Signed-off-by: Margo Crawford <margaretc@vmware.com>
6.4 KiB
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Configure the Pinniped Supervisor to use GitLab as an OIDC provider | Set up the Pinniped Supervisor to use GitLab login. |
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The Supervisor is an OpenID Connect (OIDC) issuer that supports connecting a single "upstream" identity provider to many "downstream" cluster clients.
This guide shows you how to configure the Supervisor so that users can authenticate to their Kubernetes cluster using their GitLab credentials.
Prerequisites
This how-to guide assumes that you have already [installed the Pinniped Supervisor]({{< ref "install-supervisor" >}}) with working ingress, and that you have [configured a FederationDomain to issue tokens for your downstream clusters]({{< ref "configure-supervisor" >}}).
Configure your GitLab Application
Follow the instructions for using GitLab as an OAuth2 authentication service provider and create a user, group, or instance-wide application.
For example, to create a user-owned application:
- In GitLab, navigate to User Settings > Applications
- Create a new application:
- Enter a name for your application, such as "My Kubernetes Clusters".
- Enter the redirect URI. This is the
spec.issuer
you configured in yourFederationDomain
appended with/callback
. - Check the box saying that the application is Confidential. This is required and will cause GitLab to autogenerate a client ID and client secret for your application.
- Check the box saying to Expire Access Tokens to cause refresh tokens to be returned to the Supervisor.
- Select scope
openid
. This is required to get ID tokens. Also, this provides access to thenickname
(GitLab username) andgroups
(GitLab groups) claims in the ID tokens. - Optionally select other scopes which might provide access to other claims that you might want to use to determine
the usernames of your users, for example
email
. - Save the application and make note of the Application ID and Secret.
Configure the Supervisor cluster
Create an [OIDCIdentityProvider](https://github.com/vmware-tanzu/pinniped/blob/main/generated/{{< latestcodegenversion >}}/README.adoc#oidcidentityprovider) in the same namespace as the Supervisor.
For example, this OIDCIdentityProvider and corresponding Secret for gitlab.com use the nickname
claim (GitLab username) as the Kubernetes username:
apiVersion: idp.supervisor.pinniped.dev/v1alpha1
kind: OIDCIdentityProvider
metadata:
namespace: pinniped-supervisor
name: gitlab
spec:
# Specify the upstream issuer URL.
issuer: https://gitlab.com
# Specify how to form authorization requests to GitLab.
authorizationConfig:
# GitLab is unusual among OIDC providers in that it returns an
# error if you request the "offline_access" scope during an
# authorization flow, so ask Pinniped to avoid requesting that
# scope when using GitLab by excluding it from this list.
# By specifying only "openid" here then Pinniped will only
# request "openid".
additionalScopes: [openid]
# If you would also like to allow your end users to authenticate using
# a password grant, then change this to true. See
# https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/api/oauth2.html#resource-owner-password-credentials-flow
# for more information about using the password grant with GitLab.
allowPasswordGrant: false
# Specify how GitLab claims are mapped to Kubernetes identities.
claims:
# Specify the name of the claim in your GitLab token that will be mapped
# to the "username" claim in downstream tokens minted by the Supervisor.
username: nickname
# Specify the name of the claim in GitLab that represents the groups
# that the user belongs to. Note that GitLab's "groups" claim comes from
# their "/userinfo" endpoint, not the token.
groups: groups
# Specify the name of the Kubernetes Secret that contains your GitLab
# application's client credentials (created below).
client:
secretName: gitlab-client-credentials
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
namespace: pinniped-supervisor
name: gitlab-client-credentials
type: secrets.pinniped.dev/oidc-client
stringData:
# The "Application ID" that you got from GitLab.
clientID: "<your-client-id>"
# The "Secret" that you got from GitLab.
clientSecret: "<your-client-secret>"
Once your OIDCIdentityProvider has been created, you can validate your configuration by running:
kubectl describe OIDCIdentityProvider -n pinniped-supervisor gitlab
Look at the status
field. If it was configured correctly, you should see phase: Ready
.
(Optional) Use a different GitLab claim for Kubernetes usernames
You can also use other GitLab claims as the username.
To do this, make sure you have configured the appropriate scopes on your GitLab application, such as email
.
You must also adjust the spec.authorizationConfig
to request those scopes at login and adjust spec.claims
to use those claims in Kubernetes, for example:
# [...]
spec:
# Request any scopes other than "openid" that you selected when
# creating your GitLab application. The "openid" scope is always
# included.
#
# See here for a full list of available claims:
# https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/integration/openid_connect_provider.html
authorizationConfig:
additionalScopes: [ email ]
claims:
username: email
groups: groups
# [...]
(Optional) Use a private GitLab instance
To use privately hosted instance of GitLab, you can change the spec.issuer
and spec.tls.certificateAuthorityData
fields, for example:
apiVersion: idp.supervisor.pinniped.dev/v1alpha1
kind: OIDCIdentityProvider
# [...]
spec:
# Specify your GitLab instance URL.
issuer: https://gitlab.your-company.example.com.
# Specify the CA bundle for the GitLab server as base64-encoded PEM
# data. For example, the output of `cat my-ca-bundle.pem | base64`.
#
# This is only necessary if your instance uses a custom CA.
tls:
certificateAuthorityData: "<gitlab-ca-bundle>"
# [...]
Next steps
Next, [configure the Concierge to validate JWTs issued by the Supervisor]({{< ref "configure-concierge-supervisor-jwt" >}})! Then you'll be able to log into those clusters as any of the users from the GitLab directory.