This cookbook is used to track the upstream cookbook at stackforge/cookbook-openstack-identity (which it is a fork of). We need to port everything to ruby-1.8.7 for SUSE Cloud. The intent is to constantly rebase the few fix-commits on top of new upstream changes.
Please don't push any functional changes to this cookbook and also beware that this repository's git history WILL be overwritten.
This cookbook installs the OpenStack Identity Service Keystone as part of the OpenStack reference deployment Chef for OpenStack. The https://github.com/stackforge/openstack-chef-repo contains documentation for using this cookbook in the context of a full OpenStack deployment. Keystone is installed from packages, creating the default user, tenant, and roles. It also registers the identity service and identity endpoint.
http://keystone.openstack.org/
Chef 0.10.0 or higher required (for Chef environment use)
The following cookbooks are dependencies:
- openstack-common
Installs the keystone client packages
Installs and Configures Keystone Service
"run_list": [
"recipe[openstack-identity::server]"
]
These resources provide an abstraction layer for interacting with the keystone server's API, allowing for other nodes to register any required users, tenants, roles, services, or endpoints.
Register users, tenants, roles, services and endpoints with Keystone
- :create_tenant: Create a tenant
- :create_user: Create a user for a specified tenant
- :create_role: Create a role
- :grant_role: Grant a role to a specified user for a specified tenant
- :create_service: Create a service
- :create_endpoint: Create an endpoint for a sepcified service
- auth_protocol: Required communication protocol with Keystone server
- Acceptable values are [ "http", "https" ]
- auth_host: Keystone server IP Address
- auth_port: Port Keystone server is listening on
- api_ver: API Version for Keystone server
- Accepted values are [ "/v2.0" ]
- auth_token: Auth Token for communication with Keystone server
- misc_keystone: Array of strings to be added to the keystone.conf file
- tenant_name: Name of tenant to create
- tenant_description: Description of tenant to create
- tenant_enabled: Enable or Disable tenant
- Accepted values are [ "true", "false" ]
- Default is "true"
- user_name: Name of user account to create
- user_pass: Password for the user account
- user_enabled: Enable or Disable user
- Accepted values are [ "true", "false" ]
- Default is "true"
- tenant_name: Name of tenant to create user in
- role_name: Name of the role to create
- role_name: Name of the role to grant
- user_name: User name to grant the role to
- tenant_name: Name of tenant to grant role in
- service_name: Name of service
- service_description: Description of service
- service_type: Type of service to create
- Accepted values are [ "image", "identity", "compute", "storage", "ec2", "volume", "object-store", "metering", "network", "orchestration", "cloudformation" ]
- NOTE: call will be skipped if
openstack['identity']['catalog']['backend']
is set to 'templated'
- endpoint_region: Default value is "RegionOne"
- endpoint_adminurl: URL to admin endpoint (using admin port)
- endpoint_internalurl: URL to service endpoint (using service port)
- endpoint_publicurl: URL to public endpoint
- Default is same as endpoint_internalURL
- service_type: Type of service to create endpoint for
- Accepted values are [ "image", "identity", "compute", "storage", "ec2", "volume", "object-store", "metering", "network", "orchestration", "cloudformation" ]
- NOTE: call will be skipped if
openstack['identity']['catalog']['backend']
is set to 'templated'
# Create 'openstack' tenant
openstack_identity_register "Register 'openstack' Tenant" do
auth_host "192.168.1.10"
auth_port "35357"
auth_protocol "http"
api_ver "/v2.0"
auth_token "123456789876"
tenant_name "openstack"
tenant_description "Default Tenant"
tenant_enabled "true" # Not required as this is the default
action :create_tenant
end
# Create 'admin' user
openstack_identity_register "Register 'admin' User" do
auth_host "192.168.1.10"
auth_port "35357"
auth_protocol "http"
api_ver "/v2.0"
auth_token "123456789876"
tenant_name "openstack"
user_name "admin"
user_pass "secrete"
user_enabled "true" # Not required as this is the default
action :create_user
end
# Create 'admin' role
openstack_identity_register "Register 'admin' Role" do
auth_host "192.168.1.10"
auth_port "35357"
auth_protocol "http"
api_ver "/v2.0"
auth_token "123456789876"
role_name role_key
action :create_role
end
# Grant 'admin' role to 'admin' user in the 'openstack' tenant
openstack_identity_register "Grant 'admin' Role to 'admin' User" do
