399 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
399 lines
15 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: ACL Token Migration
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description: >-
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Consul 1.4.0 introduces a new ACL system with improvements for the security
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and
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management of ACL tokens and policies. This guide documents how to upgrade
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existing (now called "legacy") tokens after upgrading to 1.4.0.
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---
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# ACL Token Migration
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Consul 1.4.0 introduces a new ACL system with improvements for the security and
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management of ACL tokens and policies. This guide documents how to upgrade
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existing (now called "legacy") tokens after upgrading to 1.4.0.
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Since the policy syntax changed to be more precise and flexible to manage, it's
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necessary to manually translate old tokens into new ones to take advantage of
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the new ACL system features. Tooling is provided to help automate this and this
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guide describes the overall process.
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~> **Note**: Before starting the token migration process all Consul agents, servers
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and clients, must be running at least version 1.4.0. Additionally, you
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must ensure the cluster is in a healthy state including a functioning leader. Once
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the leader has determined that all servers in the cluster are capable of using the
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new ACL system, the leader will transition itself. Then, the other servers will
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transition themselves to the new system, followed by the client agents. You can
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use `consul info` to investigate the cluster health.
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Consul 1.4.0 retains full support for "legacy" ACL tokens so upgrades
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from Consul 1.3.0 are safe. Existing tokens will continue to work in the same
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way for at least two "major" releases (1.5.x, 1.6.x, etc; note HashiCorp does
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not use SemVer for our products).
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This document will briefly describes the [high-level migration process](#migration-process) and provides some [specific examples](#migration-examples) of migration strategies.
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## Migration Process
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While "legacy" tokens will continue to work for several major releases, it's
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advisable to plan on migrating existing tokens as soon as is convenient.
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Migrating also enables using the new policy management improvements, stricter
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policy syntax rules and other features of the new system without
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re-issuing all the secrets in use.
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The high-level process for migrating a legacy token is as follows:
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1. Create a new policy or policies that grant the required access
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2. Update the existing token to use those policies
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### Prerequisites
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This process assumes that the 1.4.0 upgrade is complete including all legacy
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ACLs having their accessor IDs populated. This might take up to several minutes
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after the servers upgrade in the primary datacenter. You can tell if this is the
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case by using `consul acl token list` and checking that no tokens exist with a
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blank `AccessorID`.
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In addition, it is assumed that all clients that might _create_ ACL tokens (e.g.
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Vault's Consul secrets engine) have been updated to use the [new ACL
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APIs](/api-docs/acl/tokens).
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Specifically if you are using Vault's Consul secrets engine you need to be
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running Vault 1.0.0 or higher, _and_ you must update all roles defined in Vault
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to specify a list of policy names rather than an inline policy (which causes
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Vault to use the legacy API).
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~> **Note:** if you have systems still creating "legacy" tokens with the old
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APIs, the migration steps below will still work, however you'll have to keep
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re-running them until nothing is creating legacy tokens to ensure all tokens are
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migrated.
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### Creating Policies
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There are a range of different strategies for creating new policies from existing
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tokens. Two high-level strategies are described here although others or a
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mixture of these may be most appropriate depending on the ACL tokens you already
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have.
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#### Strategy 1: Simple Policy Mapping
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The simplest and most automatic strategy is to create one new policy for every
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existing token. This is easy to automate, but may result in a lot of policies
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with exactly the same rules and with non-human-readable names which will make
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managing policies harder. This approach can be accomplished using the [`consul acl policy create`](/commands/acl/policy/create) command with
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`-from-token` option.
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| Pros | Cons |
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| ------------------------ | ------------------------------------------- |
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| ✅ Simple | ❌ May leave many duplicated policies |
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| ✅ Easy to automate | ❌ Policy names not human-readable |
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A detailed example of using this approach is [given
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below](#simple-policy-mapping).
