Salt's External Authentication System (eAuth) allows for Salt to pass through command authorization to any external authentication system, such as PAM or LDAP.
Note
eAuth using the PAM external auth system requires salt-master to be run as root as this system needs root access to check authentication.
Note
publisher_acl
is useful for allowing local system users to run Salt
commands without giving them root access. If you can log into the Salt
master directly, then publisher_acl
allows you to use Salt without
root privileges. If the local system is configured to authenticate against
a remote system, like LDAP or Active Directory, then publisher_acl
will
interact with the remote system transparently.
external_auth
is useful for salt-api
or for making your own scripts
that use Salt's Python API. It can be used at the CLI (with the -a
flag) but it is more cumbersome as there are more steps involved. The only
time it is useful at the CLI is when the local system is not configured
to authenticate against an external service but you still want Salt to
authenticate against an external service.
For more information and examples, see this Access Control System section.
The external authentication system allows for specific users to be granted access to execute specific functions on specific minions. Access is configured in the master configuration file and uses the access control system:
external_auth:
pam:
thatch:
- 'web*':
- test.*
- network.*
steve|admin.*:
- .*
The above configuration allows the user thatch
to execute functions in the
test and network modules on the minions that match the web* target. User
steve
and the users whose logins start with admin
, are granted
unrestricted access to minion commands.
Salt respects the current PAM configuration in place, and uses the 'login' service to authenticate.
Note
The PAM module does not allow authenticating as root
.
Note
state.sls and state.highstate will return "Failed to authenticate!" if the request timeout is reached. Use -t flag to increase the timeout
To allow access to wheel modules or runner
modules the following @
syntax must be used:
external_auth:
pam:
thatch:
- '@wheel' # to allow access to all wheel modules
- '@runner' # to allow access to all runner modules
- '@jobs' # to allow access to the jobs runner and/or wheel module
Note
The runner/wheel markup is different, since there are no minions to scope the acl to.
Note
Globs will not match wheel or runners! They must be explicitly allowed with @wheel or @runner.
Warning
All users that have external authentication privileges are allowed to run
saltutil.findjob
. Be aware
that this could inadvertently expose some data such as minion IDs.
The structure of the external_auth
dictionary can take the following
shapes. User and function matches are exact matches, shell glob patterns or
regular expressions; minion matches are compound targets.
By user:
external_auth:
<eauth backend>:
<user or group%>:
- <regex to match function>
By user, by minion:
external_auth:
<eauth backend>:
<user or group%>:
<minion compound target>:
- <regex to match function>
By user, by runner/wheel:
external_auth:
<eauth backend>:
<user or group%>:
<@runner or @wheel>:
- <regex to match function>
By user, by runner+wheel module:
external_auth:
<eauth backend>:
<user or group%>:
<@module_name>:
- <regex to match function without module_name>
To apply permissions to a group of users in an external authentication system,
append a %
to the ID:
external_auth:
pam:
admins%:
- '*':
- 'pkg.*'
Positional arguments or keyword arguments to functions can also be whitelisted.
New in version 2016.3.0.
external_auth:
pam:
my_user:
- '*':
- 'my_mod.*':
args:
- 'a.*'
- 'b.*'
kwargs:
'kwa': 'kwa.*'
'kwb': 'kwb'
- '@runner':
- 'runner_mod.*':
args:
- 'a.*'
- 'b.*'
kwargs:
'kwa': 'kwa.*'
'kwb': 'kwb'
The rules:
The arguments values are matched as regexp.
If arguments restrictions are specified the only matched are allowed.
If an argument isn't specified any value is allowed.
To skip an arg use "everything" regexp .*
. I.e. if arg0
and arg2
should be limited but arg1
and other arguments could have any value use:
args:
- 'value0'
- '.*'
- 'value2'
The external authentication system can then be used from the command-line by
any user on the same system as the master with the -a
option:
$ salt -a pam web\* test.version
The system will ask the user for the credentials required by the authentication system and then publish the command.
With external authentication alone, the authentication credentials will be required with every call to Salt. This can be alleviated with Salt tokens.
Tokens are short term authorizations and can be easily created by just
adding a -T
option when authenticating:
$ salt -T -a pam web\* test.version
Now a token will be created that has an expiration of 12 hours (by default).
This token is stored in a file named salt_token
in the active user's home
directory.
Once the token is created, it is sent with all subsequent communications. User authentication does not need to be entered again until the token expires.
Token expiration time can be set in the Salt master config file.
Note
LDAP usage requires that you have installed python-ldap.
Salt supports both user and group authentication for LDAP (and Active Directory accessed via its LDAP interface)
LDAP configuration happens in the Salt master configuration file.
