DockerCLI/docs/extend/authorization.md

11 KiB
Raw Blame History

Create an authorization plugin

Dockers out-of-the-box authorization model is all or nothing. Any user with permission to access the Docker daemon can run any Docker client command. The same is true for callers using Docker's remote API to contact the daemon. If you require greater access control, you can create authorization plugins and add them to your Docker daemon configuration. Using an authorization plugin, a Docker administrator can configure granular access policies for managing access to Docker daemon.

Anyone with the appropriate skills can develop an authorization plugin. These skills, at their most basic, are knowledge of Docker, understanding of REST, and sound programming knowledge. This document describes the architecture, state, and methods information available to an authorization plugin developer.

Basic principles

Docker's plugin infrastructure enables extending Docker by loading, removing and communicating with third-party components using a generic API. The access authorization subsystem was built using this mechanism.

Using this subsystem, you don't need to rebuild the Docker daemon to add an authorization plugin. You can add a plugin to an installed Docker daemon. You do need to restart the Docker daemon to add a new plugin.

An authorization plugin approves or denies requests to the Docker daemon based on both the current authentication context and the command context. The authentication context contains all user details and the authentication method. The command context contains all the relevant request data.

Authorization plugins must follow the rules described in Docker Plugin API. Each plugin must reside within directories described under the Plugin discovery section.

Basic architecture

You are responsible for registering your plugin as part of the Docker daemon startup. You can install multiple plugins and chain them together. This chain can be ordered. Each request to the daemon passes in order through the chain. Only when all the plugins grant access to the resource, is the access granted.

When an HTTP request is made to the Docker daemon through the CLI or via the remote API, the authentication subsystem passes the request to the installed authentication plugin(s). The request contains the user (caller) and command context. The plugin is responsible for deciding whether to allow or deny the request.

The sequence diagrams below depict an allow and deny authorization flow:

Authorization Allow flow

Authorization Deny flow

Each request sent to the plugin includes the authenticated user, the HTTP headers, and the request/response body. Only the user name and the authentication method used are passed to the plugin. Most importantly, no user credentials or tokens are passed. Finally, not all request/response bodies are sent to the authorization plugin. Only those request/response bodies where the Content-Type is either text/* or application/json are sent.

For commands that can potentially hijack the HTTP connection (HTTP Upgrade), such as exec, the authorization plugin is only called for the initial HTTP requests. Once the plugin approves the command, authorization is not applied to the rest of the flow. Specifically, the streaming data is not passed to the authorization plugins. For commands that return chunked HTTP response, such as logs and events, only the HTTP request is sent to the authorization plugins.

During request/response processing, some authorization flows might need to do additional queries to the Docker daemon. To complete such flows, plugins can call the daemon API similar to a regular user. To enable these additional queries, the plugin must provide the means for an administrator to configure proper authentication and security policies.

Docker client flows

To enable and configure the authorization plugin, the plugin developer must support the Docker client interactions detailed in this section.

Setting up Docker daemon

Enable the authorization plugin with a dedicated command line flag in the --authz-plugin=PLUGIN_ID format. The flag supplies a PLUGIN_ID value. This value can be the plugins socket or a path to a specification file.

$ docker daemon --authz-plugin=plugin1 --authz-plugin=plugin2,...

Docker's authorization subsystem supports multiple --authz-plugin parameters.

Calling authorized command (allow)

Your plugin must support calling the allow command to authorize a command. This call does not impact Docker's command line.

$ docker pull centos
...
f1b10cd84249: Pull complete
...

Calling unauthorized command (deny)

Your plugin must support calling the deny command to report on the outcome of a plugin interaction. This call returns messages to Docker's command line informing the user of the outcome of each call.

$ docker pull centos
…
Authorization failed. Pull command for user 'john_doe' is 
denied by authorization plugin 'ACME' with message 
[ACME] User 'john_doe' is not allowed to perform the pull 
command

Where multiple authorization plugins are installed, multiple messages are expected.

