130 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
130 lines
3.5 KiB
Markdown
# Integration kubelogin and Active Directory
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## Overview
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kubelogin is helper tool for kubernetes and oidc integration.
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It makes easy to login Open ID Provider.
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This document describes how dex work with kubelogin and Active Directory.
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examples/config-ad-kubelogin.yaml is sample configuration to integrate Active Directory and kubelogin.
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## Precondition
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1. Active Directory
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You should have Active Directory or LDAP has Active Directory compatible schema such as samba ad.
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You may have user objects and group objects in AD. Please ensure TLS is enabled.
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2. Install kubelogin
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Download kubelogin from https://github.com/int128/kubelogin/releases.
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Install it to your terminal.
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## Getting started
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### Generate certificate and private key
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Create OpenSSL conf req.conf as follow:
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```
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[req]
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req_extensions = v3_req
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distinguished_name = req_distinguished_name
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[req_distinguished_name]
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[ v3_req ]
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basicConstraints = CA:FALSE
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keyUsage = nonRepudiation, digitalSignature, keyEncipherment
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subjectAltName = @alt_names
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[alt_names]
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DNS.1 = dex.example.com
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```
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Please replace dex.example.com to your favorite hostname.
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Generate certificate and private key by following command.
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```console
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$ openssl req -new -x509 -sha256 -days 3650 -newkey rsa:4096 -extensions v3_req -out openid-ca.pem -keyout openid-key.pem -config req.cnf -subj "/CN=kube-ca" -nodes
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$ ls openid*
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openid-ca.pem openid-key.pem
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```
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### Modify dex config
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Modify following host, bindDN and bindPW in examples/config-ad-kubelogin.yaml.
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```yaml
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connectors:
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- type: ldap
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name: OpenLDAP
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id: ldap
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config:
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host: ldap.example.com:636
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# No TLS for this setup.
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insecureNoSSL: false
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insecureSkipVerify: true
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# This would normally be a read-only user.
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bindDN: cn=Administrator,cn=users,dc=example,dc=com
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bindPW: admin0!
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```
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### Run dex
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```
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$ bin/dex serve examples/config-ad-kubelogin.yaml
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```
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### Configure kubernetes with oidc
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Copy openid-ca.pem to /etc/ssl/certs/openid-ca.pem on master node.
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Use the following flags to point your API server(s) at dex. `dex.example.com` should be replaced by whatever DNS name or IP address dex is running under.
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```
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--oidc-issuer-url=https://dex.example.com:32000/dex
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--oidc-client-id=kubernetes
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--oidc-ca-file=/etc/ssl/certs/openid-ca.pem
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--oidc-username-claim=email
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--oidc-groups-claim=groups
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```
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Then restart API server(s).
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See https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/access-authn-authz/authentication/ for more detail.
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### kubelogin
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Create context for dex authentication:
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```console
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$ kubectl config set-context oidc-ctx --cluster=cluster.local --user=test
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$ kubectl config set-credentials test \
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--auth-provider=oidc \
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--auth-provider-arg=idp-issuer-url=https://dex.example.com:32000/dex \
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--auth-provider-arg=client-id=kubernetes \
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--auth-provider-arg=client-secret=ZXhhbXBsZS1hcHAtc2VjcmV0 \
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--auth-provider-arg=idp-certificate-authority-data=$(base64 -w 0 openid-ca.pem) \
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--auth-provider-arg=extra-scopes="offline_access openid profile email groups"
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$ kubectl config use-context oidc-ctx
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```
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Please confirm idp-issuer-url, client-id, client-secret and idp-certificate-authority-data value is same as config-ad-kubelogin.yaml's value.
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Then run kubelogin:
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```console
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$ kubelogin
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```
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Access http://localhost:8000 by web browser and login with your AD account (eg. test@example.com) and password.
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After login and grant, you have following token in ~/.kube/config:
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```
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id-token: eyJhbGciOiJSUzICuU4dCcilDDWlw2lfr8mg...
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refresh-token: ChlxY2EzeGhKEB4492EzecdKJOElECK...
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```
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