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#### Strategy 2: Combining Policies
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This strategy takes a more manual approach to create a more manageable set of
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policies. There are a spectrum of options for how to do this which tradeoff
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increasing human involvement for increasing clarity and re-usability of the
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resulting policies.
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For example you could use hashes of the policy rules to de-duplicate identical
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token policies automatically, however naming them something meaningful for
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humans would likely still need manual intervention.
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Toward the other end of the spectrum it might be beneficial for security to
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translate prefix matches into exact matches. This however requires the operator
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knowing that clients using the token really doesn't rely on the prefix matching
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semantics of the old ACL system.
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To assist with this approach, there is a CLI tool and corresponding API that can
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translate a legacy ACL token's rules into a new ACL policy that is exactly
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equivalent. See [`consul acl translate-rules`](/commands/acl/translate-rules).
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| Pros | Cons |
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| ------------------------------------------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------ |
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| ✅ Clearer, more manageable policies | ❌ Requires more manual effort |
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| ✅ Policies can be re-used by new ACL tokens | ❌ May take longer for large or complex existing policy sets |
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A detailed example of using this approach is [given below](#combining-policies).
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### Updating Existing Tokens
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Once you have created one or more policies that adequately express the rules
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needed for a legacy token, you can update the token via the CLI or API to use
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those policies.
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After updating, the token is no longer considered "legacy" and will have all the
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properties of a new token, however it keeps its `SecretID` (the secret part of
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the token used in API calls) so clients already using that token will continue
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to work. It is assumed that the policies you attach continue to grant the
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necessary access for existing clients; this is up to the operator to ensure.
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#### Update via API
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Use the [`PUT /v1/acl/token/:AccessorID`](/api-docs/acl/tokens#update-a-token)
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endpoint. Specifically, ensure that the `Rules` field is omitted or empty. Empty
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`Rules` indicates that this is now treated as a new token.
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#### Update via CLI
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Use the [`consul acl token update`](/commands/acl/token/update)
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command to update the token. Specifically you need to use `-upgrade-legacy`
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which will ensure that legacy rules are removed as well as the new policies
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added.
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## Migration Examples
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Below are two detailed examples of the two high-level strategies for creating
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policies discussed above. It should be noted these are intended to clarify the
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concrete steps you might take. **We don't recommend you perform production
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migrations with ad-hoc terminal commands**. Combining these or something similar
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into a script might be appropriate.
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### Simple Policy Mapping
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This strategy uses the CLI to create a new policy for every existing legacy
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token with exactly equivalent rules. It's easy to automate and clients will see
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no change in behavior for their tokens, but it does leave you with a lot of
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potentially identical policies to manage or clean up later.
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#### Create Policies
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You can get the AccessorID of every legacy token from the API. For example,
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using `curl` and `jq` in bash:
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```shell-session
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$ LEGACY_IDS=$(curl --silent --header "X-Consul-Token: $CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN" \
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'localhost:8500/v1/acl/tokens' | jq --raw-output '.[] | select (.Legacy) | .AccessorID')
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$ echo "$LEGACY_IDS"
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621cbd12-dde7-de06-9be0-e28d067b5b7f
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65cecc86-eb5b-ced5-92dc-f861cf7636fe
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ba464aa8-d857-3d26-472c-4d49c3bdae72
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```
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To create a policy for each one we can use something like:
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```shell
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for id in $LEGACY_IDS; do \
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consul acl policy create -name "migrated-$id" -from-token $id \
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-description "Migrated from legacy ACL token"; \
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done
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```
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Each policy now has an identical set of rules to the original token. You can
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inspect these:
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```shell-session
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$ consul acl policy read -name migrated-621cbd12-dde7-de06-9be0-e28d067b5b7f
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ID: 573d84bd-8b08-3061-e391-d2602e1b4947
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Name: migrated-621cbd12-dde7-de06-9be0-e28d067b5b7f
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Description: Migrated from legacy ACL token
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Datacenters:
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Rules:
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service_prefix "" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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```
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Notice how the policy here is `service_prefix` and not `service` since the old
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ACL syntax was an implicit prefix match. This ensures any clients relying on
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prefix matching behavior will still work.
