open-vault/website/source/docs/auth/app-id.html.md
Jeff Escalante a3dfde5cec New Docs Website (#5535)
* conversion stage 1

* correct image paths

* add sidebar title to frontmatter

* docs/concepts and docs/internals

* configuration docs and multi-level nav corrections

* commands docs, index file corrections, small item nav correction

* secrets converted

* auth

* add enterprise and agent docs

* add extra dividers

* secret section, wip

* correct sidebar nav title in front matter for apu section, start working on api items

* auth and backend, a couple directory structure fixes

* remove old docs

* intro side nav converted

* reset sidebar styles, add hashi-global-styles

* basic styling for nav sidebar

* folder collapse functionality

* patch up border length on last list item

* wip restructure for content component

* taking middleman hacking to the extreme, but its working

* small css fix

* add new mega nav

* fix a small mistake from the rebase

* fix a content resolution issue with middleman

* title a couple missing docs pages

* update deps, remove temporary markup

* community page

* footer to layout, community page css adjustments

* wip downloads page

* deps updated, downloads page ready

* fix community page

* homepage progress

* add components, adjust spacing

* docs and api landing pages

* a bunch of fixes, add docs and api landing pages

* update deps, add deploy scripts

* add readme note

* update deploy command

* overview page, index title

* Update doc fields

Note this still requires the link fields to be populated -- this is solely related to copy on the description fields

* Update api_basic_categories.yml

Updated API category descriptions. Like the document descriptions you'll still need to update the link headers to the proper target pages.

* Add bottom hero, adjust CSS, responsive friendly

* Add mega nav title

* homepage adjustments, asset boosts

* small fixes

* docs page styling fixes

* meganav title

* some category link corrections

* Update API categories page

updated to reflect the second level headings for api categories

* Update docs_detailed_categories.yml

Updated to represent the existing docs structure

* Update docs_detailed_categories.yml

* docs page data fix, extra operator page remove

* api data fix

* fix makefile

* update deps, add product subnav to docs and api landing pages

* Rearrange non-hands-on guides to _docs_

Since there is no place for these on learn.hashicorp, we'll put them
under _docs_.

* WIP Redirects for guides to docs

* content and component updates

* font weight hotfix, redirects

* fix guides and intro sidenavs

* fix some redirects

* small style tweaks

* Redirects to learn and internally to docs

* Remove redirect to `/vault`

* Remove `.html` from destination on redirects

* fix incorrect index redirect

* final touchups

* address feedback from michell for makefile and product downloads
2018-10-19 08:40:11 -07:00

4.6 KiB

layout page_title sidebar_title sidebar_current description
docs AppID - Auth Methods App ID <sup>DEPRECATED</sup> docs-auth-appid The AppID auth method is a mechanism for machines to authenticate with Vault.

AppID Auth Method

~> DEPRECATED! As of Vault 0.6.1, AppID is deprecated in favor of AppRole. AppRole can accommodate the same workflow as AppID while enabling much more secure and flexible management and other types of authentication workflows. No new features or enhancements are planned for App ID, and new users should use AppRole instead of AppID.

The AppID auth method is a mechanism for machines to authenticate with Vault. It works by requiring two hard-to-guess unique pieces of information: a unique app ID, and a unique user ID.

The goal of this auth method is to allow elastic users (dynamic machines, containers, etc.) to authenticate with Vault without having to store passwords outside of Vault. It is a single method of solving the chicken-and-egg problem of setting up Vault access on a machine. With this provider, nobody except the machine itself has access to both pieces of information necessary to authenticate. For example: configuration management will have the app IDs, but the machine itself will detect its user ID based on some unique machine property such as a MAC address (or a hash of it with some salt).

An example, real world process for using this provider:

  1. Create unique app IDs (UUIDs work well) and map them to policies. (Path: map/app-id/<app-id>)

  2. Store the app IDs within configuration management systems.

  3. An out-of-band process run by security operators map unique user IDs to these app IDs. Example: when an instance is launched, a cloud-init system tells security operators a unique ID for this machine. This process can be scripted, but the key is that it is out-of-band and out of reach of configuration management. (Path: map/user-id/<user-id>)

  4. A new server is provisioned. Configuration management configures the app ID, the server itself detects its user ID. With both of these pieces of information, Vault can be accessed according to the policy set by the app ID.

More details on this process follow:

  • The app ID is a unique ID that maps to a set of policies. This ID is generated by an operator and configured into the method. The ID itself is usually a UUID-formatted random value, but any hard-to-guess unique value can be used.

  • After creating app IDs, an operator authorizes a fixed set of user IDs with each app ID. When a valid {app ID, user ID} tuple is given to the "login" path, then the user is authenticated with the configured app ID policies.

  • The user ID can be any value (just like the app ID), however it is generally a value unique to a machine, such as a MAC address or instance ID, or a value hashed from these unique values.

Authentication

Via the CLI:

$ vault write auth/app-id/login/:app-id user_id=:user_id

Via the API:

$ curl \
    --method POST \
    --data '{"user_id": ":user_id"}' \
    http://127.0.0.1:8200/v1/auth/app-id/login/:app_id

Configuration

Auth methods must be configured in advance before users or machines can authenticate. These steps are usually completed by an operator or configuration management tool.

  1. Enable the AppID auth method:

    $ vault auth enable app-id
    
  2. Configure it with the set of AppIDs, user IDs, and the mapping between them:

    $ vault write auth/app-id/map/app-id/foo value=admins display_name=foo
    # ...
    
    $ vault write auth/app-id/map/user-id/bar value=foo cidr_block=10.0.0.0/16
    # ...
    

    This will create an AppID "foo" that associates with the policy "admins". The display_name sets the display name for audit logs and secrets. Next, we configure the user ID "bar" and say that the user ID bar can be paired with "foo" but only if the client is in the "10.0.0.0/16" CIDR block. The cidr_block configuration is optional.

    This means that if a client authenticates and provide both "foo" and "bar", then the app ID will authenticate that client with the policy "admins".

    In practice, both the user and app ID are likely hard-to-guess UUID-like values.

    Note that it is possible to authorize multiple app IDs with each user ID by writing them as comma-separated values to the user ID mapping:

    $ vault write auth/app-id/map/user-id/bar value=foo,baz cidr_block=10.0.0.0/16
    # ...
    

API

The AppID auth method has a full HTTP API. Please see the AppID auth method API for more details.