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---
title: Using Pinniped for CI/CD cluster operations
description: Using Pinniped for CI/CD cluster operations.
cascade:
layout: docs
menu:
docs:
name: Use Pinniped for CI/CD
weight: 500
parent: howtos
---
This guide shows you how to configure Pinniped so that your CI/CD system of choice can administrate Kubernetes clusters.
Pinniped provides user authentication to Kubernetes clusters.
It does not provide service-to-service (non-user) authentication.
There are many other systems for service-to-service authentication in Kubernetes.
If an organization prefers to manage CI/CD access with non-human user accounts in their IDP, Pinniped can provide authentication for those
non-human user accounts. Humans can also use the same steps below to log into clusters non-interactively.
Note that the guide below assumes that you are using a non-human user account within the IDP of your choice.
It is never recommended to use a human's credentials for CI/CD or other automated processes.
## Prerequisites
This how-to guide assumes that you have already configured the following Pinniped server-side components within your Kubernetes cluster(s):
1. Pinniped Supervisor with a working FederationDomain and at least one IdentityProvider (LDAP, AD, or OIDC)
* The Supervisor installation could be on a completely separate cluster unrelated to your CI/CD
2. Pinniped Concierge on each cluster that needs to be administrated by your CI/CD system
* It is possible to use the Pinniped CLI to log into any cluster configured with
[OIDC authentication](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/access-authn-authz/authentication/#openid-connect-tokens),
see [here]({{< ref "../tutorials/supervisor-without-concierge-demo" >}}). This would not require Concierge to be installed
on each cluster.
3. A CI/CD system that meets the following conditions:
* It can handle secrets safely and provide them to tasks as environment variables
* It can run shell scripts, or at least invoke binaries (such as `pinniped` and `kubectl`)
* It can access Pinniped-style kubeconfigs for each cluster
4. A user account (that does not represent a human) within the IDP of your choice
* This account should be granted the least amount of privileges necessary
* This account should likely be single-purposed for CI/CD use
## Overview
1. A CI/CD admin should generate the Pinniped-style kubeconfig for each cluster that needs to be administered by CI/CD
and make those kubeconfigs available to CI/CD
* Be sure to use `pinniped get kubeconfig` with option `--upstream-identity-provider-flow=cli_password` to authenticate non-interactively (without a browser)
* When using OIDC, the optional CLI-based flow must be enabled by the administrator in the OIDCIdentityProvider configuration before use
(see `allowPasswordGrant` in the [API docs](https://github.com/vmware-tanzu/pinniped/blob/main/generated/{{< latestcodegenversion >}}/README.adoc#oidcauthorizationconfig) for more details).
2. A CI/CD admin should make the non-human user account credentials available to CI/CD tasks
3. Each CI/CD task should set the environment variables `PINNIPED_USERNAME` and `PINNIPED_PASSWORD` for the `kubectl` process to avoid the interactive prompts.
The values should be provided from the non-human user account credentials.
At this point, your CI/CD has now authenticated into your kubernetes cluster.
Be sure to set up the appropriate IDP groups and Kubernetes roles to enable your non-human user account to perform the necessary operations.

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<article>
<div class="hero subpage">
<div class="wrapper">
<h1>Pinniped blog</h1>
<h2 class="h1">Pinniped blog</h2>
</div>
</div>
<div class="wrapper blog">
<div class="blog-post">
<h2>{{ .Title }}</h2>
<h1 class="h2">{{ .Title }}</h1>
{{ partial "authors" .}}
<p class="date">{{ dateFormat "Jan 2, 2006" .Date }}</p>
{{ .Content }}