2013-08-08 14:51:01 +04:00
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd">
< html xmlns = "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" >
< body >
< h1 > Polkit access control< / h1 >
< p >
Libvirt's client < a href = "acl.html" > access control framework< / a > allows
administrators to setup fine grained permission rules across client users,
managed objects and API operations. This allows client connections
to be locked down to a minimal set of privileges. The polkit driver
provides a simple implementation of the access control framework.
< / p >
< ul id = "toc" > < / ul >
< h2 > < a name = "intro" > Introduction< / a > < / h2 >
< p >
A default install of libvirt will typically use
< a href = "http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Software/polkit/" > polkit< / a >
to authenticate the initial user connection to libvirtd. This is a
very coarse grained check though, either allowing full read-write
access to all APIs, or just read-only access. The polkit access
control driver in libvirt builds on this capability to allow for
fine grained control over the operations a user may perform on an
object.
< / p >
< h2 > < a name = "perms" > Permission names< / a > < / h2 >
< p >
The libvirt < a href = "acl.html#perms" > object names and permission names< / a >
are mapped onto polkit action names using the simple pattern:
< / p >
< pre > org.libvirt.api.$object.$permission
< / pre >
< p >
The only caveat is that any underscore characters in the
object or permission names are converted to hyphens. So,
for example, the < code > search_storage_vols< / code > permission
on the < code > storage_pool< / code > object maps to the polkit
action:
< / p >
< pre > org.libvirt.api.storage-pool.search-storage-vols
< / pre >
< p >
The default policy for any permission which corresponds to
a "read only" operation, is to allow access. All other
permissions default to deny access.
< / p >
< h2 > < a name = "attrs" > Object identity attributes< / a > < / h2 >
< p >
To allow polkit authorization rules to be written to match
against individual object instances, libvirt provides a number
of authorization detail attributes when performing a permission
check. The set of attributes varies according to the type
of object being checked
< / p >
< h3 > < a name = "object_connect" > virConnectPtr< / a > < / h3 >
< table class = "acl" >
< thead >
< tr >
< th > Attribute< / th >
< th > Description< / th >
< / tr >
< / thead >
< tbody >
< tr >
< td > connect_driver< / td >
< td > Name of the libvirt connection driver< / td >
< / tr >
< / tbody >
< / table >
< h3 > < a name = "object_domain" > virDomainPtr< / a > < / h3 >
< table class = "acl" >
< thead >
< tr >
< th > Attribute< / th >
< th > Description< / th >
< / tr >
< / thead >
< tbody >
< tr >
< td > connect_driver< / td >
< td > Name of the libvirt connection driver< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > domain_name< / td >
< td > Name of the domain, unique to the local host< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > domain_uuid< / td >
< td > UUID of the domain, globally unique< / td >
< / tr >
< / tbody >
< / table >
< h3 > < a name = "object_interface" > virInterfacePtr< / a > < / h3 >
< table class = "acl" >
< thead >
< tr >
< th > Attribute< / th >
< th > Description< / th >
< / tr >
< / thead >
< tbody >
< tr >
< td > connect_driver< / td >
< td > Name of the libvirt connection driver< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > interface_name< / td >
< td > Name of the network interface, unique to the local host< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
2014-11-07 12:35:33 +03:00
< td > interface_macaddr< / td >
2013-08-08 14:51:01 +04:00
< td > MAC address of the network interface, not unique< / td >
< / tr >
< / tbody >
< / table >
< h3 > < a name = "object_network" > virNetworkPtr< / a > < / h3 >
< table class = "acl" >
< thead >
< tr >
< th > Attribute< / th >
< th > Description< / th >
< / tr >
< / thead >
< tbody >
< tr >
< td > connect_driver< / td >
< td > Name of the libvirt connection driver< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > network_name< / td >
< td > Name of the network, unique to the local host< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > network_uuid< / td >
< td > UUID of the network, globally unique< / td >
< / tr >
< / tbody >
< / table >
< h3 > < a name = "object_node_device" > virNodeDevicePtr< / a > < / h3 >
< table class = "acl" >
< thead >
< tr >
< th > Attribute< / th >
< th > Description< / th >
< / tr >
< / thead >
< tbody >
< tr >
< td > connect_driver< / td >
< td > Name of the libvirt connection driver< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > node_device_name< / td >
< td > Name of the node device, unique to the local host< / td >
< / tr >
< / tbody >
< / table >
< h3 > < a name = "object_nwfilter" > virNWFilterPtr< / a > < / h3 >
< table class = "acl" >
< thead >
< tr >
< th > Attribute< / th >
< th > Description< / th >
< / tr >
< / thead >
< tbody >
< tr >
< td > connect_driver< / td >
< td > Name of the libvirt connection driver< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > nwfilter_name< / td >
< td > Name of the network filter, unique to the local host< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > nwfilter_uuid< / td >
< td > UUID of the network filter, globally unique< / td >
< / tr >
< / tbody >
< / table >
< h3 > < a name = "object_secret" > virSecretPtr< / a > < / h3 >
< table class = "acl" >
< thead >
< tr >
< th > Attribute< / th >
< th > Description< / th >
< / tr >
< / thead >
< tbody >
< tr >
< td > connect_driver< / td >
< td > Name of the libvirt connection driver< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > secret_uuid< / td >
< td > UUID of the secret, globally unique< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > secret_usage_volume< / td >
< td > Name of the associated volume, if any< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > secret_usage_ceph< / td >
< td > Name of the associated Ceph server, if any< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > secret_usage_target< / td >
< td > Name of the associated iSCSI target, if any< / td >
< / tr >
< / tbody >
< / table >
< h3 > < a name = "object_storage_pool" > virStoragePoolPtr< / a > < / h3 >
< table class = "acl" >
< thead >
< tr >
< th > Attribute< / th >
< th > Description< / th >
< / tr >
< / thead >
< tbody >
< tr >
< td > connect_driver< / td >
< td > Name of the libvirt connection driver< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > pool_name< / td >
< td > Name of the storage pool, unique to the local host< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > pool_uuid< / td >
< td > UUID of the storage pool, globally unique< / td >
< / tr >
< / tbody >
< / table >
< h3 > < a name = "object_storage_vol" > virStorageVolPtr< / a > < / h3 >
< table class = "acl" >
< thead >
< tr >
< th > Attribute< / th >
< th > Description< / th >
< / tr >
< / thead >
< tbody >
< tr >
< td > connect_driver< / td >
< td > Name of the libvirt connection driver< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > pool_name< / td >
< td > Name of the storage pool, unique to the local host< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > pool_uuid< / td >
< td > UUID of the storage pool, globally unique< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > vol_name< / td >
< td > Name of the storage volume, unique to the pool< / td >
< / tr >
< tr >
< td > vol_key< / td >
< td > Key of the storage volume, globally unique< / td >
< / tr >
< / tbody >
< / table >
< h2 > < a name = "user" > User identity attributes< / a > < / h2 >
< p >
At this point in time, the only attribute provided by
libvirt to identify the user invoking the operation
is the PID of the client program. This means that the
polkit access control driver is only useful if connections
to libvirt are restricted to its UNIX domain socket. If
connections are being made to a TCP socket, no identifying
information is available and access will be denied.
