Organizations and Groups

[edit on GitHub]

The Chef Infra Server uses role-based access control (RBAC) to restrict access to objects—nodes, environments, roles, data bags, cookbooks, and so on. This ensures that only authorized user and/or Chef Infra Client requests to the Chef Infra Server are allowed. Access to objects on the Chef Infra Server is fine-grained, allowing access to be defined by object type, object, group, user, and organization. The Chef Infra Server uses permissions to define how a user may interact with an object, after they have been authorized to do so.

The Chef Infra Server uses organizations, groups, and users to define role-based access control:

Feature Description
image An organization is the top-level entity for role-based access control in the Chef Infra Server. Each organization contains the default groups (admins, clients, and users, plus billing_admins for the hosted Chef Infra Server), at least one user and at least one node (on which the Chef Infra Client is installed). The Chef Infra Server supports multiple organizations. The Chef Infra Server includes a single default organization that is defined during setup. Additional organizations can be created after the initial setup and configuration of the Chef Infra Server.

image

A group is used to define access to object types and objects in the Chef Infra Server and also to assign permissions that determine what types of tasks are available to members of that group who are authorized to perform them. Groups are configured per-organization.

Individual users who are members of a group will inherit the permissions assigned to the group. The Chef Infra Server includes the following default groups: admins, clients, and users. For users of the hosted Chef Infra Server, an additional default group is provided: billing_admins.

image A user is any non-administrator human being who will manage data that is uploaded to the Chef Infra Server from a workstation or who will log on to the Chef management console web user interface. The Chef Infra Server includes a single default user that is defined during setup and is automatically assigned to the admins group.
image A client is an actor that has permission to access the Chef Infra Server. A client is most often a node (on which the Chef Infra Client runs), but is also a workstation (on which knife runs), or some other machine that is configured to use the Chef Infra Server API. Each request to the Chef Infra Server that is made by a client uses a private key for authentication that must be authorized by the public key on the Chef Infra Server.

When a user makes a request to the Chef Infra Server using the Chef Infra Server API, permission to perform that action is determined by the following process:

  1. Check if the user has permission to the object type
  2. If no, recursively check if the user is a member of a security group that has permission to that object
  3. If yes, allow the user to perform the action

Permissions are managed using the Chef management console add-on in the Chef Infra Server web user interface.

Organizations

A single instance of the Chef Infra Server can support many organizations. Each organization has a unique set of groups and users. Each organization manages a unique set of nodes, on which a Chef Infra Client is installed and configured so that it may interact with a single organization on the Chef Infra Server.

image

A user may belong to multiple organizations under the following conditions:

  • Role-based access control is configured per-organization
  • For a single user to interact with the Chef Infra Server using knife from the same chef-repo, that user may need to edit their config.rb file prior to that interaction

Using multiple organizations within the Chef Infra Server ensures that the same toolset, coding patterns and practices, physical hardware, and product support effort is being applied across the entire company, even when:

  • Multiple product groups must be supported—each product group can have its own security requirements, schedule, and goals
  • Updates occur on different schedules—the nodes in one organization are managed completely independently from the nodes in another
  • Individual teams have competing needs for object and object types—data bags, environments, roles, and cookbooks are unique to each organization, even if they share the same name

Permissions

Permissions are used in the Chef Infra Server to define how users and groups can interact with objects on the server. Permissions are configured per-organization.

Object Permissions

The Chef Infra Server includes the following object permissions:

Permission Description
Delete Use the Delete permission to define which users and groups may delete an object. This permission is required for any user who uses the knife [object] delete [object_name] argument to interact with objects on the Chef Infra Server.
Grant Use the Grant permission to define which users and groups may configure permissions on an object. This permission is required for any user who configures permissions using the Administration tab in the Chef management console.
Read Use the Read permission to define which users and groups may view the details of an object. This permission is required for any user who uses the knife [object] show [object_name] argument to interact with objects on the Chef Infra Server.
Update Use the Update permission to define which users and groups may edit the details of an object. This permission is required for any user who uses the knife [object] edit [object_name] argument to interact with objects on the Chef Infra Server and for any Chef Infra Client to save node data to the Chef Infra Server at the conclusion of a Chef Infra Client run.

