+1 from me.

On 13.02.2015 22:19, Morgan Fainberg wrote:
On February 13, 2015 at 11:51:10 AM, Lance Bragstad (lbrags...@gmail.com <mailto:lbrags...@gmail.com>) wrote:
Hello all,


I'm proposing the Authenticated Encryption (AE) Token specification [1] as an SPFE. AE tokens increases scalability of Keystone by removing token persistence. This provider has been discussed prior to, and at the Paris summit [2]. There is an implementation that is currently up for review [3], that was built off a POC. Based on the POC, there has been some performance analysis done with respect to the token formats available in Keystone (UUID, PKI, PKIZ, AE) [4].

The Keystone team spent some time discussing limitations of the current POC implementation at the mid-cycle. One case that still needs to be addressed (and is currently being worked), is federated tokens. When requesting unscoped federated tokens, the token contains unbound groups which would need to be carried in the token. This case can be handled by AE tokens but it would be possible for an unscoped federated AE token to exceed an acceptable AE token length (i.e. < 255 characters). Long story short, a federation migration could be used to ensure federated AE tokens never exceed a certain length.

Feel free to leave your comments on the AE Token spec.

Thanks!

Lance

[1] https://review.openstack.org/#/c/130050/
[2] https://etherpad.openstack.org/p/kilo-keystone-authorization
[3] https://review.openstack.org/#/c/145317/
[4] http://dolphm.com/benchmarking-openstack-keystone-token-formats/
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I am for granting this exception as long as it’s clear that the following is clear/true:

* All current use-cases for tokens (including federation) will be supported by the new token provider.

* The federation tokens being possibly over 255 characters can be addressed in the future if they are not addressed here (a “federation migration” does not clearly state what is meant.

I am also ok with the AE token work being re-ordered ahead of the provider cleanup to ensure it lands. Fixing the AE Token provider along with PKI and UUID providers should be minimal extra work in the cleanup.

This addresses a very, very big issue within Keystone as scaling scaling up happens. There has been demand for solving token persistence for ~3 cycles. The POC code makes this exception possible to land within Kilo, whereas without the POC this would almost assuredly need to be held until the L-Cycle.


TL;DR, I am for the exception if the AE Tokens support 100% of the current use-cases of tokens (UUID or PKI) today.


—Morgan



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