Namespace Permissions (Kubernetes RBAC-based)
Namespace Permissions (Kubernetes RBAC-based)
You can regulate users' or user groups' access to Kubernetes resources in a single namespace based on their Kubernetes RBAC roles. The RBAC API declares four kinds of Kubernetes objects: Role, ClusterRole, RoleBinding, and ClusterRoleBinding, which are described as follows:
- Role: defines a set of rules for accessing Kubernetes resources in a namespace.
- RoleBinding: defines the relationship between users and roles.
- ClusterRole: defines a set of rules for accessing Kubernetes resources in a cluster (including all namespaces).
- ClusterRoleBinding: defines the relationship between users and cluster roles.
Role and ClusterRole specify actions that can be performed on specific resources. RoleBinding and ClusterRoleBinding bind roles to specific users, user groups, or ServiceAccounts. Illustration:
- view (read-only): read-only permission on most resources in all or selected namespaces.
- edit (development): read and write permissions on most resources in all or selected namespaces. If this ClusterRole is configured for all namespaces, its capability is the same as the O&M permission.
- admin (O&M): read and write permissions on most resources in all namespaces, and read-only permission on nodes, storage volumes, namespaces, and quota management.
- cluster-admin (administrator): read and write permissions on all resources in all namespaces.
- drainage-editor: drain a node.
- drainage-viewer: view the nodal drainage status but cannot drain a node.
In addition to the preceding typical ClusterRoles, you can define Role and RoleBinding to grant the permissions to add, delete, modify, and obtain global resources (such as nodes, PVs, and CustomResourceDefinitions) and different resources (such as pods, Deployments, and Services) in namespaces for refined permission control.
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.
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. |
Precautions
- After you create a cluster, CCE automatically assigns the cluster-admin permission to you, which means you have full control on all resources in all namespaces in the cluster. The ID of a federated user changes upon each login and logout. Therefore, the user with the permissions is displayed as deleted. In this case, do not delete the permissions. Otherwise, the authentication fails. You are advised to grant the cluster-admin permission to a user group on CCE and add federated users to the user group.
- A user with the Security Administrator role has all IAM permissions except role switching. For example, an account in the admin user group has this role by default. Only these users can assign permissions on the Permissions page on the CCE console.
Configuring Namespace Permissions (on the Console)
You can regulate users' or user groups' access to Kubernetes resources in a single namespace based on their Kubernetes RBAC roles.
- Log in to the CCE console. In the navigation pane, choose Permissions.
- Select a cluster for which you want to add permissions from the drop-down list on the right.
- Click Add Permissions in the upper right corner.
- Confirm the cluster name and select the namespace to assign permissions for. For example, select All namespaces, the target user or user group, and select the permissions.
If you do not have IAM permissions, you cannot select users or user groups when configuring permissions for other users or user groups. In this case, you can enter a user ID or user group ID.
Permissions can be customized as required. After selecting Custom for Permission Type, click Add Custom Role on the right of the Custom parameter. In the dialog box displayed, enter a name and select a rule. After the custom rule is created, you can select a value from the Custom drop-down list box.
Custom permissions are classified into ClusterRole and Role. Each ClusterRole or Role contains a group of rules that represent related permissions. For details, see Using RBAC Authorization.
- A ClusterRole is a cluster-level resource that can be used to configure cluster access permissions.
- A Role is used to configure access permissions in a namespace. When creating a Role, specify the namespace to which the Role belongs.
- Click OK.
Using kubectl to Configure Namespace Permissions
When you access a cluster using kubectl, CCE uses kubeconfig.json 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 Cluster Permissions (IAM-based) and Namespace Permissions (Kubernetes RBAC-based).
In addition to cluster-admin, admin, edit, and view, you can define Roles and RoleBindings to configure the permissions to add, delete, modify, and obtain resources, such as pods, Deployments, and Services, in the namespace.
The procedure for creating a Role is very simple. To be specific, specify a namespace and then define rules. The rules in the following example are to allow GET and LIST operations on pods in the default namespace.
kind: Role apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 metadata: namespace: default # Namespace name: role-example rules: - apiGroups: [""] resources: ["pods"] # The pod can be accessed. verbs: ["get", "list"] # The GET and LIST operations can be performed.
- apiGroups indicates the API group to which the resource belongs.
- resources indicates the resources that can be operated. Pods, Deployments, ConfigMaps, and other Kubernetes resources are supported.
- verbs indicates the operations that can be performed. get indicates querying a specific object, and list indicates listing all objects of a certain type. Other value options include create, update, and delete.
