ceph/doc/radosgw/multitenancy.rst

108 lines
3.9 KiB
ReStructuredText

=================
RGW Multi-tenancy
=================
.. versionadded:: Jewel
The multi-tenancy feature allows to use buckets and users of the same
name simultaneously by segregating them under so-called ``tenants``.
This may be useful, for instance, to permit users of Swift API to
create buckets with easily conflicting names such as "test" or "trove".
From the Jewel release onward, each user and bucket lies under a tenant.
For compatibility, a "legacy" tenant with an empty name is provided.
Whenever a bucket is referred without an explicit tenant, an implicit
tenant is used, taken from the user performing the operation. Since
the pre-existing users are under the legacy tenant, they continue
to create and access buckets as before. The layout of objects in RADOS
is extended in a compatible way, ensuring a smooth upgrade to Jewel.
Administering Users With Explicit Tenants
=========================================
Tenants as such do not have any operations on them. They appear and
disappear as needed, when users are administered. In order to create,
modify, and remove users with explicit tenants, either an additional
option --tenant is supplied, or a syntax "<tenant>$<user>" is used
in the parameters of the radosgw-admin command.
Examples
--------
Create a user testx$tester to be accessed with S3::
# radosgw-admin --tenant testx --uid tester --display-name "Test User" --access_key TESTER --secret test123 user create
Create a user testx$tester to be accessed with Swift::
# radosgw-admin --tenant testx --uid tester --display-name "Test User" --subuser tester:test --key-type swift --access full user create
# radosgw-admin --subuser 'testx$tester:test' --key-type swift --secret test123
.. note:: The subuser with explicit tenant has to be quoted in the shell.
Tenant names may contain only alphanumeric characters and underscores.
Accessing Buckets with Explicit Tenants
=======================================
When a client application accesses buckets, it always operates with
credentials of a particular user. As mentioned above, every user belongs
to a tenant. Therefore, every operation has an implicit tenant in its
context, to be used if no tenant is specified explicitly. Thus a complete
compatibility is maintained with previous releases, as long as the
referred buckets and referring user belong to the same tenant.
In other words, anything unusual occurs when accessing another tenant's
buckets *only*.
Extensions employed to specify an explicit tenant differ according
to the protocol and authentication system used.
S3
--
In case of S3, a colon character is used to separate tenant and bucket.
Thus a sample URL would be::
https://ep.host.dom/tenant:bucket
Here's a simple Python sample:
.. code-block:: python
:linenos:
from boto.s3.connection import S3Connection, OrdinaryCallingFormat
c = S3Connection(
aws_access_key_id="TESTER",
aws_secret_access_key="test123",
host="ep.host.dom",
calling_format = OrdinaryCallingFormat())
bucket = c.get_bucket("test5b:testbucket")
Note that it's not possible to supply an explicit tenant using
a hostname. Hostnames cannot contain colons, or any other separators
that are not already valid in bucket names. Using a period creates an
ambiguous syntax. Therefore, the bucket-in-URL-path format has to be
used.
Swift with built-in authenticator
---------------------------------
TBD -- not in test_multen.py yet
Swift with Keystone
-------------------
TBD -- don't forget to explain the function of
rgw keystone implicit tenants = true
in commit e9259486decab52a362443d3fd3dec33b0ec654f
Notes and known issues
----------------------
Just to be clear, it is not possible to create buckets in other
tenants at present. The owner of newly created bucket is extracted
from authentication information.
This document needs examples of administration of Keystone users.
The keystone.rst may need to be updated.