ACL Roles
A role is a collection of policies that your ACL administrator can link to a token. They enable you to reuse policies by decoupling the policies from the token distributed to team members. Instead, the token is linked to the role, which is able to hold several policies that can be updated asynchronously without distributing new tokens to users. As a result, roles can provide a more convenient authentication infrastructure than creating unique policies and tokens for each requester.
Workflow Overview
Roles are configurations linking several policies to a token. The following procedure describes the workflow for implementing roles.
- Assemble rules into policies (see Policies) and register them in Consul.
- Define a role and include the policy IDs or names.
- Register the role in Consul and link it to a token.
- Distribute the tokens to users for implementation.
Creating Roles
Creating roles is commonly the responsibility of the Consul ACLs administrator. Roles have several attributes, including service identities and node identities. Refer to the following documentation for details:
Use the Consul command line or API endpoint to create roles.
Command Line
Issue the consul acl role create
command to create roles. In the following example, a role named crawler
is created that contains a policy named crawler-kv
and a policy named crawler-key
.
Refer to the command line documentation for details.
API
Make a PUT
call to the acl/role
endpoint and specify the role configuration in the payload to create roles. You can save the role definition in a JSON file or use escaped JSON in the call. In the following example call, the payload is defined externally.
Refer to the API documentation for details.
Role Attributes
Roles may contain the following attributes:
ID
: TheID
is an auto-generated public identifier. You can specify the roleID
when linking it to tokens.Name
: A unique meaningful name for the role. You can specify the roleName
when linking it to tokens.Description
: (Optional) A human-readable description of the role.Policies
: Specifies a the list of policies that are applicable for the role. The object can reference the policyID
orName
attribute.ServiceIdentities
: Specifies a list of services that are applicable for the role. See Service Identities for details.NodeIdentities
: Specifies a list of nodes that are applicable for the role. See Node Identities for details.Namespace
: Enterprise The namespace that the policy resides in. Roles can only be linked to policies that are defined in the same namespace. See Namespaces for additional information. Requires Consul Enterprise 1.7.0+Partition
: Enterprise The admin partition that the policy resides in. Roles can only be linked to policies that are defined in the same admin partition. See Admin Partitions for additional information. Requires Consul Enterprise 1.10.0+.
Service Identities
You can specify a service identity when configuring roles or linking tokens to policies. Service identities enable you to quickly construct policies for services, rather than creating identical polices for each service.
Service identities are used during the authorization process to automatically generate a policy for the service(s) specified. The policy will be linked to the role or token so that the service(s) can be discovered and discover other healthy service instances in a service mesh. Refer to the service mesh topic for additional information about Consul service mesh.
Service Identity Specification
Use the following syntax to define a service identity:
ServiceIdentities
: Declares a service identity block.ServiceIdentities.ServiceName
: String value that specifies the name of the service you want to associate with the policy.ServiceIdentities.Datacenters
: Array that specifies the names of datacenters in which the service identity applies. This field is optional.
Refer to the the API documentation for roles for additional information and examples.
Scope for Namespace and Admin Partition - In Consul Enterprise, service identities inherit the namespace or admin partition scope of the corresponding ACL token or role.
The following policy is generated for each service when a service identity is declared:
Refer to the rules reference for information about the rules in the policy.
Example
The following role configuration contains service identities for the web
and db
services. Note that the db
service is also scoped to the dc1
datacenter so that the policy will only be applied to instances of db
in dc1
.
During the authorization process, the following policies for the web
and db
services will be generated and linked to the token:
Per the ServiceIdentities.Datacenters
configuration, the db
policy is scoped to resources in the dc1
datacenter.
Node Identities
You can specify a node identity when configuring roles or linking tokens to policies. Node commonly refers to a Consul agent, but a node can also be a physical server, cloud instance, virtual machine, or container.
Node identities enable you to quickly construct policies for nodes, rather than manually creating identical polices for each node. They are used during the authorization process to automatically generate a policy for the node(s) specified. You can specify the token linked to the policy in the acl_tokens_agent
field when configuring the agent.
Node Identity Specification
Use the following syntax to define a node identity:
NodeIdentities
: Declares a node identity block.NodeIdentities.NodeName
: String value that specifies the name of the node you want to associate with the policy.NodeIdentities.Datacenter
: String value that specifies the name of the datacenter in which the node identity applies.
Refer to the the API documentation for roles for additional information and examples.
Consul Enterprise Namespacing - Node Identities can only be applied to tokens and roles in the default
namespace. The generated policy rules allow for service:read
permissions on all services in all namespaces.
The following policy is generated for each node when a node identity is declared:
Refer to the rules reference for information about the rules in the policy.
Example
The following role configuration contains a node identity for node-1
. Note that the node identity is also scoped to the dc2
datacenter. As a result, the policy will only be applied to nodes named node-1
in dc2
.
During the authorization process, the following policy will be generated and linked to the token: