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143 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Configure the Pinniped Supervisor to use GitLab as an OIDC provider
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description: Set up the Pinniped Supervisor to use GitLab login.
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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 With GitLab OIDC
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weight: 90
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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
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"upstream" identity provider to many "downstream" cluster clients.
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This guide shows you how to configure the Supervisor so that users can authenticate to their Kubernetes
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cluster using their GitLab credentials.
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## Prerequisites
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This how-to guide assumes that you have already [installed the Pinniped Supervisor]({{< ref "install-supervisor" >}}) with working ingress,
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and that you have [configured a FederationDomain to issue tokens for your downstream clusters]({{< ref "configure-supervisor" >}}).
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## Configure your GitLab Application
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Follow the instructions for [using GitLab as an OAuth2 authentication service provider](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/integration/oauth_provider.html) and create a user, group, or instance-wide application.
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For example, to create a user-owned application:
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1. In GitLab, navigate to [_User Settings_ > _Applications_](https://gitlab.com/-/profile/applications)
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1. Create a new application:
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1. Enter a name for your application, such as "My Kubernetes Clusters".
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1. Enter the redirect URI. This is the `spec.issuer` you configured in your `FederationDomain` appended with `/callback`.
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1. Check the box saying that the application is _Confidential_.
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1. Select scope `openid`. This provides access to the `nickname` (GitLab username) and `groups` (GitLab groups) claims.
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1. Save the application and make note of the _Application ID_ and _Secret_.
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## Configure the Supervisor cluster
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Create an [OIDCIdentityProvider](https://github.com/vmware-tanzu/pinniped/blob/main/generated/1.20/README.adoc#oidcidentityprovider) in the same namespace as the Supervisor.
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For example, this OIDCIdentityProvider and corresponding Secret for [gitlab.com](https://gitlab.com) use the `nickname` claim (GitLab username) as the Kubernetes username:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: idp.supervisor.pinniped.dev/v1alpha1
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kind: OIDCIdentityProvider
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metadata:
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namespace: pinniped-supervisor
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name: gitlab
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spec:
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# Specify the upstream issuer URL.
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issuer: https://gitlab.com
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# Specify how GitLab claims are mapped to Kubernetes identities.
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claims:
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# Specify the name of the claim in your GitLab token that will be mapped
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# to the "username" claim in downstream tokens minted by the Supervisor.
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username: nickname
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# Specify the name of the claim in GitLab that represents the groups
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# that the user belongs to. Note that GitLab's "groups" claim comes from
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# their "/userinfo" endpoint, not the token.
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groups: groups
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# Specify the name of the Kubernetes Secret that contains your GitLab
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# application's client credentials (created below).
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client:
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secretName: gitlab-client-credentials
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---
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apiVersion: v1
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kind: Secret
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metadata:
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namespace: pinniped-supervisor
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name: gitlab-client-credentials
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type: secrets.pinniped.dev/oidc-client
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stringData:
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# The "Application ID" that you got from GitLab.
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clientID: "<your-client-id>"
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# The "Secret" that you got from GitLab.
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clientSecret: "<your-client-secret>"
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```
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Once your OIDCIdentityProvider has been created, you can validate your configuration by running:
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```shell
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kubectl describe OIDCIdentityProvider -n pinniped-supervisor gitlab
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```
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Look at the `status` field. If it was configured correctly, you should see `phase: Ready`.
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### (Optional) Use a different GitLab claim for Kubernetes usernames
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You can also use other GitLab claims as the username.
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To do this, make sure you have configured the appropriate scopes on your GitLab application, such as `email`.
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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:
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```yaml
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# [...]
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spec:
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# Request any scopes other than "openid" that you selected when
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# creating your GitLab application. The "openid" scope is always
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# included.
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#
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# See here for a full list of available claims:
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# https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/integration/openid_connect_provider.html
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authorizationConfig:
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additionalScopes: [ email ]
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claims:
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username: email
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groups: groups
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# [...]
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```
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### (Optional) Use a private GitLab instance
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To use privately hosted instance of GitLab, you can change the `spec.issuer` and `spec.tls.certificateAuthorityData` fields, for example:
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```yaml
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apiVersion: idp.supervisor.pinniped.dev/v1alpha1
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kind: OIDCIdentityProvider
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# [...]
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spec:
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# Specify your GitLab instance URL.
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issuer: https://gitlab.your-company.example.com.
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# Specify the CA bundle for the GitLab server as base64-encoded PEM
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# data. For example, the output of `cat my-ca-bundle.pem | base64`.
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#
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# This is only necessary if your instance uses a custom CA.
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tls:
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certificateAuthorityData: "<gitlab-ca-bundle>"
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# [...]
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```
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## Next steps
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Next, [configure the Concierge to validate JWTs issued by the Supervisor]({{< ref "configure-concierge-supervisor-jwt" >}})!
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Then you'll be able to log into those clusters as any of the users from the GitLab directory.
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