Global Permissions

The Chef Infra Server includes the following global permissions:

Permission Description
Create Use the Create global permission to define which users and groups may create the following server object types: cookbooks, data bags, environments, nodes, roles, and tags. This permission is required for any user who uses the knife [object] create argument to interact with objects on the Chef Infra Server.
List Use the List global permission to define which users and groups may view the following server object types: cookbooks, data bags, environments, nodes, roles, and tags. This permission is required for any user who uses the knife [object] list argument to interact with objects on the Chef Infra Server.

These permissions set the default permissions for the following Chef Infra Server object types: clients, cookbooks, data bags, environments, groups, nodes, roles, and sandboxes.

Client Key Permissions

Note

This is only necessary after migrating a client from one Chef Infra Server to another. Permissions must be reset for client keys after the migration.

Keys should have DELETE, GRANT, READ and UPDATE permissions.

Use the following code to set the correct permissions:

#!/usr/bin/env ruby
require 'chef/knife'

#previously knife.rb
Chef::Config.from_file(File.join(Chef::Knife.chef_config_dir, 'knife.rb'))

rest = Chef::ServerAPI.new(Chef::Config[:chef_server_url])

Chef::Node.list.each do |node|
  %w(read update delete grant).each do |perm|
    ace = rest.get("nodes/#{node[0]}/_acl")[perm]
    ace['actors'] << node[0] unless ace['actors'].include?(node[0])
    rest.put("nodes/#{node[0]}/_acl/#{perm}", perm => ace)
    puts "Client \"#{node[0]}\" granted \"#{perm}\" access on node \"#{node[0]}\""
  end
end

Save it as a Ruby script—chef_server_permissions.rb, for example—in the .chef/scripts directory located in the chef-repo, and then run a knife command similar to:

knife exec chef_server_permissions.rb

Knife ACL

The knife plugin knife-acl provides a fine-grained approach to modifying permissions, by wrapping API calls to the _acl endpoint and makes such permission changes easier to manage.

Warning

Chef Manage is deprecated and no longer under active development. It is supported on Chef Automate installations up to version 1.8 and replaced by Chef Automate 2.0. Contact your Chef account representative for information about upgrading your system. See our Automate documentation to learn more about Chef Automate 2.

This document is no longer maintained.

knife-acl and the Chef Manage browser interface are incompatible. After engaging knife-acl, you will need to discontinue using the Chef Manage browser interface from that point forward due to possible incompatibilities.

Groups

The Chef Infra Server includes the following default groups:

Group Description
admins The admins group defines the list of users who have administrative rights to all objects and object types for a single organization.
billing_admins The billing_admins group defines the list of users who have permission to manage billing information. This permission exists only for the hosted Chef Infra Server.
clients The clients group defines the list of nodes on which a Chef Infra Client is installed and under management by Chef. In general, think of this permission as "all of the non-human actors---Chef Infra Client, in nearly every case---that get data from, and/or upload data to, the Chef server". Newly-created Chef Infra Client instances are added to this group automatically.
public_key_read_access The public_key_read_access group defines which users and clients have read permissions to key-related endpoints in the Chef Infra Server API.
users The users group defines the list of users who use knife and the Chef management console to interact with objects and object types. In general, think of this permission as "all of the non-admin human actors who work with data that is uploaded to and/or downloaded from the Chef server".

Example Default Permissions

The following sections show the default permissions assigned by the Chef Infra Server to the admins, billing_admins, clients, and users groups.

Note

The creator of an object on the Chef Infra Server is assigned create, delete, grant, read, and update permission to that object.

admins

The admins group is assigned the following:

Group Create Delete Grant Read Update
admins yes yes yes yes yes
clients yes yes yes yes yes
users yes yes yes yes yes

billing_admins

The billing_admins group is assigned the following:

billing_admins

The billing_admins group is assigned the following:

Group Create Delete Read Update
billing_admins no no yes yes

clients

The clients group is assigned the following:

Object Create Delete Read Update
clients no no no no
cookbooks no no yes no
cookbook_artifacts no no yes no
data no no yes no
environments no no yes no
nodes yes no yes no
organization no no yes no
policies no no yes no
policy_groups no no yes no
roles no no yes no
sandboxes no no no no

public_key_read_access

The public_key_read_access group controls which users and clients have read permissions to the following endpoints:

  • GET /clients/CLIENT/keys
  • GET /clients/CLIENT/keys/KEY
  • GET /users/USER/keys
  • GET /users/USER/keys/

By default, the public_key_read_access assigns all members of the users and clients group permission to these endpoints:

Group Create Delete Grant Read Update
admins no no no no no
clients yes yes yes yes yes
users yes yes yes yes yes

users

The users group is assigned the following:

users

The users group is assigned the following:

Object Create Delete Read Update
clients no yes yes no
cookbooks yes yes yes yes
cookbook_artifacts yes yes yes yes
data yes yes yes yes
environments yes yes yes yes
nodes yes yes yes yes
organization no no yes no
policies yes yes yes yes
policy_groups yes yes yes yes
roles yes yes yes yes
sandboxes yes no no no

chef-validator

Every request made by Chef Infra Client to the Chef Infra Server must be an authenticated request using the Chef Infra Server API and a private key. When Chef Infra Client makes a request to the Chef Infra Server, Chef Infra Client authenticates each request using a private key located in /etc/chef/client.pem.

The chef-validator is allowed to do the following at the start of a Chef Infra Client run. After the Chef Infra Client is registered with Chef Infra Server, that Chef Infra Client is added to the clients group:

Object Create Delete Read Update
clients yes no no no

Chef Push Jobs Groups

Chef Push Jobs is an extension of the Chef Infra Server that allows jobs to be run against nodes independently of a Chef Infra Client run. A job is an action or a command to be executed against a subset of nodes; the nodes against which a job is run are determined by the results of a search query made to the Chef Infra Server.

Chef Push Jobs uses the Chef Infra Server API and a Ruby client to initiate all connections to the Chef Infra Server. Connections use the same authentication and authorization model as any other request made to the Chef Infra Server. A knife plugin is used to initiate job creation and job tracking.

It is possible to initiate jobs from Chef Infra Client, such as from within a recipe based on an action to be determined as the recipe runs. For a Chef Infra Client to be able to create, initiate, or read jobs, Chef Infra Client on which Chef Push Jobs is configured must belong to one (or both) of the following groups:

Group Description
pushy_job_readers Use to view the status of jobs.
pushy_job_writers Use to create and initiate jobs.

These groups do not exist by default, even after Chef Push Jobs has been installed to the Chef Infra Server. If these groups are not created, only members of the admin security group will be able to create, initiate, and view jobs.

Server Admins

The server-admins group is a global group that grants its members permission to create, read, update, and delete user accounts, with the exception of superuser accounts. The server-admins group is useful for users who are responsible for day-to-day administration of the Chef Infra Server, especially user management via the knife user subcommand. Before members can be added to the server-admins group, they must already have a user account on the Chef Infra Server.

Scenario

The following user accounts exist on the Chef Infra Server: pivotal (a superuser account), alice, bob, carol, and dan. Run the following command to view a list of users on the Chef Infra Server:

chef-server-ctl user-list

and it returns the same list of users:

pivotal
alice
bob
carol
dan

Alice is a member of the IT team whose responsibilities include day-to-day administration of the Chef Infra Server, in particular managing the user accounts on the Chef Infra Server that are used by the rest of the organization. From a workstation, Alice runs the following command:

knife user list -c ~/.chef/alice.rb

and it returns the following error:

ERROR: You authenticated successfully to <chef_server_url> as alice
       but you are not authorized for this action
Response: Missing read permission

Alice is not a superuser and does not have permissions on other users because user accounts are global to organizations in the Chef Infra Server. Let’s add Alice to the server-admins group:

chef-server-ctl grant-server-admin-permissions alice

and it returns the following response:

User alice was added to server-admins.

Alice can now create, read, update, and delete user accounts on the Chef Infra Server, even for organizations to which Alice is not a member. From a workstation, Alice re-runs the following command:

knife user list -c ~/.chef/alice.rb

which now returns:

pivotal
alice
bob
carol
dan

Alice is now a server administrator and can use the following knife subcommands to manage users on the Chef Infra Server:

  • knife user-create
  • knife user-delete
  • knife user-edit
  • knife user-list
  • knife user-show

For example, Alice runs the following command:

knife user edit carol -c ~/.chef/alice.rb

and the $EDITOR opens in which Alice makes changes, and then saves them.