Server configuration values and their defaults:
# Server to auth against
auth.ldap.server: localhost
# Port to connect via
auth.ldap.port: 389
# Use TLS when connecting
auth.ldap.tls: False
# Use STARTTLS when connecting
auth.ldap.starttls: False
# LDAP scope level, almost always 2
auth.ldap.scope: 2
# Server specified in URI format
auth.ldap.uri: '' # Overrides .ldap.server, .ldap.port, .ldap.tls above
# Verify server's TLS certificate
auth.ldap.no_verify: False
# Bind to LDAP anonymously to determine group membership
# Active Directory does not allow anonymous binds without special configuration
# In addition, if auth.ldap.anonymous is True, empty bind passwords are not permitted.
auth.ldap.anonymous: False
# FOR TESTING ONLY, this is a VERY insecure setting.
# If this is True, the LDAP bind password will be ignored and
# access will be determined by group membership alone with
# the group memberships being retrieved via anonymous bind
auth.ldap.auth_by_group_membership_only: False
# Require authenticating user to be part of this Organizational Unit
# This can be blank if your LDAP schema does not use this kind of OU
auth.ldap.groupou: 'Groups'
# Object Class for groups. An LDAP search will be done to find all groups of this
# class to which the authenticating user belongs.
auth.ldap.groupclass: 'posixGroup'
# Unique ID attribute name for the user
auth.ldap.accountattributename: 'memberUid'
# These are only for Active Directory
auth.ldap.activedirectory: False
auth.ldap.persontype: 'person'
auth.ldap.minion_stripdomains: []
# Redhat Identity Policy Audit
auth.ldap.freeipa: False
There are two phases to LDAP authentication. First, Salt authenticates to search for a users' Distinguished Name and group membership. The user it authenticates as in this phase is often a special LDAP system user with read-only access to the LDAP directory. After Salt searches the directory to determine the actual user's DN and groups, it re-authenticates as the user running the Salt commands.
If you are already aware of the structure of your DNs and permissions in your LDAP store are set such that
users can look up their own group memberships, then the first and second users can be the same. To tell Salt this is
the case, omit the auth.ldap.bindpw
parameter. Note this is not the same thing as using an anonymous bind.
Most LDAP servers will not permit anonymous bind, and as mentioned above, if auth.ldap.anonymous is False you
cannot use an empty password.
You can template the binddn
like this:
auth.ldap.basedn: dc=saltstack,dc=com
auth.ldap.binddn: uid={{ username }},cn=users,cn=accounts,dc=saltstack,dc=com
Salt will use the password entered on the salt command line in place of the bindpw.
To use two separate users, specify the LDAP lookup user in the binddn directive, and include a bindpw like so
auth.ldap.binddn: uid=ldaplookup,cn=sysaccounts,cn=etc,dc=saltstack,dc=com
auth.ldap.bindpw: mypassword
As mentioned before, Salt uses a filter to find the DN associated with a user. Salt
substitutes the {{ username }}
value for the username when querying LDAP
auth.ldap.filter: uid={{ username }}
For OpenLDAP, to determine group membership, one can specify an OU that contains
group data. This is prepended to the basedn to create a search path. Then
the results are filtered against auth.ldap.groupclass
, default
posixGroup
, and the account's 'name' attribute, memberUid
by default.
auth.ldap.groupou: Groups
Note that as of 2017.7, auth.ldap.groupclass can refer to either a groupclass or an objectClass.
For some LDAP servers (notably OpenLDAP without the memberOf
overlay enabled) to determine group
membership we need to know both the objectClass
and the memberUid
attributes. Usually for these
servers you will want a auth.ldap.groupclass
of posixGroup
and an auth.ldap.groupattribute
of
memberUid
.
LDAP servers with the memberOf
overlay will have entries similar to auth.ldap.groupclass: person
and
auth.ldap.groupattribute: memberOf
.
When using the ldap('DC=domain,DC=com')
eauth operator, sometimes the records returned
from LDAP or Active Directory have fully-qualified domain names attached, while minion IDs
instead are simple hostnames. The parameter below allows the administrator to strip
off a certain set of domain names so the hostnames looked up in the directory service
can match the minion IDs.
auth.ldap.minion_stripdomains: ['.external.bigcorp.com', '.internal.bigcorp.com']
Active Directory handles group membership differently, and does not utilize the
groupou
configuration variable. AD needs the following options in
the master config:
auth.ldap.activedirectory: True
auth.ldap.filter: sAMAccountName={{username}}
auth.ldap.accountattributename: sAMAccountName
auth.ldap.groupclass: group
auth.ldap.persontype: person
To determine group membership in AD, the username and password that is entered
when LDAP is requested as the eAuth mechanism on the command line is used to
bind to AD's LDAP interface. If this fails, then it doesn't matter what groups
the user belongs to, he or she is denied access. Next, the distinguishedName
of the user is looked up with the following LDAP search:
(&(<value of auth.ldap.accountattributename>={{username}})
(objectClass=<value of auth.ldap.persontype>)
)
This should return a distinguishedName that we can use to filter for group membership. Then the following LDAP query is executed:
(&(member=<distinguishedName from search above>)
(objectClass=<value of auth.ldap.groupclass>)
)
external_auth:
ldap:
test_ldap_user:
- '*':
- test.ping
To configure a LDAP group, append a %
to the ID:
external_auth:
ldap:
test_ldap_group%:
- '*':
- test.echo
In addition, if there are a set of computers in the directory service that should be part of the eAuth definition, they can be specified like this:
external_auth:
ldap:
test_ldap_group%:
- ldap('DC=corp,DC=example,DC=com'):
- test.echo
The string inside ldap()
above is any valid LDAP/AD tree limiter. OU=
in
particular is permitted as long as it would return a list of computer objects.