auth_host "192.168.1.10"
auth_port "35357"
auth_protocol "http"
api_ver "/v2.0"
auth_token "123456789876"
tenant_name "openstack"
user_name "admin"
role_name "admin"
action :grant_role
end
# Create 'identity' service
openstack_identity_register "Register Identity Service" do
auth_host "192.168.1.10"
auth_port "35357"
auth_protocol "http"
api_ver "/v2.0"
auth_token "123456789876"
service_name "keystone"
service_type "identity"
service_description "Keystone Identity Service"
action :create_service
end
# Create 'identity' endpoint
openstack_identity_register "Register Identity Endpoint" do
auth_host "192.168.1.10"
auth_port "35357"
auth_protocol "http"
api_ver "/v2.0"
auth_token "123456789876"
service_type "identity"
endpoint_region "RegionOne"
endpoint_adminurl "http://192.168.1.10:35357/v2.0"
endpoint_internalurl "http://192.168.1.10:5001/v2.0"
endpoint_publicurl "http://1.2.3.4:5001/v2.0"
action :create_endpoint
end
Create EC2 credentials for a given user in the specified tenant
- :create_ec2: create EC2 credentials
- auth_protocol: Required communication protocol with Keystone server. Acceptable values are [ "http", "https" ]
- auth_host: Keystone server IP Address
- auth_port: Port Keystone server is listening on
- api_ver: API Version for Keystone server
- Accepted values are [ "/v2.0" ]
- auth_token: Auth Token for communication with Keystone server
- user_name: User name to grant the credentials for
- tenant_name: Tenant name to grant the credentials in
openstack_identity_credentials "Create EC2 credentials for 'admin' user" do
auth_host "192.168.1.10"
auth_port "35357"
auth_protocol "http"
api_ver "/v2.0"
auth_token "123456789876"
user_name "admin"
tenant_name "openstack"
end
Please refer to the Common cookbook for more attributes.
openstack['identity']['db_server_chef_role']
- The name of the Chef role that knows about the db serveropenstack['identity']['user']
- User keystone runs asopenstack['identity']['group']
- Group keystone runs asopenstack['identity']['db']
- Name of keystone databaseopenstack['identity']['db_user']
- Username for keystone database accessopenstack['identity']['db_passwd']
- Password for keystone database accessopenstack['identity']['db_ipaddress']
- IP address of the keystone databaseopenstack['identity']['api_ipaddress']
- IP address for the keystone API to bind to. TODO: Rename to bind_addressopenstack['identity']['verbose']
- Enables/disables verbose output for keystone API serveropenstack['identity']['debug']
- Enables/disables debug output for keystone API serveropenstack['identity']['admin_token']
- Admin token for bootstraping keystone serveropenstack['identity']['roles']
- Array of roles to create in the keystone serveropenstack['identity']['users']
- Array of users to create in the keystone serveropenstack['identity']['pastefile_url']
- Specify the URL for a keystone-paste.ini file that will override the default packaged fileopenstack['identity']['token']['expiration']
- Token validity time in secondsopenstack['identity']['catalog']['backend']
- Storage mechanism for the keystone service catalogopenstack['identity']["control_exchange"]
- The AMQP exchange to connect to if using RabbitMQ or Qpid, defaults to openstackopenstack['identity']['rpc_backend']
- The messaging module to useopenstack['identity']['rpc_thread_pool_size']
- Size of RPC thread poolopenstack['identity']['rpc_conn_pool_size']
- Size of RPC connection poolopenstack['identity']['rpc_response_timeout']
- Seconds to wait for a response from call or multicallopenstack['identity']['ldap']['url']
- LDAP host URL (default: 'ldap://localhost')openstack['identity']['ldap']['user']
- LDAP bind DN (default: 'dc=Manager,dc=example,dc=com')openstack['identity']['ldap']['password']
- LDAP bind password (default: nil)openstack['identity']['ldap']['use_tls']
- Use TLS for LDAP (default: false)openstack['identity']['ldap']['tls_cacertfile']
- Path to CA cert file (default: nil)openstack['identity']['ldap']['tls_cacertdir']
- Path to CA cert directory (default: nil)openstack['identity']['ldap']['tls_req_cert']
- CA cert check ('demand', 'allow' or 'never', default: 'demand')openstack['identity']['misc_keystone']
- Array of strings to be added to keystone.conf
Most openstack['identity']['ldap']
attributes map directly to the corresponding config options in keystone.conf's [ldap]
backend. They are primarily used when configuring openstack['identity']['identity']['backend']
and/or openstack["identity"]["assignment"]["backend"]
as ldap
(both default to sql
).
