168 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
168 lines
6.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "intro"
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page_title: "Authentication"
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sidebar_current: "gettingstarted-auth"
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description: |-
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Authentication to Vault gives a user access to use Vault. Vault can authenticate using multiple methods.
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---
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# Authentication
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Now that we know how to use the basics of Vault, it is important to understand
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how to authenticate to Vault itself. Up to this point, we haven't had to
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authenticate because starting the Vault server in dev mode automatically logs
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us in as root. In practice, you'll almost always have to manually authenticate.
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On this page, we'll talk specifically about _authentication_. On the next
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page, we talk about _authorization_.
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Authentication is the mechanism of assigning an identity to a Vault user.
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The access control and permissions associated with an identity are
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authorization, and will not be covered on this page.
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Vault has pluggable authentication backends, making it easy to authenticate
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with Vault using whatever form works best for your organization. On this page
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we'll use the token backend as well as the GitHub backend.
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## Tokens
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We'll first explain token authentication before going over any other
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authentication backends. Token authentication is enabled by default in
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Vault and cannot be disabled. It is also what we've been using up to this
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point.
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When you start a dev server with `vault server -dev`, it outputs your
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_root token_. The root token is the initial access token to configure Vault.
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It has root privileges, so it can perform any operation within Vault.
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We'll cover how to limit privileges in the next section.
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You can create more tokens using `vault token-create`:
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```
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$ vault token-create
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6c38f603-6441-2161-c543-ee15b7206563
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```
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By default, this will create a child token of your current token that
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inherits all the same access control policies. The "child" concept here
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is important: tokens always have a parent, and when that parent token is
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revoked, children can also be revoked all in one operation. This makes it
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easy when removing access for a user, to remove access for all sub-tokens
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that user created as well.
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After a token is created, you can revoke it with `vault token-revoke`:
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```
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$ vault token-revoke 6c38f603-6441-2161-c543-ee15b7206563
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Revocation successful.
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```
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In a previous section, we use the `vault revoke` command. This command
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is only used for revoking _secrets_. For revoking _tokens_, the
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`vault token-revoke` command must be used.
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To authenticate with a token, use the `vault auth` command:
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```
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$ vault auth d08e2bd5-ffb0-440d-6486-b8f650ec8c0c
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Successfully authenticated! The policies that are associated
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with this token are listed below:
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root
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```
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This authenticates with Vault. It will verify your token and let you know
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what access policies the token is associated with. If you want to test
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`vault auth`, make sure you create a new token first.
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## Auth Backends
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In addition to tokens, other authentication backends can be enabled.
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Authentication backends enable alternate methods of identifying with Vault.
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These identities are tied back to a set of access policies, just like tokens.
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Vault supports other authentication backends in order to make authentication
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easiest for your environment. For example, for desktop environments,
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private key or GitHub based authentication may be easiest. For server
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environments, some shared secret may be best. Auth backends give you
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flexibility to choose what authentication you want to use.
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As an example, let's authenticate using GitHub. First, enable the
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GitHub authentication backend:
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```
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$ vault auth-enable github
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Successfully enabled 'github' at 'github'!
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```
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Auth backends are mounted, just like secret backends, except auth
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backends are always prefixed with `auth/`. So the GitHub backend we just
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mounted can be accessed at `auth/github`. You can use `vault path-help` to
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learn more about it.
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With the backend enabled, we first have to configure it. For GitHub,
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we tell it what organization users must part of, and map a team to a policy:
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```
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$ vault write auth/github/config organization=hashicorp
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Success! Data written to: auth/github/config
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$ vault write auth/github/map/teams/default value=root
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Success! Data written to: auth/github/map/teams/default
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```
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The above configured our GitHub backend to only accept users from the
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"hashicorp" organization (you should fill in your own organization)
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and to map any team to the "root" policy, which is the only policy we have
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right now until the next section.
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With GitHub enabled, we can authenticate using `vault auth`:
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```
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$ vault auth -method=github token=e6919b17dd654f2b64e67b6369d61cddc0bcc7d5
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Successfully authenticated! The policies that are associated
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with this token are listed below:
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root
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```
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Success! We've authenticated using GitHub. The "root" policy was associated
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with my identity since we mapped that earlier. The value for "token" should be your own
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[personal access token](https://help.github.com/articles/creating-an-access-token-for-command-line-use/).
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You can revoke authentication from any authentication backend using
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`vault token-revoke` as well, which can revoke any path prefix. For
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example, to revoke all GitHub tokens, you could run the following.
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**Don't run this unless you have access to another root token or you'll
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get locked out.**
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```
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$ vault token-revoke -mode=path auth/github
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```
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When you're done, you can disable authentication backends with
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`vault auth-disable`. This will immediately invalidate all authenticated
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users from this backend.
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```
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$ vault auth-disable github
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Disabled auth provider at path 'github'!
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```
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If you ran the above, you'll probably find you can't access your Vault
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anymore unless you have another root token, since it invalidated your
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own session since we authenticated with GitHub above. Since we're still
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operating in development mode, just restart the dev server to fix this.
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## Next
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In this page you learned about how Vault authenticates users. You learned
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about the built-in token system as well as enabling other authentication
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backends. At this point you know how Vault assigns an _identity_ to
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a user.
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The multiple authentication backends Vault provides let you choose the
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most appropriate authentication mechanism for your organization.
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In this next section, we'll learn about
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[access control policies](/intro/getting-started/acl.html).
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