Also note that if the client is connecting via an SSH
tunnel, it is the local SSH user that will be identified.
In future versions, it is expected that more information
about the client user will be provided, including the
SASL / Kerberos username and/or x509 distinguished
name obtained from the authentication provider in use.
< / p >
2013-10-04 21:38:57 +04:00
< h2 > < a name = "checks" > Writing access control policies< / a > < / h2 >
2013-08-08 14:51:01 +04:00
< p >
If using versions of polkit prior to 0.106 then it is only
possible to validate (user, permission) pairs via the < code > .pkla< / code >
files. Fully validation of the (user, permission, object) triple
requires the new JavaScript < code > .rules< / code > support that
was introduced in version 0.106. The latter is what will be
described here.
< / p >
< p >
Libvirt does not ship any rules files by default. It merely
provides a definition of the default behaviour for each
action (permission). As noted earlier, permissions which
correspond to read-only operations in libvirt will be allowed
to all users by default; everything else is denied by default.
Defining custom rules requires creation of a file in the
< code > /etc/polkit-1/rules.d< / code > directory with a name
chosen by the administrator (< code > 100-libvirt-acl.rules< / code >
would be a reasonable choice). See the < code > polkit(8)< / code >
manual page for a description of how to write these files
in general. The key idea is to create a file containing
something like
< / p >
< pre >
polkit.addRule(function(action, subject) {
....logic to check 'action' and 'subject'...
});
< / pre >
< p >
In this code snippet above, the < code > action< / code > object
instance will represent the libvirt permission being checked
along with identifying attributes for the object it is being
applied to. The < code > subject< / code > meanwhile will identify
the libvirt client app (with the caveat above about it only
dealing with local clients connected via the UNIX socket).
On the < code > action< / code > object, the permission name is
accessible via the < code > id< / code > attribute, while the
2013-08-15 14:14:15 +04:00
object identifying attributes are exposed via the
< code > lookup< / code > method.
2013-08-08 14:51:01 +04:00
< / p >
< h3 > < a name = "exconnect" > Example: restricting ability to connect to drivers< / a > < / h3 >
< p >
Consider a local user < code > berrange< / code >
who has been granted permission to connect to libvirt in
full read-write mode. The goal is to only allow them to
use the < code > QEMU< / code > driver and not the Xen or LXC
drivers which are also available in libvirtd.
To achieve this we need to write a rule which checks
2013-08-15 14:14:15 +04:00
whether the < code > connect_driver< / code > attribute
2013-08-08 14:51:01 +04:00
is < code > QEMU< / code > , and match on an action
name of < code > org.libvirt.api.connect.getattr< / code > . Using
the javascript rules format, this ends up written as
< / p >
< pre >
polkit.addRule(function(action, subject) {
if (action.id == "org.libvirt.api.connect.getattr" & &
subject.user == "berrange") {
2013-08-15 14:14:15 +04:00
if (action.lookup("connect_driver") == 'QEMU') {
2013-08-08 14:51:01 +04:00
return polkit.Result.YES;
} else {
return polkit.Result.NO;
}
}
});
< / pre >
< h3 > < a name = "exdomain" > Example: restricting access to a single domain< / a > < / h3 >
< p >
Consider a local user < code > berrange< / code >
who has been granted permission to connect to libvirt in
full read-write mode. The goal is to only allow them to
see the domain called < code > demo< / code > on the LXC driver.
To achieve this we need to write a rule which checks
2013-08-15 14:14:15 +04:00
whether the < code > connect_driver< / code > attribute
is < code > LXC< / code > and the < code > domain_name< / code >
2013-08-08 14:51:01 +04:00
attribute is < code > demo< / code > , and match on a action
name of < code > org.libvirt.api.domain.getattr< / code > . Using
the javascript rules format, this ends up written as
< / p >
< pre >
polkit.addRule(function(action, subject) {
if (action.id == "org.libvirt.api.domain.getattr" & &
subject.user == "berrange") {
2013-08-15 14:14:15 +04:00
if (action.lookup("connect_driver") == 'LXC' & &
action.lookup("domain_name") == 'demo') {
2013-08-08 14:51:01 +04:00
return polkit.Result.YES;
} else {
return polkit.Result.NO;
}
}
});
< / pre >
< / body >
< / html >