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#### Update Tokens
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With the policies created as above, we can automatically upgrade all legacy
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tokens.
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```shell
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for id in $LEGACY_IDS; do \
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consul acl token update -id $id -policy-name "migrated-$id" -upgrade-legacy; \
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done
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```
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The update is now complete, all legacy tokens are now new tokens with identical
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secrets and enforcement rules.
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### Combining Policies
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This strategy has more manual elements but results in a cleaner and more
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manageable set of policies than the fully automatic solutions. Note that this is
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**just an example** to illustrate a few ways you may choose to merge or
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manipulate policies.
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#### Find All Unique Policies
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You can get the AccessorID of every legacy token from the API. For example,
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using `curl` and `jq` in bash:
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```shell-session
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$ LEGACY_IDS=$(curl --silent --header "X-Consul-Token: $CONSUL_HTTP_TOKEN" \
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'localhost:8500/v1/acl/tokens' | jq --raw-output '.[] | select (.Legacy) | .AccessorID')
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$ echo "$LEGACY_IDS"
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8b65fdf9-303e-0894-9f87-e71b3273600c
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d9deb39b-1b30-e100-b9c5-04aba3f593a1
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f2bce42e-cdcc-848d-28ca-cfd0556a22e3
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```
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Now we want to read the actual policy for each legacy token and de-duplicate
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them. We can use the `translate-rules` helper sub-command which will read the
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token's policy and return a new ACL policy that is exactly equivalent.
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```shell-session
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$ for id in $LEGACY_IDS; do \
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echo "Policy for $id:"
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consul acl translate-rules -token-accessor "$id"; \
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done
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Policy for 8b65fdf9-303e-0894-9f87-e71b3273600c:
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service_prefix "bar" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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Policy for d9deb39b-1b30-e100-b9c5-04aba3f593a1:
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service_prefix "foo" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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Policy for f2bce42e-cdcc-848d-28ca-cfd0556a22e3:
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service_prefix "bar" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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```
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Notice that two policies are the same and one different.
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We can change the loop above to take a hash of this policy definition to
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de-duplicate the policies into a set of files locally. This example uses command
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available on macOS but equivalents for other platforms should be easy to find.
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```shell-session
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$ mkdir policies
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$ for id in $LEGACY_IDS; do \
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# Fetch the equivalent new policy rules based on the legacy token rules
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NEW_POLICY=$(consul acl translate-rules -token-accessor "$id"); \
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# Sha1 hash the rules
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HASH=$(echo -n "$NEW_POLICY" | shasum | awk '{ print $1 }'); \
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# Write rules to a policy file named with the hash to de-duplicated
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echo "$NEW_POLICY" > policies/$HASH.hcl; \
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done
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$ tree policies
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policies
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├── 024ce11f26f59436c518fb31f0999d1400485c17.hcl
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└── 501b787c9444fbd62f346ab257eeb27197be2444.hcl
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```
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#### Cleaning Up Policies
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You can now manually inspect and potentially edit these policies. For example we
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could rename them according to their intended use. In this case we maintain the
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hash as it will allow us to match tokens to policies later.
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```shell-session
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$ cat policies/024ce11f26f59436c518fb31f0999d1400485c17.hcl
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service_prefix "bar" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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$ # Add human-readable suffix to the file name so policies end up clearly named
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$ mv policies/024ce11f26f59436c518fb31f0999d1400485c17.hcl \
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policies/024ce11f26f59436c518fb31f0999d1400485c17-bar-service.hcl
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```
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You might also choose to tighten up the rules, for example if you know you never
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rely on prefix-matching the service name `foo` you might choose to modify the
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policy to use exact match.
