Updated on 2024-11-11 GMT+08:00

Permissions Overview

CCE permissions management allows you to assign permissions to IAM users and user groups under your tenant accounts. CCE combines the advantages of Identity and Access Management (IAM) and Kubernetes Role-based Access Control (RBAC) authorization to provide a variety of authorization methods, including IAM fine-grained authorization, IAM token authorization, cluster-scoped authorization, and namespace-wide authorization.

CCE allows you to manage permissions on clusters and related resources at a finer granularity, for example, to control the access of employees in different departments to cloud resources.

This section describes the CCE permissions management mechanism and related concepts. If your account has met your service requirements, you can skip this section.

CCE Permissions Management

CCE permissions are described as follows:
  • Cluster-level permissions: Cluster-level permissions management evolves out of the system policy authorization feature of IAM. IAM users in the same user group have the same permissions. On IAM, you can configure system policies to describe which IAM user groups can perform which operations on cluster resources. For example, you can grant user group A to create and delete cluster X, add a node, or install an add-on, while granting user group B to view information about cluster X.

    Cluster-level permissions involve non-Kubernetes APIs in CCE clusters and support fine-grained IAM policies.

  • Namespace-level permissions: You can regulate users' or user groups' access to Kubernetes resources in a single namespace based on their Kubernetes RBAC roles. CCE has also been enhanced based on open-source capabilities. It supports RBAC authorization based on IAM user or user group, and RBAC authentication on access to APIs using IAM tokens.

    Namespace-level permissions involve CCE Kubernetes APIs and are enhanced based on the Kubernetes RBAC capabilities. Namespace-level permissions can be granted to IAM users or user groups for authentication and authorization, but are independent of fine-grained IAM policies.

In general, you configure CCE permissions in two scenarios. The first is creating and managing clusters and related resources, such as nodes. The second is creating and using Kubernetes resources in the cluster, such as workloads and Services.

Figure 1 Illustration on CCE permissions

These permissions allow you to manage resource users at a finer granularity.

Cluster Permissions (IAM-based) and Namespace Permissions (Kubernetes RBAC-based)

Users with different cluster permissions (assigned using IAM) have different namespace permissions (assigned using Kubernetes RBAC). Table 1 lists the namespace permissions of different users.

Table 1 Differences in namespace permissions

User

Clusters of v1.13 and Later

User with the Tenant Administrator permissions

All namespace permissions

IAM user with the CCE Administrator role

All namespace permissions

IAM user with the CCE FullAccess or CCE ReadOnlyAccess role

Requires Kubernetes RBAC authorization.

IAM user with the Tenant Guest role

Requires Kubernetes RBAC authorization.

kubectl Permissions

You can use kubectl to access Kubernetes resources in a cluster.

When you access a cluster using kubectl, CCE uses the kubeconfig.json file generated on the cluster for authentication. This file contains user information, based on which CCE determines which Kubernetes resources can be accessed by kubectl. The permissions recorded in a kubeconfig.json file vary from user to user. The permissions that a user has are listed in Table 1.