xref: /qemu/docs/system/authz.rst (revision f9734d5d)
1.. _client authorization:
2
3Client authorization
4--------------------
5
6When configuring a QEMU network backend with either TLS certificates or SASL
7authentication, access will be granted if the client successfully proves
8their identity. If the authorization identity database is scoped to the QEMU
9client this may be sufficient. It is common, however, for the identity database
10to be much broader and thus authentication alone does not enable sufficient
11access control. In this case QEMU provides a flexible system for enforcing
12finer grained authorization on clients post-authentication.
13
14Identity providers
15~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
16
17At the time of writing there are two authentication frameworks used by QEMU
18that emit an identity upon completion.
19
20 * TLS x509 certificate distinguished name.
21
22   When configuring the QEMU backend as a network server with TLS, there
23   are a choice of credentials to use. The most common scenario is to utilize
24   x509 certificates. The simplest configuration only involves issuing
25   certificates to the servers, allowing the client to avoid a MITM attack
26   against their intended server.
27
28   It is possible, however, to enable mutual verification by requiring that
29   the client provide a certificate to the server to prove its own identity.
30   This is done by setting the property ``verify-peer=yes`` on the
31   ``tls-creds-x509`` object, which is in fact the default.
32
33   When peer verification is enabled, client will need to be issued with a
34   certificate by the same certificate authority as the server. If this is
35   still not sufficiently strong access control the Distinguished Name of
36   the certificate can be used as an identity in the QEMU authorization
37   framework.
38
39 * SASL username.
40
41   When configuring the QEMU backend as a network server with SASL, upon
42   completion of the SASL authentication mechanism, a username will be
43   provided. The format of this username will vary depending on the choice
44   of mechanism configured for SASL. It might be a simple UNIX style user
45   ``joebloggs``, while if using Kerberos/GSSAPI it can have a realm
46   attached ``joebloggs@QEMU.ORG``.  Whatever format the username is presented
47   in, it can be used with the QEMU authorization framework.
48
49Authorization drivers
50~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
51
52The QEMU authorization framework is a general purpose design with choice of
53user customizable drivers. These are provided as objects that can be
54created at startup using the ``-object`` argument, or at runtime using the
55``object_add`` monitor command.
56
57Simple
58^^^^^^
59
60This authorization driver provides a simple mechanism for granting access
61based on an exact match against a single identity. This is useful when it is
62known that only a single client is to be allowed access.
63
64A possible use case would be when configuring QEMU for an incoming live
65migration. It is known exactly which source QEMU the migration is expected
66to arrive from. The x509 certificate associated with this source QEMU would
67thus be used as the identity to match against. Alternatively if the virtual
68machine is dedicated to a specific tenant, then the VNC server would be
69configured with SASL and the username of only that tenant listed.
70
71To create an instance of this driver via QMP:
72
73::
74
75   {
76     "execute": "object-add",
77     "arguments": {
78       "qom-type": "authz-simple",
79       "id": "authz0",
80       "props": {
81         "identity": "fred"
82       }
83     }
84   }
85
86
87Or via the command line
88
89::
90
91   -object authz-simple,id=authz0,identity=fred
92
93
94List
95^^^^
96
97In some network backends it will be desirable to grant access to a range of
98clients. This authorization driver provides a list mechanism for granting
99access by matching identities against a list of permitted one. Each match
100rule has an associated policy and a catch all policy applies if no rule
101matches. The match can either be done as an exact string comparison, or can
102use the shell-like glob syntax, which allows for use of wildcards.
103
104To create an instance of this class via QMP:
105
106::
107
108   {
109     "execute": "object-add",
110     "arguments": {
111       "qom-type": "authz-list",
112       "id": "authz0",
113       "props": {
114         "rules": [
115            { "match": "fred", "policy": "allow", "format": "exact" },
116            { "match": "bob", "policy": "allow", "format": "exact" },
117            { "match": "danb", "policy": "deny", "format": "exact" },
118            { "match": "dan*", "policy": "allow", "format": "glob" }
119         ],
120         "policy": "deny"
121       }
122     }
123   }
124
125
126Due to the way this driver requires setting nested properties, creating
127it on the command line will require use of the JSON syntax for ``-object``.
