following procedure describes the workflow for implementing roles.
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1. Assemble rules into policies (see [Policies](/docs/security/acl/acl-policies)) and register them in Consul.
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1. Define a role and include the policy IDs or names.
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1. Register the role in Consule and link it to a token.
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1. Distribute the tokens to users for implementation.
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## Creating Roles
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Creating roles is commonly the responsibility of the Consul ACLs administrator.
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Roles have several attributes, including service identities and node identities.
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Refer to the following documentation for details:
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- [Role Attributes](#role-attributes)
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- [Service Identities](#service-identities)
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- [Node Identities](#node-identities)
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Use the Consul command line or API endpoint to create roles.
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### Command Line
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Issue the `consul acl role create` command to create roles. In the following example, a role named `crawler` is created that contains a policy named `crawler-kv` and a policy named `crawler-key`.
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```shell-session
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$ consul acl role create -name "crawler" -description "web crawler role" -policy-name "crawler-kv" -policy-name "crawler-key"
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```
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Refer to the [command line documentation](/commands/acl/role) for details.
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### API
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Make a `PUT` call to the `acl/role` endpoint and specify the role configuration in the payload to create roles. You can save the role definition in a JSON file or use escaped JSON in the call. In the following example call, the payload is defined externally.
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```shell-session
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$ curl --request PUT --data @payload.json http://127.0.0.1:8500/v1/acl/role
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```
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Refer to the [API documentation](/api-docs/acl/roles) for details.
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## Role Attributes
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Roles may contain the following attributes:
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- `ID`: The `ID` is an auto-generated public identifier. You can specify the role `ID` when linking it to tokens.
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- `Name`: A unique meaningful name for the role. You can specify the role `Name` when linking it to tokens.
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- `Description`: (Optional) A human-readable description of the role.
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- `Policies`: Specifies a the list of policies that are applicable for the role. The object can reference the policy `ID` or `Name` attribute.
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- `ServiceIdentities`: Specifies a list of services that are applicable for the role. See [Service Identities](#service-identities) for details.
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- `NodeIdentities`: Specifies a list of nodes that are applicable for the role. See [Node Identities](#node-identities) for details.
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- `Namespace`: <EnterpriseAlert inline /> The namespace that the policy resides in. Roles can only be linked to policies that are defined in the same namespace. See [Namespaces](/docs/enterprise/namespaces) for additional information. Requires Consul Enterprise 1.7.0+
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- `Partition`: <EnterpriseAlert inline/> The admin partition that the policy resides in. Roles can only be linked to policies that are defined in the same admin partition. See [Admin Partitions](/docs/enterprise/admin-partitions) for additional information. Requires Consul Enterprise 1.10.0+.
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## Service Identities
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<!-- -> Added in Consul 1.5.0 # Remove and lean on versioning?-->
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You can specify a service identity when configuring roles or linking tokens to policies. Service identities enable you to quickly construct policies for services, rather than creating identical polices for each service.
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Service identities are used during the authorization process to automatically generate a policy for the service(s) specifed. The policy will be linked to the role or token so that the service(s) can _be discovered_ and _discover other healthy service instances_ in a service mesh. Refer to the [service mesh](/docs/connect) topic for additional information about Consul service mesh.
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### Service Identity Specification
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Use the following syntax to define a service identity:
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<CodeTabs>
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```json
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{
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"ServiceIdentities": [
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{
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"ServiceName": "<service name>",
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"Datacenters": ["<datacenter name>"]
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}
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]
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}
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```
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```hcl
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"ServiceIdentities" = {
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"ServiceName" = "<service name>"
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"Datacenters" = ["<datacenter name>"]
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}
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```
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</CodeTabs>
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- `ServiceIdentities`: Declares a service identity block.
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- `ServiceIdentities.ServiceName`: String value that specifies the name of the service you want to associate with the policy.
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- `ServiceIdentitites.Datacenters`: Array that specifies the names of datacenters in which the service identity applies. This field is optional.
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Refer to the the [API documentation for roles](/api/acl/roles#sample-payload) for additional information and examples.
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-> **Scope for Namespace and Admin Partition** - In Consul Enterprise, service identities inherit the namespace or admin partition scope of the corresponding ACL token or role.
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The following policy is generated for each service when a service identity is declared:
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```hcl
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# Allow the service and its sidecar proxy to register into the catalog.
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service "<service name>" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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service "<service name>-sidecar-proxy" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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# Allow for any potential upstreams to be resolved.
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service_prefix "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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node_prefix "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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```
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Refer to the [rules reference](/docs/security/acl/acl-rules) for information about the rules in the policy.
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### Example
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The following role configuration contains service identities for the `web` and `db` services. Note that the `db` service is also scoped to the `dc1` datacenter so that the policy will only be applied to instances of `db` in `dc1`.
