On 12/07/2017 12:27 PM, Colleen Murphy wrote: > On Thu, Dec 7, 2017 at 5:37 PM, Pavlo Shchelokovskyy > <[email protected]> wrote: >> Hi all, >> >> We have a following use case - several independent keystones (say KeyA and >> KeyB), using fernet tokens and synchronized fernet keys, and single external >> IdP for federated auth. >> >> Is it generally possible to configure both KeyA and KeyB such that scoped >> token issued by KeyA for a federated user is valid on KeyB? >> >> Currently we have the next problem - although domains/projects where >> keystone's mapping engine assigns federated users are equal by name between >> KeyA and KeyB, the UUIDs of projects/domains in KeyA and KeyB are >> different, which seems to invalidate the scoped token issued by KeyA when >> trying to use it for KeyB. And it is not possible to create projects/domains >> with specific UUIDs via keystone API (which would probably solve this >> problem for non-autoprovisioned projects). >> >> Is such usage scenario supported? Or one should always use the unscoped >> token first to list projects/domains available on a specific keystone >> instance and then get a scoped token for usage o this instance only? > No, it is not currently possible to use the same token on projects in > different keystones, for the reasons you gave. You might be interested > in following https://review.openstack.org/#/c/323499/ if you're not > already aware of it, which has the goal of solving that problem. > > It's also been brought up before: > > https://review.openstack.org/#/c/403866/ > http://lists.openstack.org/pipermail/openstack-dev/2016-December/108466.html > > And we talked about it a lot at the last Forum (sorry my brief summary > does not really do the discussion justice): > > http://www.gazlene.net/sydney-summit.html#keystone-operator-and-user-feedback I had a snippet about it in my recap under the "Other Feedback" section [0]. The TL;DR in my opinion is that we originally thought we could solve the problem with federation 100%, and if we couldn't we wanted to try and improve the parts of federation that would make that possible.
The interesting bit we came up with during the feedback session in Sydney is what happens if a user no longer has a role on a project. For example; - A user has a role on Project A and in the us-east region and the us-west region, each region has it's own keystone deployment, but let's assume the ID for Project A are the same in each region - A user authenticates for a token scoped to Project A and starts creating instances in both regions - The user has their role from Project A removed in us-east, but not in us-west - The user isn't able to do anything within us-east since they no longer have a role assignment on Project A in that region, but they can still take the invalid token from the us-east region and effectively use it in the us-west region Without replicating revocation events, or syncing the assignment table, this will lead to security concerns. > > Lance mentioned today that we'd likely try to discuss it at our next > weekly meeting: http://eavesdrop.openstack.org/#Keystone_Team_Meeting Yep, I have it on the agenda for the next meeting [1]. [0] https://www.lbragstad.com/blog/openstack-summit-sydney-recap [1] https://etherpad.openstack.org/p/keystone-weekly-meeting > > Colleen > > __________________________________________________________________________ > OpenStack Development Mailing List (not for usage questions) > Unsubscribe: [email protected]?subject:unsubscribe > http://lists.openstack.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/openstack-dev
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