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This changes the string "tenant$<user>" to 'tenant$<user>' in order to avoid users running into confusing shell expansion behavior. Hat tip to IcePic. Signed-off-by: Zac Dover <zac.dover@gmail.com>
170 lines
7.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
170 lines
7.0 KiB
ReStructuredText
.. _rgw-multitenancy:
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=================
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RGW Multi-tenancy
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=================
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.. versionadded:: Jewel
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The multi-tenancy feature allows to use buckets and users of the same
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name simultaneously by segregating them under so-called ``tenants``.
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This may be useful, for instance, to permit users of Swift API to
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create buckets with easily conflicting names such as "test" or "trove".
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From the Jewel release onward, each user and bucket lies under a tenant.
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For compatibility, a "legacy" tenant with an empty name is provided.
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Whenever a bucket is referred without an explicit tenant, an implicit
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tenant is used, taken from the user performing the operation. Since
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the pre-existing users are under the legacy tenant, they continue
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to create and access buckets as before. The layout of objects in RADOS
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is extended in a compatible way, ensuring a smooth upgrade to Jewel.
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Administering Users With Explicit Tenants
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=========================================
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Tenants as such do not have any operations on them. They appear and
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disappear as needed, when users are administered. In order to create,
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modify, and remove users with explicit tenants, either an additional
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option --tenant is supplied, or a syntax '<tenant>$<user>' is used
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in the parameters of the radosgw-admin command.
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Examples
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--------
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Create a user testx$tester to be accessed with S3::
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# radosgw-admin --tenant testx --uid tester --display-name "Test User" --access_key TESTER --secret test123 user create
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Create a user testx$tester to be accessed with Swift::
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# radosgw-admin --tenant testx --uid tester --display-name "Test User" --subuser tester:test --key-type swift --access full user create
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# radosgw-admin --subuser 'testx$tester:test' --key-type swift --secret test123
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.. note:: The subuser with explicit tenant has to be quoted in the shell.
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Tenant names may contain only alphanumeric characters and underscores.
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Accessing Buckets with Explicit Tenants
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=======================================
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When a client application accesses buckets, it always operates with
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credentials of a particular user. As mentioned above, every user belongs
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to a tenant. Therefore, every operation has an implicit tenant in its
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context, to be used if no tenant is specified explicitly. Thus a complete
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compatibility is maintained with previous releases, as long as the
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referred buckets and referring user belong to the same tenant.
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In other words, anything unusual occurs when accessing another tenant's
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buckets *only*.
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Extensions employed to specify an explicit tenant differ according
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to the protocol and authentication system used.
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S3
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--
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In case of S3, a colon character is used to separate tenant and bucket.
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Thus a sample URL would be::
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https://ep.host.dom/tenant:bucket
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Here's a simple Python sample:
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.. code-block:: python
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:linenos:
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from boto.s3.connection import S3Connection, OrdinaryCallingFormat
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c = S3Connection(
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aws_access_key_id="TESTER",
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aws_secret_access_key="test123",
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host="ep.host.dom",
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calling_format = OrdinaryCallingFormat())
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bucket = c.get_bucket("test5b:testbucket")
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Note that it's not possible to supply an explicit tenant using
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a hostname. Hostnames cannot contain colons, or any other separators
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that are not already valid in bucket names. Using a period creates an
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ambiguous syntax. Therefore, the bucket-in-URL-path format has to be
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used.
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Due to the fact that the native S3 API does not deal with
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multi-tenancy and radosgw's implementation does, things get a bit
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involved when dealing with signed URLs and public read ACLs.
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* A **signed URL** does contain the ``AWSAccessKeyId`` query
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parameters, from which radosgw is able to discern the correct user
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and tenant owning the bucket. In other words, an application
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generating signed URLs should be able to take just the un-prefixed
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bucket name, and produce a signed URL that itself contains the
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bucket name without the tenant prefix. However, it is *possible* to
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include the prefix if you so choose.
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Thus, accessing a signed URL of an object ``bar`` in a container
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``foo`` belonging to the tenant ``7188e165c0ae4424ac68ae2e89a05c50``
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would be possible either via
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``http://<host>:<port>/foo/bar?AWSAccessKeyId=b200fb6634c547199e436a0f93c0c46e&Expires=1542890806&Signature=eok6CYQC%2FDwmQQmqvY5jTg6ehXU%3D``,
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or via
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``http://<host>:<port>/7188e165c0ae4424ac68ae2e89a05c50:foo/bar?AWSAccessKeyId=b200fb6634c547199e436a0f93c0c46e&Expires=1542890806&Signature=eok6CYQC%2FDwmQQmqvY5jTg6ehXU%3D``,
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depending on whether or not the tenant prefix was passed in on
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signature generation.
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* A bucket with a **public read ACL** is meant to be read by an HTTP
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client *without* including any query parameters that would allow
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radosgw to discern tenants. Thus, publicly readable objects must
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always be accessed using the bucket name with the tenant prefix.
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Thus, if you set a public read ACL on an object ``bar`` in a
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container ``foo`` belonging to the tenant
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``7188e165c0ae4424ac68ae2e89a05c50``, you would need to access that
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object via the public URL
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``http://<host>:<port>/7188e165c0ae4424ac68ae2e89a05c50:foo/bar``.
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Swift with built-in authenticator
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---------------------------------
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TBD -- not in test_multen.py yet
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Swift with Keystone
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-------------------
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In the default configuration, although native Swift has inherent
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multi-tenancy, radosgw does not enable multi-tenancy for the Swift
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API. This is to ensure that a setup with legacy buckets --- that is,
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buckets that were created before radosgw supported multitenancy ---,
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those buckets retain their dual-API capability to be queried and
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modified using either S3 or Swift.
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If you want to enable multitenancy for Swift, particularly if your
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users only ever authenticate against OpenStack Keystone, you should
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enable Keystone-based multitenancy with the following ``ceph.conf``
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configuration option::
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rgw keystone implicit tenants = true
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Once you enable this option, any newly connecting user (whether they
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are using the Swift API, or Keystone-authenticated S3) will prompt
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radosgw to create a user named ``<tenant_id>$<tenant_id``, where
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``<tenant_id>`` is a Keystone tenant (project) UUID --- for example,
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``7188e165c0ae4424ac68ae2e89a05c50$7188e165c0ae4424ac68ae2e89a05c50``.
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Whenever that user then creates an Swift container, radosgw internally
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translates the given container name into
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``<tenant_id>/<container_name>``, such as
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``7188e165c0ae4424ac68ae2e89a05c50/foo``. This ensures that if there
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are two or more different tenants all creating a container named
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``foo``, radosgw is able to transparently discern them by their tenant
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prefix.
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It is also possible to limit the effects of implicit tenants
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to only apply to swift or s3, by setting ``rgw keystone implicit tenants``
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to either ``s3`` or ``swift``. This will likely primarily
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be of use to users who had previously used implicit tenants
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with older versions of ceph, where implicit tenants
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only applied to the swift protocol.
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Notes and known issues
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----------------------
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Just to be clear, it is not possible to create buckets in other
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tenants at present. The owner of newly created bucket is extracted
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from authentication information.
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