The openstack['identity']['ldap']['use_tls']
option should not be used in conjunction with an ldaps://
url. When the latter is used (and openstack['identity']['ldap']['use_tls'] = false
), the certificate path and validation will instead be subject to the OS's LDAP config.
If openstack['identity']['ldap']['tls_cacertfile']
is set, openstack['identity']['ldap']['tls_cacertdir']
will be ignored. Set openstack['identity']['ldap']['tls_cacertfile']
to nil
if openstack['identity']['ldap']['tls_cacertdir']
is desired.
Values of openstack['identity']['ldap']['tls_req_cert']
correspond to the standard options permitted by the TLS_REQCERT TLS option (never
performs no validation of certs, allow
performs some basic name checks but no thorough CA validation, demand
requires the certificate chain to be valid for the connection to succeed).
The following attributes are defined in attributes/default.rb of the common cookbook, but are documented here due to their relevance:
openstack['endpoints']['identity-bind']['host']
- The IP address to bind the identity services toopenstack['endpoints']['identity-bind']['scheme']
- Unusedopenstack['endpoints']['identity-bind']['port']
- Unusedopenstack['endpoints']['identity-bind']['path']
- Unusedopenstack['endpoints']['identity-bind']['bind_interface']
- The interface name to bind the identity services to
If the value of the 'bind_interface' attribute is non-nil, then the identity service will be bound to the first IP address on that interface. If the value of the 'bind_interface' attribute is nil, then the identity service will be bound to the IP address specified in the host attribute.
When managing tokens with an SQL backend the token database may grow unboundedly as new tokens are issued and expired tokens are not disposed of. Expired tokens may need to be kept around in order to allow for auditability.
It is up to deployers to define when their tokens can be safely deleted. Keystone provides a tool to purge expired tokens, and the server recipe can create a cronjob to run that tool. By default the cronjob will be configured to run hourly.
The flush tokens cronjob configuration parameters are listed below:
openstack['identity']['token_flush_cron']['enabled']
- Boolean indicating whether the flush tokens cronjob is enabled. It is by default enabled if the token backend is 'sql'.openstack['identity']['token_flush_cron']['log_file']
- The log file for the flush tokens tool.openstack['identity']['token_flush_cron']['hour']
- The hour at which the flush tokens cronjob should run (values 0 - 23).openstack['identity']['token_flush_cron']['minute']
- The minute at which the flush tokens cronjob should run (values 0 - 59).openstack']['identity']['token_flush_cron']['day']
- The day of the month when the flush tokens cronjob should run (values 1 - 31).openstack['identity']['token_flush_cron']['weekday']
= The day of the week at which the flush tokens cronjob should run (values 0 - 6, where Sunday is 0).
Please refer to the TESTING.md for instructions for testing the cookbook.
Berks will resolve version requirements and dependencies on first run and
store these in Berksfile.lock. If new cookbooks become available you can run
berks update
to update the references in Berksfile.lock. Berksfile.lock will
be included in stable branches to provide a known good set of dependencies.
Berksfile.lock will not be included in development branches to encourage
development against the latest cookbooks.
Author:: Justin Shepherd ([email protected]) Author:: Jason Cannavale ([email protected]) Author:: Ron Pedde ([email protected]) Author:: Joseph Breu ([email protected]) Author:: William Kelly ([email protected]) Author:: Darren Birkett ([email protected]) Author:: Evan Callicoat ([email protected]) Author:: Matt Ray ([email protected]) Author:: Jay Pipes ([email protected]) Author:: John Dewey ([email protected]) Author:: Sean Gallagher ([email protected]) Author:: Ionut Artarisi ([email protected]) Author:: Chen Zhiwei ([email protected]) Author:: Eric Zhou ([email protected])
Copyright 2012, Rackspace US, Inc. Copyright 2012-2013, Opscode, Inc. Copyright 2012-2013, AT&T Services, Inc. Copyright 2013-2014, SUSE Linux GmbH Copyright 2013-2014, IBM, Corp.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.