196 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
196 lines
12 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "docs"
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page_title: "ACL System"
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sidebar_current: "docs-acl-system"
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description: |-
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Consul provides an optional Access Control List (ACL) system which can be used to control access to data and APIs. The ACL system is a Capability-based system that relies on tokens which can have fine grained rules applied to them. It is very similar to AWS IAM in many ways.
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---
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-> **1.4.0 and later:** This guide only applies in Consul versions 1.4.0 and later. The documentation for the legacy ACL system is [here](/docs/acl/acl-legacy.html)
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# ACL System
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Consul provides an optional Access Control List (ACL) system which can be used to control access to data and APIs.
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The ACL is [Capability-based](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capability-based_security), relying on tokens which
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are associated with policies to determine which fine grained rules can be applied. Consul's capability based
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ACL system is very similar to the design of [AWS IAM](https://aws.amazon.com/iam/).
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## ACL System Overview
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The ACL system is designed to be easy to use and fast to enforce while providing administrative insight.
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At the highest level, there are two major components to the ACL system:
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* **ACL Policies** - Policies allow the grouping of a set of rules into a logical unit that can be reused and linked with
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many tokens.
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* **ACL Tokens** - Requests to Consul are authorized by using bearer token. Each ACL token has a public
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Accessor ID which is used to name a token, and a Secret ID which is used as the bearer token used to
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make requests to Consul.
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ACL tokens and policies are managed by Consul operators via Consul's
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[ACL API](/api/acl/acl.html), [ACL CLI](/docs/commands/acl.html), or systems like
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[HashiCorp's Vault](https://www.vaultproject.io/docs/secrets/consul/index.html).
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### ACL Policies
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An ACL policy is a named set of rules and is composed of the following elements:
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* **ID** - The policies auto-generated public identifier.
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* **Name** - A unique meaningful name for the policy.
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* **Rules** - Set of rules granting or denying permissions. See the [Rule Specification](/docs/acl/acl-rules.html#rule-specification) documentation for more details.
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* **Datacenters** - A list of datacenters the policy is valid within.
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#### Builtin Policies
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* **Global Management** - Grants unrestricted privileges to any token that uses it. When created it will be named `global-management`
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and will be assigned the reserved ID of `00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000001`. This policy can be renamed but modification
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of anything else including the rule set and datacenter scoping will be prevented by Consul.
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### ACL Tokens
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ACL tokens are used to determine if the caller is authorized to perform an action. An ACL token is composed of the following
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elements:
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* **Accessor ID** - The token's public identifier.
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* **Secret ID** -The bearer token used when making requests to Consul.
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* **Description** - A human readable description of the token. (Optional)
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* **Policy Set** - The list of policies that are applicable for the token.
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* **Locality** - Indicates whether the token should be local to the datacenter it was created within or created in
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the primary datacenter and globally replicated.
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#### Builtin Tokens
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During cluster bootstrapping when ACLs are enabled both the special `anonymous` and the `master` token will be
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injected.
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* **Anonymous Token** - The anonymous token is used when a request is made to Consul without specifying a bearer token.
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The anonymous token's description and policies may be updated but Consul will prevent this tokens deletion. When created,
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it will be assigned `00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000002` for its Accessor ID and `anonymous` for its Secret ID.
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* **Master Token** - When a master token is present within the Consul configuration, it is created and will be linked
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With the builtin Global Management policy giving it unrestricted privileges. The master token is created with the Secret ID
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set to the value of the configuration entry.
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#### Authorization
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The token Secret ID is passed along with each RPC request to the servers. Consul's
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[HTTP endpoints](/api/index.html) can accept tokens via the `token`
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query string parameter, the `X-Consul-Token` request header, or an
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[RFC6750](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6750) authorization bearer token. Consul's
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[CLI commands](/docs/commands/index.html) can accept tokens via the
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`token` argument, or the `CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN` environment variable.
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If no token is provided for an HTTP request then Consul will use the default ACL token
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if it has been configured. If no default ACL token was configured then the anonymous
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token will be used.
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#### ACL Rules and Scope
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The rules from all policies linked with a token are combined to form that token's
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effective rule set. Policy rules can be defined in either a whitelist or blacklist
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mode depending on the configuration of [`acl_default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy).
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If the default policy is to "deny" access to all resources, then policy rules can be set to
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whitelist access to specific resources. Conversely, if the default policy is “allow” then policy rules can
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be used to explicitly deny access to resources.
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The following table summarizes the ACL resources that are available for constructing
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rules:
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| Resource | Scope |
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| ------------------------ | ----- |
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| [`acl`](#acl-rules) | Operations for managing the ACL system [ACL API](/api/acl/acl.html) |
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| [`agent`](#agent-rules) | Utility operations in the [Agent API](/api/agent.html), other than service and check registration |
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| [`event`](#event-rules) | Listing and firing events in the [Event API](/api/event.html) |
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| [`key`](#key-value-rules) | Key/value store operations in the [KV Store API](/api/kv.html) |
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| [`keyring`](#keyring-rules) | Keyring operations in the [Keyring API](/api/operator/keyring.html) |
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| [`node`](#node-rules) | Node-level catalog operations in the [Catalog API](/api/catalog.html), [Health API](/api/health.html), [Prepared Query API](/api/query.html), [Network Coordinate API](/api/coordinate.html), and [Agent API](/api/agent.html) |
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| [`operator`](#operator-rules) | Cluster-level operations in the [Operator API](/api/operator.html), other than the [Keyring API](/api/operator/keyring.html) |
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| [`query`](#prepared-query-rules) | Prepared query operations in the [Prepared Query API](/api/query.html)
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| [`service`](#service-rules) | Service-level catalog operations in the [Catalog API](/api/catalog.html), [Health API](/api/health.html), [Prepared Query API](/api/query.html), and [Agent API](/api/agent.html) |
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| [`session`](#session-rules) | Session operations in the [Session API](/api/session.html) |
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Since Consul snapshots actually contain ACL tokens, the [Snapshot API](/api/snapshot.html)
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requires a token with "write" privileges for the ACL system.
