7a1d92a8d4
Signed-off-by: Matt Moyer <moyerm@vmware.com>
162 lines
8.5 KiB
Markdown
162 lines
8.5 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Configure the Pinniped Supervisor as an OIDC issuer
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description: Set up the Pinniped Supervisor to provide seamless login flows across multiple clusters.
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cascade:
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layout: docs
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menu:
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docs:
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name: Configure Supervisor
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weight: 35
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parent: howtos
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---
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The Supervisor is an [OpenID Connect (OIDC)](https://openid.net/connect/) issuer that supports connecting a single "upstream" OIDC identity provider to many "downstream" cluster clients.
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This guide show you how to use this capability to issue [JSON Web Tokens (JWTs)](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7519) that can be validated by the [Pinniped Concierge]({{< ref "configure-concierge-jwt" >}}).
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Before starting, you should have the [command-line tool installed]({{< ref "install-cli" >}}) locally and the Concierge [installed]({{< ref "install-concierge" >}}) in your cluster.
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## Expose the Supervisor app as a service
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The Supervisor app's endpoints should be exposed as HTTPS endpoints with proper TLS certificates signed by a certificate authority (CA) which is trusted by your user's web browsers.
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Because there are many ways to expose TLS services from a Kubernetes cluster, the Supervisor app leaves this up to the user.
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The most common ways are:
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1. Define an [`Ingress` resource](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/ingress/) with TLS certificates.
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In this case, the ingress terminates TLS. Typically, the ingress then talks plain HTTP to its backend,
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which would be a NodePort or LoadBalancer Service in front of the HTTP port 8080 of the Supervisor pods.
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The required configuration of the Ingress is specific to your cluster's Ingress Controller, so please refer to the
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documentation from your Kubernetes provider. If you are using a cluster from a cloud provider, then you'll probably
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want to start with that provider's documentation. For example, if your cluster is a Google GKE cluster, refer to
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the [GKE documentation for Ingress](https://cloud.google.com/kubernetes-engine/docs/concepts/ingress).
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Otherwise, the Kubernetes documentation provides a list of popular
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[Ingress Controllers](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/ingress-controllers/), including
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[Contour](https://projectcontour.io/) and many others.
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1. Or, define a [TCP LoadBalancer Service](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/service/#loadbalancer)
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which is a layer 4 load balancer and does not terminate TLS. In this case, the Supervisor app needs to be
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configured with TLS certificates and terminates the TLS connection itself (see the section about FederationDomain
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below). The LoadBalancer Service should be configured to use the HTTPS port 443 of the Supervisor pods as its `targetPort`.
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*Warning:* do not expose the Supervisor's port 8080 to the public. It would not be secure for the OIDC protocol
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to use HTTP, because the user's secret OIDC tokens would be transmitted across the network without encryption.
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1. Or, expose the Supervisor app using a Kubernetes service mesh technology, for example [Istio](https://istio.io/).
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Please see the documentation for your service mesh. Generally, the setup would be similar to the previous description
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for defining an ingress, except the service mesh would probably provide both the ingress with TLS termination
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and the service.
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For either of the first two options, if you installed using `ytt` then you can use
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the related `service_*` options from [deploy/supervisor/values.yml](values.yaml) to create a Service.
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If you installed using `install-supervisor.yaml` then you can create
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the Service separately after installing the Supervisor app. There is no `Ingress` included in the `ytt` templates,
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so if you choose to use an Ingress then you'll need to create that separately after installing the Supervisor app.
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#### Example: Using a LoadBalancer Service
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This is an example of creating a LoadBalancer Service to expose port 8443 of the Supervisor app outside the cluster.
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Service
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metadata:
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name: pinniped-supervisor-loadbalancer
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# Assuming that this is the namespace where the supervisor was installed. This is the default in install-supervisor.yaml.
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namespace: pinniped-supervisor
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spec:
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type: LoadBalancer
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selector:
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# Assuming that this is how the supervisor pods are labeled. This is the default in install-supervisor.yaml.
