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docs | Auth Plugin Backend: GCP | docs-auth-gcp | The gcp backend plugin allows automated authentication of AWS entities. |
Auth Plugin Backend: gcp
The gcp
plugin backend allows authentication against Vault using
Google credentials. It treats GCP as a Trusted Third Party and expects a
JSON Web Token (JWT) signed by Google
credentials from the authenticating entity. This token can be generated through
different GCP APIs depending on the type of entity.
Currently supports authentication for:
- GCP IAM service accounts (
iam
) - GCE IAM service accounts (
gce
)
Precursors:
The following documentation assumes that the backend has been
mounted at auth/gcp
.
You must also enable the following GCP APIs for your GCP project:
- IAM API for both
iam
service accounts andgce
instances - GCE API for just
gce
instances
The next sections review how the authN/Z workflows work. If you have already reviewed these sections, here are some quick links to:
- Usage
- API documentation docs.
Authentication Workflow
IAM
The Vault authentication workflow for IAM service accounts is as follows:
- A client with IAM service account credentials generates a signed JWT using the IAM projects.serviceAccounts.signJwt method. See here for the expected format and example code.
- The client sends this JWT to Vault in a login request with a role name. This role should have type
iam
. - Vault grabs the
kid
header value, which contains the ID of the key-pair used to generate the JWT, and thesub
ID/email to find the service account key. If the service account does not exist or the key is not linked to the service account, Vault will deny authentication. - Vault authorizes the confirmed service account against the given role. See authorization section to see how each type of role handles authorization.
The iam
Authentication Token
The expected format of the JWT payload is as follows:
{
"sub" : "[SERVICE ACCOUNT IDENTIFIER]",
"aud" : "vault/[ROLE NAME]",
"exp" : "[EXPIRATION]"
}
[SERVICE ACCOUNT ID OR EMAIL]
: Either the email or the unique ID of a service account.[ROLE NAME]
: Name of the role that this token will be used to login against. The full expectedaud
string should end in "vault/$roleName".[EXPIRATION]
: A NumericDate value (seconds from Epoch). This value must be before the max JWT expiration allowed for a role (seemax_jwt_exp
parameter for creating a role). This defaults to 15 minutes and cannot be more than a hour.
Note: By default, we enforce a shorter exp
period than the default length
for a given token (1 hour) in order to make reuse of tokens difficult. You can
customize this value for a given role but it will be capped at an hour.
To generate this token, we use the Google IAM API method projects.serviceAccounts.signJwt. See an example of how to generate this token.
GCE
The Vault authentication workflow for GCE instances is as follows:
- A client logins into a GCE instances and obtains an instance identity metadata token.
- The client request to login using this token (a JWT) and gives a role name to Vault.
- Vault uses the
kid
header value, which contains the ID of the key-pair used to generate the JWT, to find the OAuth2 public cert to verify this JWT. - Vault authorizes the confirmed instance against the given role. See the authorization section to see how each type of role handles authorization.
The gce
Authentication Token
The token can be obtained from the service-accounts/default/identity
endpoint for a instance's
metadata server. You can use the
example of how to obtain an instance metadata token to get started.
Learn more about the JWT format from the documentation for the identity metadata token. The params the user provides are:
[AUD]
: The full expectedaud
string should end in "vault/$roleName". Note that Google requires theaud
claim to contain a scheme or authority but Vault will only check for a suffix.[FORMAT]
: MUST BEfull
for Vault. Format of the metadata token generated (standard
orfull
).
Examples for Obtaining Auth Tokens
Generating IAM Token
HTTP Request Example
This uses Google API HTTP annotation.
Note the $PAYLOAD
must be a marshaled JSON string with escaped double quotes.
#!/bin/sh
# [START PARAMS]
ROLE="test-role"
PROJECT="project-123456"
SERVICE_ACCOUNT="my-account@project-123456.iam.gserviceaccount.com"
OAUTH_TOKEN=$(oauth2l header cloud-platform)
# [END PARAMS]
PAYLOAD=$(echo "{ \"aud\": \"vault/$ROLE\", \"sub\": \"$SERVICE_ACCOUNT\"}" | sed -e 's/"/\\&/g')
curl -H "$OAUTH_TOKEN" \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-X POST -d "{\"payload\":\"$PAYLOAD\"}" https://iam.googleapis.com/v1/projects/$PROJECT/serviceAccounts/$SERVICE_ACCOUNT:signJwt```
Golang Example
We use the Go OAuth2 libraries, GCP IAM API, and Vault API. The example generates a token valid for the dev-role
role (as indicated by the aud
field of jwtPayload
).
// Abbreviated imports to show libraries.
import (
vaultapi "github.com/hashicorp/vault/api"
"golang.org/x/oauth2"
"golang.org/x/oauth2/google"
"google.golang.org/api/iam/v1"
...