128In most cases, however, the next driver will be more suitable.
129
130List file
131^^^^^^^^^
132
133This is a variant on the previous driver that allows for a more dynamic
134access control policy by storing the match rules in a standalone file
135that can be reloaded automatically upon change.
136
137To create an instance of this class via QMP:
138
139::
140
141   {
142     "execute": "object-add",
143     "arguments": {
144       "qom-type": "authz-list-file",
145       "id": "authz0",
146       "props": {
147         "filename": "/etc/qemu/myvm-vnc.acl",
148         "refresh": true
149       }
150     }
151   }
152
153
154If ``refresh`` is ``yes``, inotify is used to monitor for changes
155to the file and auto-reload the rules.
156
157The ``myvm-vnc.acl`` file should contain the match rules in a format that
158closely matches the previous driver:
159
160::
161
162   {
163     "rules": [
164       { "match": "fred", "policy": "allow", "format": "exact" },
165       { "match": "bob", "policy": "allow", "format": "exact" },
166       { "match": "danb", "policy": "deny", "format": "exact" },
167       { "match": "dan*", "policy": "allow", "format": "glob" }
168     ],
169     "policy": "deny"
170   }
171
172
173The object can be created on the command line using
174
175::
176
177   -object authz-list-file,id=authz0,\
178           filename=/etc/qemu/myvm-vnc.acl,refresh=on
179
180
181PAM
182^^^
183
184In some scenarios it might be desirable to integrate with authorization
185mechanisms that are implemented outside of QEMU. In order to allow maximum
186flexibility, QEMU provides a driver that uses the ``PAM`` framework.
187
188To create an instance of this class via QMP:
189
190::
191
192   {
193     "execute": "object-add",
194     "arguments": {
195       "qom-type": "authz-pam",
196       "id": "authz0",
197       "parameters": {
198         "service": "qemu-vnc-tls"
199       }
200     }
201   }
202
203
204The driver only uses the PAM "account" verification
205subsystem. The above config would require a config
206file /etc/pam.d/qemu-vnc-tls. For a simple file
207lookup it would contain
208
209::
210
211   account requisite  pam_listfile.so item=user sense=allow \
212           file=/etc/qemu/vnc.allow
213
214
215The external file would then contain a list of usernames.
216If x509 cert was being used as the username, a suitable
217entry would match the distinguished name:
218
219::
220
221   CN=laptop.berrange.com,O=Berrange Home,L=London,ST=London,C=GB
222
223
224On the command line it can be created using
225
226::
227
228   -object authz-pam,id=authz0,service=qemu-vnc-tls
229
230
231There are a variety of PAM plugins that can be used which are not illustrated
232here, and it is possible to implement brand new plugins using the PAM API.
233
234
235Connecting backends
236~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
237
238The authorization driver is created using the ``-object`` argument and then
239needs to be associated with a network service. The authorization driver object
240will be given a unique ID that needs to be referenced.
241
242The property to set in the network service will vary depending on the type of
243identity to verify. By convention, any network server backend that uses TLS
244will provide ``tls-authz`` property, while any server using SASL will provide
245a ``sasl-authz`` property.
246
247Thus an example using SASL and authorization for the VNC server would look
248like:
249
250::
251
252   $QEMU --object authz-simple,id=authz0,identity=fred \
253         --vnc 0.0.0.0:1,sasl,sasl-authz=authz0
254
255While to validate both the x509 certificate and SASL username:
256
257::
258
259   echo "CN=laptop.qemu.org,O=QEMU Project,L=London,ST=London,C=GB" >> tls.acl
260   $QEMU --object authz-simple,id=authz0,identity=fred \
261         --object authz-list-file,id=authz1,filename=tls.acl \
262	 --object tls-creds-x509,id=tls0,dir=/etc/qemu/tls,verify-peer=yes \
263         --vnc 0.0.0.0:1,sasl,sasl-authz=auth0,tls-creds=tls0,tls-authz=authz1
264