API schema and implementation

In addition to Docker's standard plugin registration method, each plugin should implement the following two methods:

  • /AuthzPlugin.AuthZReq This authorize request method is called before the Docker daemon processes the client request.

  • /AuthzPlugin.AuthZRes This authorize response method is called before the response is returned from Docker daemon to the client.

/AuthzPlugin.AuthZReq

Request:

{
    "User":              "The user identification",
    "UserAuthNMethod":   "The authentication method used",
    "RequestMethod":     "The HTTP method",
    "RequestUri":        "The HTTP request URI",
    "RequestBody":       "Byte array containing the raw HTTP request body",
    "RequestHeader":     "Byte array containing the raw HTTP request header as a map[string][]string ",
    "RequestStatusCode": "Request status code"
}

Response:

{
    "Allow": "Determined whether the user is allowed or not",
    "Msg":   "The authorization message",
    "Err":   "The error message if things go wrong"
}

/AuthzPlugin.AuthZRes

Request:

{
    "User":              "The user identification",
    "UserAuthNMethod":   "The authentication method used",
    "RequestMethod":     "The HTTP method",
    "RequestUri":        "The HTTP request URI",
    "RequestBody":       "Byte array containing the raw HTTP request body",
    "RequestHeader":     "Byte array containing the raw HTTP request header as a map[string][]string",
    "RequestStatusCode": "Request status code",
    "ResponseBody":      "Byte array containing the raw HTTP response body",
    "ResponseHeader":    "Byte array containing the raw HTTP response header as a map[string][]string",
    "ResponseStatusCode":"Response status code"
}

Response:

{
   "Allow":              "Determined whether the user is allowed or not",
   "Msg":                "The authorization message",
   "Err":                "The error message if things go wrong",
   "ModifiedBody":       "Byte array containing a modified body of the raw HTTP body (or nil if no changes required)",
   "ModifiedHeader":     "Byte array containing a modified header of the HTTP response (or nil if no changes required)",
   "ModifiedStatusCode": "int containing the modified version of the status code (or 0 if not change is required)"
}

The modified response enables the authorization plugin to manipulate the content of the HTTP response. In case of more than one plugin, each subsequent plugin receives a response (optionally) modified by a previous plugin.

Request authorization

Each plugin must support two request authorization messages formats, one from the daemon to the plugin and then from the plugin to the daemon. The tables below detail the content expected in each message.

Daemon -> Plugin

Name Type Description
User string The user identification
Authentication method string The authentication method used
Request method enum The HTTP method (GET/DELETE/POST)
Request URI string The HTTP request URI including API version (e.g., v.1.17/containers/json)
Request headers map[string]string Request headers as key value pairs (without the authorization header)
Request body []byte Raw request body

Plugin -> Daemon

Name Type Description
Allow bool Boolean value indicating whether the request is allowed or denied
Msg string Authorization message (will be returned to the client in case the access is denied)
Err string Error message (will be returned to the client in case the plugin encounter an error)

Response authorization

The plugin must support two authorization messages formats, one from the daemon to the plugin and then from the plugin to the daemon. The tables below detail the content expected in each message.

Daemon -> Plugin

Name Type Description
User string The user identification
Authentication method string The authentication method used
Request method string The HTTP method (GET/DELETE/POST)
Request URI string The HTTP request URI including API version (e.g., v.1.17/containers/json)
Request headers map[string]string Request headers as key value pairs (without the authorization header)
Request body []byte Raw request body
Response status code int Status code from the docker daemon
Response headers map[string]string Response headers as key value pairs
Response body []byte Raw docker daemon response body

Plugin -> Daemon

Name Type Description
Allow bool Boolean value indicating whether the response is allowed or denied
Msg string Authorization message (will be returned to the client in case the access is denied)
Err string Error message (will be returned to the client in case the plugin encounter an error)