)
func main() {
// Start [PARAMS]
project := "project-123456"
serviceAccount := "myserviceaccount@project-123456.iam.gserviceaccount.com"
credsPath := "path/to/creds.json"
os.Setenv("VAULT_ADDR", "https://vault.mycompany.com")
defer os.Setenv("VAULT_ADDR", "")
// End [PARAMS]
// Start [GCP IAM Setup]
jsonBytes, err := ioutil.ReadFile(credsPath)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
config, err := google.JWTConfigFromJSON(jsonBytes, iam.CloudPlatformScope)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
httpClient := config.Client(oauth2.NoContext)
iamClient, err := iam.New(httpClient)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// End [GCP IAM Setup]
// 1. Generate signed JWT using IAM.
resourceName := fmt.Sprintf("projects/%s/serviceAccounts/%s", project, serviceAccount)
jwtPayload := map[string]interface{}{
"aud": "vault/dev-role",
"sub": serviceAccount,
"exp": time.Now().Add(time.Minute * 10).Unix(),
}
payloadBytes, err := json.Marshal(jwtPayload)
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
signJwtReq := &iam.SignJwtRequest{
Payload: string(payloadBytes),
}
resp, err := iamClient.Projects.ServiceAccounts.SignJwt(resourceName, signJwtReq).Do()
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// 2. Send signed JWT in login request to Vault.
vaultClient, err := vaultapi.NewClient(vaultapi.DefaultConfig())
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
vaultResp, err := vaultClient.Logical().Write(
"auth/gcp/login",
map[string]interface{}{
"role": "test",
"jwt": resp.SignedJwt,
})
if err != nil {
log.Fatal(err)
}
// 3. Use auth token from response.
log.Println("Access token: %s", vaultResp.Auth.ClientToken)
vaultClient.SetToken(vaultResp.Auth.ClientToken)
// ...
}
Generating GCE Token
HTTP Request Example
This uses Google API HTTP annotation and must be run on a GCE instance.
# [START PARAMS]
VAULT_ADDR="https://127.0.0.1:8200/"
ROLE="my-gce-role"
SERVICE_ACCOUNT="default" # replace with an instance's service account if needed
# [END PARAMS]
curl -H "Metadata-Flavor: Google"\
-G
--data-urlencode "audience=$VAULT_ADDR/vault/$ROLE"\
--data-urlencode "format=full" \
"http://metadata/computeMetadata/v1/instance/service-accounts/$SERVICE_ACCOUNT/identity"
Authorization Workflow
For gcp
, login is per-role. Each role has a specific set of restrictions that
an authorized entity must fit in order to login. These restrictions are specific
to the role type.
Currently supported role types are:
iam
(Supports both IAM and inference for GCE tokens)gce
(Only supports GCE tokens)
Vault validates an authenticated entity against the role and uses the role to determine information about the lease, including Vault policies assigned and TTLs. For a full list of accepted restrictions, see role API docs.
If a GCE token is provided for login under an iam
role, the service account associated with the token
(sub
claim) is inferred and used to login.
Usage
Via the CLI.
Enable GCP authentication in Vault
$ vault auth-enable gcp
Configure the GCP authentication backend
$ vault write auth/gcp/config credentials=@path/to/creds.json
Configuration: This includes GCP credentials Vault will use these to make calls to GCP APIs. If credentials are not configured or if the user explicitly sets the config with no credentials, the Vault server will attempt to use Application Default Credentials as set on the Vault server.
See API documentation to learn more about parameters.
Create a role
$ vault write auth/gcp/role/dev-role \
type="iam" \
project_id="project-123456" \
policies="prod,dev" \
bound_service_accounts="serviceaccount1@project1234.iam.gserviceaccount.com,uuid123,..."
...
Roles: Roles are associated with an authentication type/entity and a set of Vault policies. Roles are configured with constraints specific to the authentication type, as well as overall constraints and configuration for the generated auth tokens.
We also expose a helper path for updating the service accounts attached to an existing iam
role:
```sh
vault write auth/gcp/role/iam-role/service-accounts \
add='serviceAccountToAdd,...' \
remove='serviceAccountToRemove,...' \
```
and for updating the labels attached to an existing gce
role:
```sh
vault write auth/gcp/role/gce-role/labels \
add='label1:value1,foo:bar,...' \
remove='key1,key2,...' \
```
See API docs to view parameters for role creation and updates.
Login to get a Vault Token
Once the backend is setup and roles are registered with the backend, the user can login against a specific role.
$ vault write auth/gcp/login role='dev-role' jwt='eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9...'
The role
and jwt
parameters are required. These map to the name of the
role to login against, and the signed JWT token for authenticating a role
respectively. The format of the provided JWT differs depending on the
authenticating entity.
Via the API
Enable GCP authentication in Vault
$ curl $VAULT_ADDR/v1/sys/auth/gcp -d '{ "type": "gcp" }'
Configure the GCP authentication backend
$ curl $VAULT_ADDR/v1/auth/gcp/config \
-d '{ "credentials": "{...}" }'
Create a role
$ curl $VAULT_ADDR/v1/auth/gcp/role/dev-role \
-d '{ "type": "iam", "project_id": "project-123456", ...}'
Login to get a Vault Token
The endpoint for the GCP login is auth/gcp/login
.
The gcp
mountpoint value in the url is the default mountpoint value.
If you have mounted the gcp
backend with a different mountpoint, use that value.
The role
and jwt
should be sent in the POST body encoded as JSON.
$ curl $VAULT_ADDR/v1/auth/gcp/login \
-d '{ "role": "dev-role", "jwt": "eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9..." }'
The response will be in JSON. For example:
{
"auth":{
"client_token":"f33f8c72-924e-11f8-cb43-ac59d697597c",
"accessor":"0e9e354a-520f-df04-6867-ee81cae3d42d",
"policies":[
"default",
"dev",
"prod"
],
"metadata":{
"role": "dev-role",
"service_account_email": "dev1@project-123456.iam.gserviceaccount.com",
"service_account_id": "111111111111111111111"
},
"lease_duration":2764800,
"renewable":true
},
...
}
Contributing
This plugin is developed in a separate Github repository: hashicorp/vault-plugin-auth-gcp
. Please file all feature requests, bugs, and pull requests specific to the GCP plugin under that repository.
API
The GCP Auth Plugin has a full HTTP API. Please see the API docs for more details.