For details, see Using RBAC Authorization.
After creating a Role, you can bind the Role to a specific user, which is called RoleBinding. The following shows an example:
kind: RoleBinding apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 metadata: name: RoleBinding-example namespace: default annotations: CCE.com/IAM: 'true' roleRef: kind: Role name: role-example apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io subjects: - kind: User name: 0c97ac3cb280f4d91fa7c0096739e1f8 # User ID of the user-example apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
The subjects section binds a Role with an IAM user so that the IAM user can obtain the permissions defined in the Role, as shown in the following figure.
You can also specify a user group in the subjects section. In this case, all users in the user group obtain the permissions defined in the Role.
subjects: - kind: Group name: 0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 # User group ID apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
Use the IAM user user-example to connect to the cluster and obtain the pod information. The following is an example of the returned pod information.
# kubectl get pod NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE deployment-389584-2-6f6bd4c574-2n9rk 1/1 Running 0 4d7h deployment-389584-2-6f6bd4c574-7s5qw 1/1 Running 0 4d7h deployment-3895841-746b97b455-86g77 1/1 Running 0 4d7h deployment-3895841-746b97b455-twvpn 1/1 Running 0 4d7h nginx-658dff48ff-7rkph 1/1 Running 0 4d9h nginx-658dff48ff-njdhj 1/1 Running 0 4d9h # kubectl get pod nginx-658dff48ff-7rkph NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE nginx-658dff48ff-7rkph 1/1 Running 0 4d9h
Try querying Deployments and Services in the namespace. The output shows that user-example does not have the required permissions. Try querying the pods in namespace kube-system. The output shows that user-example does not have the required permissions. This indicates that the IAM user user-example has only the GET and LIST Pod permissions in the default namespace, which is the same as expected.
# kubectl get deploy Error from server (Forbidden): deployments.apps is forbidden: User "0c97ac3cb280f4d91fa7c0096739e1f8" cannot list resource "deployments" in API group "apps" in the namespace "default" # kubectl get svc Error from server (Forbidden): services is forbidden: User "0c97ac3cb280f4d91fa7c0096739e1f8" cannot list resource "services" in API group "" in the namespace "default" # kubectl get pod --namespace=kube-system Error from server (Forbidden): pods is forbidden: User "0c97ac3cb280f4d91fa7c0096739e1f8" cannot list resource "pods" in API group "" in the namespace "kube-system"
Example: Assigning Cluster Administrator Permissions (cluster-admin)
You can use the cluster-admin role to assign all permissions on a cluster. This role contains the permissions for all cluster resources.
In the following example kubectl output, a ClusterRoleBinding has been created and binds the cluster-admin role to the user group cce-role-group.
# kubectl get clusterrolebinding NAME ROLE AGE clusterrole_cluster-admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 ClusterRole/cluster-admin 61s # kubectl get clusterrolebinding clusterrole_cluster-admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 -oyaml apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata: annotations: CCE.com/IAM: "true" creationTimestamp: "2021-06-23T09:15:22Z" name: clusterrole_cluster-admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 resourceVersion: "36659058" selfLink: /apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1/clusterrolebindings/clusterrole_cluster-admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 uid: d6cd43e9-b4ca-4b56-bc52-e36346fc1320 roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: cluster-admin subjects: - apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: Group name: 0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7
Connect to the cluster as an authorized user. If the PVs and StorageClasses can be queried, the permission configuration takes effect.
# kubectl get pv No resources found # kubectl get sc NAME PROVISIONER RECLAIMPOLICY VOLUMEBINDINGMODE ALLOWVOLUMEEXPANSION AGE csi-disk everest-csi-provisioner Delete Immediate true 75d csi-disk-topology everest-csi-provisioner Delete WaitForFirstConsumer true 75d csi-nas everest-csi-provisioner Delete Immediate true 75d csi-obs everest-csi-provisioner Delete Immediate false 75d
Example: Assigning Namespace O&M Permissions (admin)
The admin role has the read and write permissions on most namespace resources. You can grant the admin permission on all namespaces to a user or user group.
In the following example kubectl output, a RoleBinding has been created and binds the admin role to the user group cce-role-group.
