191 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
191 lines
8.3 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: Intentions (Legacy Mode)
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description: >-
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Intentions define service communication permissions in the service mesh. As of version 1.9, Consul uses a new system for creating and managing intentions. Learn how intentions worked in earlier versions of Consul with this legacy documentation.
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---
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# Intentions in Legacy Mode
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~> **1.8.x and earlier:** This document only applies in Consul versions 1.8.x
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and before. If you are using version 1.9.0 or later please use the updated
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documentation [here](/consul/docs/connect/intentions).
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Intentions define access control for services via Connect and are used
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to control which services may establish connections. Intentions can be
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managed via the API, CLI, or UI.
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Intentions are enforced by the [proxy](/consul/docs/connect/proxies)
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or [natively integrated application](/consul/docs/connect/native) on
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inbound connections. After verifying the TLS client certificate, the
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[authorize API endpoint](/consul/api-docs/agent/connect#authorize) is called which verifies the connection
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is allowed by testing the intentions. If authorize returns false the
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connection must be terminated.
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The default intention behavior is defined by the default [ACL
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policy](/consul/docs/agent/config/config-files#acl_default_policy). If the default ACL policy is
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"allow all", then all Connect connections are allowed by default. If the
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default ACL policy is "deny all", then all Connect connections are denied by
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default.
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## Intention Basics
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Intentions can be managed via the [API](/consul/api-docs/connect/intentions),
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[CLI](/consul/commands/intention), or UI. Please see the respective documentation for
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each for full details on options, flags, etc. Below is an example of a basic
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intention to show the basic attributes of an intention. The full data model of
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an intention can be found in the [API
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documentation](/consul/api-docs/connect/intentions).
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```shell-session
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$ consul intention create -deny web db
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Created: web => db (deny)
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```
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The intention above is a deny intention with a source of "web" and
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destination of "db". This says that connections from web to db are not
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allowed and the connection will be rejected.
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When an intention is modified, existing connections will not be affected.
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This means that changing a connection from "allow" to "deny" today
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_will not_ kill the connection. Addressing this shortcoming is on
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the near term roadmap for Consul.
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### Wildcard Intentions
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An intention source or destination may also be the special wildcard
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value `*`. This matches _any_ value and is used as a catch-all. Example:
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```shell-session
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$ consul intention create -deny web '*'
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Created: web => * (deny)
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```
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This example says that the "web" service cannot connect to _any_ service.
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### Metadata
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Arbitrary string key/value data may be associated with intentions. This
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is unused by Consul but can be used by external systems or for visibility
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in the UI.
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```shell-session
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$ consul intention create \
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-deny \
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-meta description='Hello there' \
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web db
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...
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$ consul intention get web db
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Source: web
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Destination: db
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Action: deny
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ID: 31449e02-c787-f7f4-aa92-72b5d9b0d9ec
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Meta[description]: Hello there
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Created At: Friday, 25-May-18 02:07:51 CEST
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```
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## Precedence and Match Order
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Intentions are matched in an implicit order based on specificity, preferring
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deny over allow. Specificity is determined by whether a value is an exact
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specified value or is the wildcard value `*`.
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The full precedence table is shown below and is evaluated
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top to bottom, with larger numbers being evaluated first.
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| Source Namespace | Source Name | Destination Namespace | Destination Name | Precedence |
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| ---------------- | ----------- | --------------------- | ---------------- | ---------- |
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| Exact | Exact | Exact | Exact | 9 |
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| Exact | `*` | Exact | Exact | 8 |
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| `*` | `*` | Exact | Exact | 7 |
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| Exact | Exact | Exact | `*` | 6 |
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| Exact | `*` | Exact | `*` | 5 |
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| `*` | `*` | Exact | `*` | 4 |
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| Exact | Exact | `*` | `*` | 3 |
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| Exact | `*` | `*` | `*` | 2 |
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| `*` | `*` | `*` | `*` | 1 |
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The precedence value can be read from the [API](/consul/api-docs/connect/intentions)
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after an intention is created.
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Precedence cannot be manually overridden today. This is a feature that will
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be added in a later version of Consul.
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In the case the two precedence values match, Consul will evaluate
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intentions based on lexicographical ordering of the destination then
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source name. In practice, this is a moot point since authorizing a connection
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has an exact source and destination value so its impossible for two
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valid non-wildcard intentions to match.
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The numbers in the table above are not stable. Their ordering will remain
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fixed but the actual number values may change in the future.
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-> **Consul Enterprise** - Namespaces are an Enterprise feature. In Consul OSS any of the rows in
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the table with a `*` for either the source namespace or destination namespace are not applicable.
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## Intention Management Permissions
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Intention management can be protected by [ACLs](/consul/docs/security/acl).
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Permissions for intentions are _destination-oriented_, meaning the ACLs
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for managing intentions are looked up based on the destination value
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of the intention, not the source.
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Intention permissions are by default implicitly granted at `read` level
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when granting `service:read` or `service:write`. This is because a
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service registered that wants to use Connect needs `intentions:read`
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for its own service name in order to know whether or not to authorize
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connections. The following ACL policy will implicitly grant `intentions:read`
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(note _read_) for service `web`.
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```hcl
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service "web" {
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policy = "write"
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}
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```
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It is possible to explicitly specify intention permissions. For example,
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the following policy will allow a service to be discovered without granting
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access to read intentions for it.
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```hcl
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service "web" {
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policy = "read"
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intentions = "deny"
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}
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```
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Note that `intentions:read` is required for a token that a Connect-enabled
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service uses to register itself or its proxy. If the token used does not
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have `intentions:read` then the agent will be unable to resolve intentions
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for the service and so will not be able to authorize any incoming connections.
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~> **Security Note:** Explicitly allowing `intentions:write` on the token you
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provide to a service instance at registration time opens up a significant
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additional vulnerability. Although you may trust the service _team_ to define
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which inbound connections they accept, using a combined token for registration
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allows a compromised instance to to redefine the intentions which allows many
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additional attack vectors and may be hard to detect. We strongly recommend only
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delegating `intentions:write` using tokens that are used by operations teams or
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orchestrators rather than spread via application config, or only manage
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intentions with management tokens.
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## Performance and Intention Updates
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The intentions for services registered with a Consul agent are cached
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locally on that agent. They are then updated via a background blocking query
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against the Consul servers.
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Connect connection attempts require only local agent
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communication for authorization and generally only impose microseconds
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of latency to the connection. All actions in the data path of connections
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require only local data to ensure minimal performance overhead.
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Updates to intentions are propagated nearly instantly to agents since agents
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maintain a continuous blocking query in the background for intention updates
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for registered services.
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Because all the intention data is cached locally, the agents can fail static.
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Even if the agents are severed completely from the Consul servers, inbound
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connection authorization continues to work for a configured amount of time.
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Changes to intentions will not be picked up until the partition heals, but
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will then automatically take effect when connectivity is restored.
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