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app: pinniped-supervisor
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ports:
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- protocol: TCP
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port: 443
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targetPort: 8443
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```
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#### Example: Using a NodePort Service
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A NodePort Service exposes the app as a port on the nodes of the cluster.
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This is convenient for use with kind clusters, because kind can
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[expose node ports as localhost ports on the host machine](https://kind.sigs.k8s.io/docs/user/configuration/#extra-port-mappings)
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without requiring an Ingress, although
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[kind also supports several Ingress Controllers](https://kind.sigs.k8s.io/docs/user/ingress).
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A NodePort Service could also be used behind an Ingress which is terminating TLS.
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For example:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Service
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metadata:
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name: pinniped-supervisor-nodeport
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# Assuming that this is the namespace where the supervisor was installed. This is the default in install-supervisor.yaml.
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namespace: pinniped-supervisor
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spec:
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type: NodePort
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selector:
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# Assuming that this is how the supervisor pods are labeled. This is the default in install-supervisor.yaml.
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app: pinniped-supervisor
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ports:
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- protocol: TCP
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port: 80
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targetPort: 8080
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nodePort: 31234 # This is the port that you would forward to the kind host. Or omit this key for a random port.
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```
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### Configuring the Supervisor to act as an OIDC provider
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The Supervisor can be configured as an OIDC provider by creating `FederationDomain` resources
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in the same namespace where the Supervisor app was installed. For example:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: config.supervisor.pinniped.dev/v1alpha1
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kind: FederationDomain
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metadata:
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name: my-provider
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# Assuming that this is the namespace where the supervisor was installed. This is the default in install-supervisor.yaml.
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namespace: pinniped-supervisor
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spec:
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# The hostname would typically match the DNS name of the public ingress or load balancer for the cluster.
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# Any path can be specified, which allows a single hostname to have multiple different issuers. The path is optional.
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issuer: https://my-issuer.example.com/any/path
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# Optionally configure the name of a Secret in the same namespace, of type `kubernetes.io/tls`,
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# which contains the TLS serving certificate for the HTTPS endpoints served by this OIDC Provider.
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tls:
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secretName: my-tls-cert-secret
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```
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#### Configuring TLS for the Supervisor OIDC endpoints
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If you have terminated TLS outside the app, for example using an Ingress with TLS certificates, then you do not need to
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configure TLS certificates on the FederationDomain.
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If you are using a LoadBalancer Service to expose the Supervisor app outside your cluster, then you
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also need to configure the Supervisor app to terminate TLS. There are two places to configure TLS certificates:
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1. Each `FederationDomain` can be configured with TLS certificates, using the `spec.tls.secretName` field.
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1. The default TLS certificate for all OIDC providers can be configured by creating a Secret called
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`pinniped-supervisor-default-tls-certificate` in the same namespace in which the Supervisor was installed.
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The default TLS certificate are used for all OIDC providers which did not declare a `spec.tls.secretName`.
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Also, the `spec.tls.secretName` is ignored for incoming requests to the OIDC endpoints
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that use an IP address as the host, so those requests always present the default TLS certificates
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to the client. When the request includes the hostname, and that hostname matches the hostname of an `Issuer`,
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then the TLS certificate defined by the `spec.tls.secretName` is used. If that issuer did not
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define `spec.tls.secretName` then the default TLS certificate is used. If neither exists,
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then the client gets a TLS error because the server does not present any TLS certificate.
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It is recommended that you have a DNS entry for your load balancer or Ingress, and that you configure the
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OIDC provider's `Issuer` using that DNS hostname, and that the TLS certificate for that provider also
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covers that same hostname.
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You can create the certificate Secrets however you like, for example you could use [cert-manager](https://cert-manager.io/)
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or `kubectl create secret tls`.
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Keep in mind that your users must load some of these endpoints in their web browsers, so the TLS certificates
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should be signed by a certificate authority that is trusted by their browsers.
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