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<CodeTabs>
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="example-role.hcl">
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```hcl
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Description = "Showcases all input parameters"
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Name = "example-role"
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Policies = {
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ID = "783beef3-783f-f41f-7422-7087dc272765"
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}
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Policies = {
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Name = "node-read"
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}
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ServiceIdentities = {
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ServiceName = "web"
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}
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ServiceIdentities = {
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Datacenters = ["dc1"]
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ServiceName = "db"
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}
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="example-role.json">
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```json
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{
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"Name": "example-role",
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"Description": "Showcases all input parameters",
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"Policies": [
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{
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"ID": "783beef3-783f-f41f-7422-7087dc272765"
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},
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{
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"Name": "node-read"
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}
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],
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"ServiceIdentities": [
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{
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"ServiceName": "web"
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},
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{
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"ServiceName": "db",
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"Datacenters": ["dc1"]
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}
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],
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"NodeIdentities": [
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{
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"NodeName": "node-1",
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"Datacenter": "dc2"
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}
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]
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}
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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</CodeTabs>
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During the authorization process, the following policies for the `web` and `db` services will be generated and linked to the token:
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="web-policy.hcl">
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```hcl
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# Allow the service and its sidecar proxy to register into the catalog.
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service "web" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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service "web-sidecar-proxy" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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# Allow for any potential upstreams to be resolved.
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service_prefix "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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node_prefix "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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Per the `ServiceIdentitites.Datacenters` configuration, the `db` policy is scoped to resources in the `dc1` datacenter.
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="db-policy.hcl">
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```hcl
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# Allow the service and its sidecar proxy to register into the catalog.
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service "db" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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service "db-sidecar-proxy" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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# Allow for any potential upstreams to be resolved.
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service_prefix "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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node_prefix "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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## Node Identities
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<!-- -> Added in Consul 1.8.1 -- remove and lean on doc version? -->
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You can specify a node identity when configuring roles or linking tokens to policies. _Node_ commonly refers to a Consul agent, but a node can also be a physical server, cloud instance, virtual machine, or container.
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Node identities enable you to quickly construct policies for nodes, rather than manually creating identical polices for each node. They are used during the authorization process to automatically generate a policy for the node(s) specifed. You can specify the token linked to the policy in the [`acl_tokens_agent`](/docs/agent/options#acl_tokens_agent) field when configuring the agent.
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### Node Identity Specification
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Use the following syntax to define a node identity:
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<CodeTabs>
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```json
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{
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"NodeIdentities": [
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{
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"NodeName": "<node name>",
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"Datacenters": ["<datacenter name>"]
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}
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]
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}
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```
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```hcl
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NodeIdentities = {
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NodeName = "<node name>"
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Datacenters = ["<datacenter name>"]
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}
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```
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</CodeTabs>
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- `NodeIdentities`: Declares a node identity block.
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- `NodeIdentities.NodeName`: String value that specifies the name of the node you want to associate with the policy.
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- `NodeIdentitites.Datacenters`: Array that specifies the names of datacenters in which the node identity applies. This field is optional.
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Refer to the the [API documentation for roles](/api/acl/roles#sample-payload) for additional information and examples.
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-> **Consul Enterprise Namespacing** - Node Identities can only be applied to tokens and roles in the `default` namespace. The generated policy rules allow for `service:read` permissions on all services in all namespaces.
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The following policy is generated for each node when a node identity is declared:
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```hcl
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# Allow the agent to register its own node in the Catalog and update its network coordinates
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node "<node name>" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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# Allows the agent to detect and diff services registered to itself. This is used during
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# anti-entropy to reconcile difference between the agents knowledge of registered
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# services and checks in comparison with what is known in the Catalog.
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service_prefix "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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```
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Refer to the [rules reference](/docs/security/acl/acl-rules) for information about the rules in the policy.
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### Example
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The following role configuration contains a node identity for `node-1`. Note that the node identity is also scoped to the `dc2` datacenter. As a result, the policy will only be applied to nodes named `node-1` in `dc2`.
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<CodeTabs>
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="example-role.hcl">
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```hcl
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Description = "Showcases all input parameters"
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Name = "example-role"
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NodeIdentities = {
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Datacenter = "dc2"
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NodeName = "node-1",
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}
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Policies = {
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ID = "783beef3-783f-f41f-7422-7087dc272765"
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}
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Policies = {
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Name = "node-read"
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}
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="example-role.json">
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```json
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{
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"Name": "example-role",
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"Description": "Showcases all input parameters",
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"Policies": [
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{
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"ID": "783beef3-783f-f41f-7422-7087dc272765"
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},
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{
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"Name": "node-read"
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}
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],
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"NodeIdentities": [
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{
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"NodeName": "node-1",
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"Datacenter": "dc2"
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}
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]
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}
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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</CodeTabs>
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During the authorization process, the following policy will be generated and linked to the token:
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<CodeBlockConfig filename="node-1-policy.hcl">
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```hcl
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# Allow the agent to register its own node in the Catalog and update its network coordinates
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node "node-1" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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# Allows the agent to detect and diff services registered to itself. This is used during
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# anti-entropy to reconcile differences between the agent's knowledge of registered
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# services and checks in comparison with what is known in the Catalog.
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service_prefix "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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```
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</CodeBlockConfig>
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