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The following resources are not covered by ACL policies:
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1. The [Status API](/api/status.html) is used by servers when bootstrapping and exposes
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basic IP and port information about the servers, and does not allow modification
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of any state.
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2. The datacenter listing operation of the
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[Catalog API](/api/catalog.html#list-datacenters) similarly exposes the names of known
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Consul datacenters, and does not allow modification of any state.
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3. The [connect CA roots endpoint](/api/connect/ca.html#list-ca-root-certificates) exposes just the public TLS certificate which other systems can use to verify the TLS connection with Consul.
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Constructing rules from these policies is covered in detail on the
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[ACL Rules](/docs/acl/acl-rules.html) page.
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## Configuring ACLs
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ACLs are configured using several different configuration options. These are marked
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as to whether they are set on servers, clients, or both.
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| Configuration Option | Servers | Clients | Purpose |
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| -------------------- | ------- | ------- | ------- |
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| [`acl.enabled`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_enabled) | `REQUIRED` | `REQUIRED` | Controls whether ACLs are enabled |
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| [`acl.default_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_default_policy) | `OPTIONAL` | `N/A` | Determines whitelist or blacklist mode |
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| [`acl.down_policy`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_down_policy) | `OPTIONAL` | `OPTIONAL` | Determines what to do when the remote token or policy resolution fails |
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| [`acl.policy_ttl`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_policy_ttl) | `OPTIONAL` | `OPTIONAL` | Determines time-to-live for cached ACL Policies |
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| [`acl.token_ttl`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_token_ttl) | `OPTIONAL` | `OPTIONAL` | Determines time-to-live for cached ACL Tokens |
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A number of special tokens can also be configured which allow for bootstrapping the ACL
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system, or accessing Consul in special situations:
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| Special Token | Servers | Clients | Purpose |
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| ------------- | ------- | ------- | ------- |
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| [`acl.tokens.agent_master`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_tokens_agent_master) | `OPTIONAL` | `OPTIONAL` | Special token that can be used to access [Agent API](/api/agent.html) when remote bearer token resolution fails; used for setting up the cluster such as doing initial join operations, see the [ACL Agent Master Token](#acl-agent-master-token) section for more details |
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| [`acl.tokens.agent`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_tokens_agent) | `OPTIONAL` | `OPTIONAL` | Special token that is used for an agent's internal operations, see the [ACL Agent Token](#acl-agent-token) section for more details |
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| [`acl.tokens.master`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_tokens_master) | `OPTIONAL` | `N/A` | Special token used to bootstrap the ACL system, see the [Bootstrapping ACLs](https://learn.hashicorp.com/consul/advanced/day-1-operations/acl-guide) guide for more details |
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| [`acl.tokens.default`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_tokens_default) | `OPTIONAL` | `OPTIONAL` | Default token to use for client requests where no token is supplied; this is often configured with read-only access to services to enable DNS service discovery on agents |
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All of these tokens except the `master` token can all be introduced or updated via the [/v1/agent/token API](/api/agent.html#update-acl-tokens).
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#### ACL Agent Master Token
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Since the [`acl.tokens.agent_master`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_tokens_agent_master) is designed to be used when the Consul servers are not available, its policy is managed locally on the agent and does not need to have a token defined on the Consul servers via the ACL API. Once set, it implicitly has the following policy associated with it
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```text
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agent "<node name of agent>" {
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policy = "write"
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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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#### ACL Agent Token
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The [`acl.tokens.agent`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_tokens_agent) is a special token that is used for an agent's internal operations. It isn't used directly for any user-initiated operations like the [`acl.tokens.default`](/docs/agent/options.html#acl_tokens_default), though if the `acl.tokens.agent_token` isn't configured the `acl.tokens.default` will be used. The ACL agent token is used for the following operations by the agent:
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1. Updating the agent's node entry using the [Catalog API](/api/catalog.html), including updating its node metadata, tagged addresses, and network coordinates
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2. Performing [anti-entropy](/docs/internals/anti-entropy.html) syncing, in particular reading the node metadata and services registered with the catalog
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3. Reading and writing the special `_rexec` section of the KV store when executing [`consul exec`](/docs/commands/exec.html) commands
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Here's an example policy sufficient to accomplish the above for a node called `mynode`:
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```text
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node "mynode" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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service_prefix "" {
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policy = "read"
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}
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key_prefix "_rexec" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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```
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The `service_prefix` policy needs read access for any services that can be registered on the agent. If [remote exec is disabled](/docs/agent/options.html#disable_remote_exec), the default, then the `key_prefix` policy can be omitted.
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## Next Steps
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Setup ACLs with the [Bootstrapping the ACL System guide](https://learn.hashicorp.com/consul/advanced/day-1-operations/acl-guide) or continue reading about
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[ACL rules](/docs/acl/acl-rules.html).
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