KLWT tokens provide a way to represent a token, allowing for tokens to be non-persistent. KLWT tokens provide integrity and confidentiality, when optionally using encryption, by being signed by Keystone. KLWT tokens contain some amount of token information, including the user, the issued at time, the expiration time, and the digest of the signed information. Regardless if encryption is used, the tokens are authentic since they are signed and validated by Keystone.
After having deployed Keystone for some time, deployers have run into issues with the amount of tokens stored in the token backend. To avoid this problem, deployers must routinely clean out stale tokens from their persistent storage to prevent performance or upgrade issues.
One way to avoid issues with massive amounts of tokens stored in a backend is to not store tokens at all. KLWT tokens will provide a way for deployers to avoid performance degradation and maintenance of tokens backends by using an KLWT token driver. When authenticating, the KLWT token provider will pull a subset of information about the user out of the request, generate a token containing this data and return it to the user. To ensure we keep the tokens to a reasonable length, the information can be compressed.
Although not to be considered prescribed by this spec, an example of this would look similar to the following:
payload = [scope_type, scope, user_id, created_at, expires_at, audit_id]
Where the values are: * scope_type: Scope type to determine the type of the token (i.e. domain scoped token, trust scoped token, etc) * scope: Scope of the token, consisting of a trust ID, project ID, etc. * user_id: ID representing the user creating the token. * created_at: UTC timestamp representing the created at time of the token. By using timestamp we can save on space when packing the message by packing an integer instead of a string. * expires_at: UTC timestamp representing the expiration of the token. This can be represented different ways and also using an integer to store the timestamp instead of a string. This could optionally be a delta integer that is the token ttl. * audit_id: The audit ID for the token.
Federation tokens will be a special case. We will need a specific formatter to handle federated tokens. The difference between the KLWT provider/driver and a KLWT token formatter is that a formatter knows how at handle a specific token format, like federated tokens. The KLWT provider knows how to determine a token format and pass the token to the proper KLWT formatter. We can determine if we are authenticating in a federated workflow and use a format version specific to federated tokens. In that specific format version, we can append the groups necessary for federated tokens.
These values can be stored in a list where the KLWT Token driver, or any validator for that matter, knows the order of the values. The above values can be packed, possibly encrypted, and encoded. This will result in a payload. To ensure the integrity of the contents, the payload must be signed with a mechanism like HMAC. The resulting digest will be included as part of the token.
Alternatively, encryption can be used if the deployer wishes to keep information opaque from end users. The important part is that the token data is signed by Keystone for integrity regardless if the token is encrypted or not. This is important because we should fast fail if the token has been tampered with in any way without having to attempt decrypting the spoofed token only to fail on bogus token values.
The user can then use a KLWT token in a normal UUID workflow. When Keystone receives an KLWT token from a user or a service, it can validate the digest provided with the token to determine if the token has been tampered with in transit. This doesn’t require the KLWT token driver to look up any information from a token backend. The information traditionally stored in the token backend, like the service catalog, will be computed on demand based on the scope that is passed in the token.
This driver will only require minimum data to verify the user’s identity. The data will be included in the user’s token. The workflow for the user doesn’t change from the current UUID workflow. The token size will be bigger than UUID tokens but not as big as a PKI tokens.
That’s neat, but how do I revoke an KLWT token that isn’t stored?
Token revocation will be handled through revocation events, which is to be built off the existing revocation events system. When a user token has been revoked, the KLWT token driver will build a rule that will describe a token to revoke. An example being, revoke all tokens from user XYZ before this point in time. The next time the user sends the now revoked token to Keystone, the validate call will check the token information against the revocation rules and if a revocation rule matches the information included in the token, return 401. Revocation events can be cleaned up anytime after the default token expiration time has lapsed, since the revocation rule was created. This work and framework is already in place, but the middleware just needs a way to get the latest revocation events.
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Describe any potential security impact on the system. Some of the items to consider include:
Does this change touch sensitive data such as tokens, keys, or user data?
Yes, identity and authorization data will be optionally encrypted, compressed and returned to the API user instead of stored in a token backend.
Does this change alter the API in a way that may impact security, such as a new way to access sensitive information or a new way to login?
It shouldn’t, all the same data will be required for authenticating and validating against Keystone.
Does this change involve cryptography or hashing?
Yes, this change involves cryptography to protect the user’s information and hashing to verify. Keyczar can be used to handle KLWTS encryption.
Does this change require the use of sudo or any elevated privileges?
No
Does this change involve using or parsing user-provided data? This could be directly at the API level or indirectly such as changes to a cache layer.
The KLWT token will be built from data provided from the user. This doesn’t make Keystone vulnerable to injection attacks since the information used will be pulled from a backing store.
Can this change enable a resource exhaustion attack, such as allowing a single API interaction to consume significant server resources? Some examples of this include launching subprocesses for each connection, or entity expansion attacks in XML.
KLWT tokens do not make it possible to cause an exhaustion of resources from a persistence perspective, like UUID or PKI[z] tokens do becuause they don’t have to be persisted.
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By using an KLWT token driver, Keystone performance should not decay as the deployment size increases. In large Keystone deployments where tokens are persisted to a backend, a performance hit may be observed as token creation increases in scale. Instead of scaling a persistent storage solution for tokens, an alternative would be to use KLWT tokens and scale up compute power. Since the tokens never have to be written to a backend, CPU operations will have better performance versus I/O operations.
Performance results have been documented based on a proof of concept KLWT token implementation.
Discuss things that will affect how you deploy and configure OpenStack that have not already been mentioned, such as:
What config options are being added? Should they be more generic than proposed (for example a flag that other hypervisor drivers might want to implement as well)? Are the default values ones which will work well in real deployments?
The KLWT token driver should be specified in the Keystone configuration file.
Is this a change that takes immediate effect after its merged, or is it something that has to be explicitly enabled?
This would be an opt-in feature and not enabled by default.
If the blueprint proposes a change to the driver API, discussion of how other backends would implement the feature is required.
This change shouldn’t be specific to a driver, from a persistent storage perspective.
Detail how to switch to a KLWT token implementation and setting up the drivers.
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