# kubectl get rolebinding NAME ROLE AGE clusterrole_admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 ClusterRole/admin 18s # kubectl get rolebinding clusterrole_admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 -oyaml apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: RoleBinding metadata: annotations: CCE.com/IAM: "true" creationTimestamp: "2021-06-24T01:30:08Z" name: clusterrole_admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 resourceVersion: "36963685" selfLink: /apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1/namespaces/default/rolebindings/clusterrole_admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 uid: 6c6f46a6-8584-47da-83f5-9eef1f7b75d6 roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: admin subjects: - apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: Group name: 0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7
Connect to the cluster as an authorized user. If the PVs and StorageClasses can be queried but a namespace cannot be created, the permission configuration takes effect.
# kubectl get pv No resources found # kubectl get sc NAME PROVISIONER RECLAIMPOLICY VOLUMEBINDINGMODE ALLOWVOLUMEEXPANSION AGE csi-disk everest-csi-provisioner Delete Immediate true 75d csi-disk-topology everest-csi-provisioner Delete WaitForFirstConsumer true 75d csi-nas everest-csi-provisioner Delete Immediate true 75d csi-obs everest-csi-provisioner Delete Immediate false 75d # kubectl apply -f namespaces.yaml Error from server (Forbidden): namespaces is forbidden: User "0c97ac3cb280f4d91fa7c0096739e1f8" cannot create resource "namespaces" in API group "" at the cluster scope
Example: Assigning Namespace Developer Permissions (edit)
The edit role has the read and write permissions on most namespace resources. You can grant the edit permission on all namespaces to a user or user group.
In the following example kubectl output, a RoleBinding has been created, the edit role is bound to the user group cce-role-group, and the target namespace is the default namespace.
# kubectl get rolebinding NAME ROLE AGE clusterrole_admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 ClusterRole/admin 18s # kubectl get rolebinding clusterrole_admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 -oyaml apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: RoleBinding metadata: annotations: CCE.com/IAM: "true" creationTimestamp: "2021-06-24T01:30:08Z" name: clusterrole_admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 namespace: default resourceVersion: "36963685" selfLink: /apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1/namespaces/default/rolebindings/clusterrole_admin_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 uid: 6c6f46a6-8584-47da-83f5-9eef1f7b75d6 roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: edit subjects: - apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: Group name: 0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7
Connect to the cluster as an authorized user. In this example, you can create and obtain resources in the default namespace, but cannot query resources in the kube-system namespace or cluster resources.
# kubectl get pod NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE test-568d96f4f8-brdrp 1/1 Running 0 33m test-568d96f4f8-cgjqp 1/1 Running 0 33m # kubectl get pod -nkube-system Error from server (Forbidden): pods is forbidden: User "0c97ac3cb280f4d91fa7c0096739e1f8" cannot list resource "pods" in API group "" in the namespace "kube-system" # kubectl get pv Error from server (Forbidden): persistentvolumes is forbidden: User "0c97ac3cb280f4d91fa7c0096739e1f8" cannot list resource "persistentvolumes" in API group "" at the cluster scope
Example: Assigning Read-Only Namespace Permissions (view)
The view role has the read-only permissions on a namespace. You can assign permissions to users to view one or multiple namespaces.
In the following example kubectl output, a RoleBinding has been created, the view role is bound to the user group cce-role-group, and the target namespace is the default namespace.
# kubectl get rolebinding NAME ROLE AGE clusterrole_view_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 ClusterRole/view 7s # kubectl get rolebinding clusterrole_view_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 -oyaml apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: RoleBinding metadata: annotations: CCE.com/IAM: "true" creationTimestamp: "2021-06-24T01:36:53Z" name: clusterrole_view_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 namespace: default resourceVersion: "36965800" selfLink: /apis/rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1/namespaces/default/rolebindings/clusterrole_view_group0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7 uid: b86e2507-e735-494c-be55-c41a0c4ef0dd roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: view subjects: - apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: Group name: 0c96fad22880f32a3f84c009862af6f7
Connect to the cluster as an authorized user. In this example, you can query resources in the default namespace but cannot create resources.
# kubectl get pod NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE test-568d96f4f8-brdrp 1/1 Running 0 40m test-568d96f4f8-cgjqp 1/1 Running 0 40m # kubectl run -i --tty --image tutum/dnsutils dnsutils --restart=Never --rm /bin/sh Error from server (Forbidden): pods is forbidden: User "0c97ac3cb280f4d91fa7c0096739e1f8" cannot create resource "pods" in API group "" in the namespace "default"
Example: Assigning Permissions for a Specific Kubernetes Resource Object
You can assign permissions on a specific Kubernetes resource object, such as pod, Deployment, and Service. For details, see Using kubectl to Configure Namespace Permissions.
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