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```shell-session
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$ cat policies/501b787c9444fbd62f346ab257eeb27197be2444.hcl
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service_prefix "foo" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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$ echo 'service "foo" { policy = "write" }' > policies/501b787c9444fbd62f346ab257eeb27197be2444.hcl
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$ # Add human-readable suffix to the file name so policies end up clearly named
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$ mv policies/501b787c9444fbd62f346ab257eeb27197be2444.hcl \
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policies/501b787c9444fbd62f346ab257eeb27197be2444-foo-service.hcl
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```
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#### Creating Policies
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We now have a minimal set of policies to create, with human-readable names. We
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can create each one with something like the following.
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```shell-session
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$ for p in $(ls policies | grep ".hcl"); do \
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# Extract the hash part of the file name
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HASH=$(echo "$p" | cut -d - -f 1); \
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# Extract the name suffix without .hcl
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NAME=$(echo "$p" | cut -d - -f 2- | cut -d . -f 1); \
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# Create new policy based on the rules in the file and the name we gave
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consul acl policy create -name $NAME \
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-rules "@policies/$p" \
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-description "Migrated from legacy token"; \
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done
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ID: da2a9f9b-4e44-13f8-e308-76ce7a8dcb21
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Name: bar-service
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Description: Migrated from legacy token
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Datacenters:
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Rules:
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service_prefix "bar" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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ID: 9fbded86-9140-efe4-b661-c8bd07b6c584
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Name: foo-service
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Description: Migrated from legacy token
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Datacenters:
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Rules:
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service "foo" { policy = "write" }
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```
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#### Upgrading Tokens
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Finally we can map our existing tokens to those policies using the hash in the
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policy file names. The `-upgrade-legacy` flag removes the token's legacy
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embedded rules at the same time as associating them with the new policies
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created from those rules.
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```shell-session
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$ for id in $LEGACY_IDS; do \
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NEW_POLICY=$(consul acl translate-rules -token-accessor "$id"); \
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HASH=$(echo -n "$NEW_POLICY" | shasum | awk '{ print $1 }'); \
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# Lookup the hash->new policy mapping from the policy file names
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POLICY_FILE=$(ls policies | grep "^$HASH"); \
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POLICY_NAME=$(echo "$POLICY_FILE" | cut -d - -f 2- | cut -d . -f 1); \
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echo "==> Mapping token $id to policy $POLICY_NAME"; \
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consul acl token update -id $id -policy-name $POLICY_NAME -upgrade-legacy; \
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done
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==> Mapping token 8b65fdf9-303e-0894-9f87-e71b3273600c to policy bar-service
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Token updated successfully.
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AccessorID: 8b65fdf9-303e-0894-9f87-e71b3273600c
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SecretID: 3dbb3981-7654-733a-3475-5ce20fc5a7b9
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Description:
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Local: false
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Create Time: 0001-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 UTC
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Policies:
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da2a9f9b-4e44-13f8-e308-76ce7a8dcb21 - bar-service
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==> Mapping token d9deb39b-1b30-e100-b9c5-04aba3f593a1 to policy foo-service
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Token updated successfully.
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AccessorID: d9deb39b-1b30-e100-b9c5-04aba3f593a1
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SecretID: 5f54733b-4c76-eb74-8781-3550c20f4969
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Description:
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Local: false
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Create Time: 0001-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 UTC
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Policies:
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9fbded86-9140-efe4-b661-c8bd07b6c584 - foo-service
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==> Mapping token f2bce42e-cdcc-848d-28ca-cfd0556a22e3 to policy bar-service
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Token updated successfully.
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AccessorID: f2bce42e-cdcc-848d-28ca-cfd0556a22e3
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SecretID: f3aaa3e2-2c6f-cf3c-1e86-454de728e8ab
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Description:
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Local: false
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Create Time: 0001-01-01 00:00:00 +0000 UTC
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Policies:
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da2a9f9b-4e44-13f8-e308-76ce7a8dcb21 - bar-service
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```
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At this point all tokens are upgraded and can use new ACL features while
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retaining the same secret clients are already using.
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