Superuser Accounts

Superuser accounts may not be managed by users who belong to the server-admins group. For example, Alice attempts to delete the pivotal superuser account:

knife user delete pivotal -c ~/.chef/alice.rb

and the following error is returned:

ERROR: You authenticated successfully to <chef_server_url> as user1
       but you are not authorized for this action
Response: Missing read permission

Alice’s action is unauthorized even with membership in the server-admins group.

Manage server-admins Group

Membership of the server-admins group is managed with a set of chef-server-ctl subcommands:

  • chef-server-ctl grant-server-admin-permissions
  • chef-server-ctl list-server-admins
  • chef-server-ctl remove-server-admin-permissions

Add Members

The grant-server-admin-permissions subcommand is used to add a user to the server-admins group. Run the command once per user added.

This subcommand has the following syntax:

chef-server-ctl grant-server-admin-permissions USER_NAME

where USER_NAME is the user to add to the list of server administrators.

For example:

chef-server-ctl grant-server-admin-permissions bob

returns:

User bob was added to server-admins. This user can now list,
read, and create users (even for orgs they are not members of)
for this Chef Infra Server.

Remove Members

The remove-server-admin-permissions subcommand is used to remove a user from the server-admins group. Run the command once per user removed.

This subcommand has the following syntax:

chef-server-ctl remove-server-admin-permissions USER_NAME

where USER_NAME is the user to remove from the list of server administrators.

For example:

chef-server-ctl remove-server-admin-permissions bob

returns:

User bob was removed from server-admins. This user can no longer
list, read, and create users for this Chef Infra Server except for where
they have default permissions (such as within an org).

List Membership

The list-server-admins subcommand is used to return a list of users who are members of the server-admins group.

This subcommand has the following syntax:

chef-server-ctl list-server-admins

and will return a list of users similar to:

pivotal
alice
bob
carol
dan

Manage Organizations

Use the org-create, org-delete, org-list, org-show, org-user-add and org-user-remove commands to manage organizations.

org-create

The org-create subcommand is used to create an organization. (The validation key for the organization is returned to STDOUT when creating an organization with this command.)

Syntax

This subcommand has the following syntax:

chef-server-ctl org-create ORG_NAME "ORG_FULL_NAME" (options)

where:

  • The name must begin with a lower-case letter or digit, may only contain lower-case letters, digits, hyphens, and underscores, and must be between 1 and 255 characters. For example: chef.
  • The full name must begin with a non-white space character and must be between 1 and 1023 characters. For example: "Chef Software, Inc.".

Options

This subcommand has the following options:

-a USER_NAME, --association_user USER_NAME

Associate a user with an organization and add them to the admins and billing_admins security groups.

-f FILE_NAME, --filename FILE_NAME

Write the ORGANIZATION-validator.pem to FILE_NAME instead of printing it to STDOUT.

org-delete

The org-delete subcommand is used to delete an organization.

Syntax

This subcommand has the following syntax:

chef-server-ctl org-delete ORG_NAME

org-list

The org-list subcommand is used to list all of the organizations currently present on the Chef Infra Server.

Syntax

This subcommand has the following syntax:

chef-server-ctl org-list (options)

Options

This subcommand has the following options:

-a, --all-orgs

Show all organizations.

-w, --with-uri

Show the corresponding URIs.

org-show

The org-show subcommand is used to show the details for an organization.

Syntax

This subcommand has the following syntax:

chef-server-ctl org-show ORG_NAME

org-user-add

The org-user-add subcommand is used to add a user to an organization.

Syntax

This subcommand has the following syntax:

chef-server-ctl org-user-add ORG_NAME USER_NAME (options)

Options

This subcommand has the following options:

--admin

Add the user to the admins group.

org-user-remove

The org-user-remove subcommand is used to remove a user from an organization.

Syntax

This subcommand has the following syntax:

chef-server-ctl org-user-remove ORG_NAME USER_NAME (options)

© Chef Software, Inc.
Licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 Unported License.
The Chef™ Mark and Chef Logo are either registered trademarks/service marks or trademarks/servicemarks of Chef, in the United States and other countries and are used with Chef Inc's permission.
We are not affiliated with, endorsed or sponsored by Chef Inc.
https://docs.chef.io/server_orgs/