JMX plays an important role in Karaf as a remote management mechanism. A number of management clients are built on top JMX, hawtio being probably the most popular one right now. While hawtio uses JMX through Jolokia which exposes the JMX API over a REST interface, other clients use JMX locally (e.g. via JConsole) or over a remote connector.
Most functionality available in Karaf can be managed via MBeans, but up until now it was suffering from one issue, there was really only one level of access. If you were given rights to access, you had access to all the MBeans. It was not possible to give users access to certain areas in JMX while restricting access to other areas.
Role-based Access Control
With commit r1528587 my JMX role-based access has been added to Karaf trunk (extra kudos and thanks to Jean-Baptiste Onofré for additional testing, finding a number of bugs, fixing those and actually applying the commits!). It means that an administrator can now declare the roles required to access certain Karaf MBeans. And, it also applies to MBeans that are registered outside of Karaf, but running in the same MBeans server. So JRE-provided MBeans and MBeans coming from OSGi bundles that are installed on top of Karaf are also covered.How does it work?
It works by inserting a JMX Guard which is configured via a JVM-wide MBeanServerBuilder. The Karaf launching scrips are updated to contain the following argument: -Djavax.management.builder.initial=org.apache.karaf.management.boot.KarafMBeanServerBuilder
This global JVM-level MBeanServerBuilder calls into an OSGi bundle that contains the JMX Guard for each JMX invocation made. The Guard in turn looks up the ACL of the accessed MBean in the OSGi Configuration Admin Service and checks the required roles for this MBean with the RolePrincipal objects present in the Subject in the current AccessControlContext. If no matching role is present, the JMX invocation will be blocked with a SecurityException.
How can I define my ACLs?
The Access Control Lists are stored in OSGi Configuration Admin. This means that they can be defined in whatever way the currently configured Config Admin implementation stores its information, which could be a database, nosql, etc... In the case of Karaf this information is normally stored in the etc/ directory in .cfg text files. The file name (excluding the .cfg extension) represents the Config Admin PID. JMX ACLs are mapped to Config Admin PIDs by prefixing them with jmx.acl. Then the Object Name as it appears in the JConsole tree is used to identify the MBean. So the ActiveMQ QueueA MBean as in the screenshot below would map to the PID jmx.acl.org.apache.activemq.Broker.amq-broker.Queue.QueueA.
The 'purge' operation is denied if the user does not have the required role |
However, having to write a configuration file for every MBean isn't really that user-friendly. It would be nice if we could define this stuff on a slightly higher level. Therefore the code that looks for the ACL PIDs follows a hierarchical approach. If it cannot find any matching definitions for the operation invoked on ...QueueA PID, it goes up in the tree and looks for definitions in jmx.acl.org.apache.activemq.Broker.amq-broker.Queue and then jmx.acl.org.apache.activemq.Broker.amq-broker and so on. So if you want to specify an ACL for all queues on all ActiveMQ brokers you could do this in the jmx.acl.org.apache.activemq.Broker.cfg file. For example:
browse* = manager, viewer
getMessage = manager, viewer
purge = admin
remove* = admin
copy* = manager
sendTextMessage* = manager
Note that this example uses wildcards for method names, so browse* covers browse(), browseAsTable() and browseMessages(). Additionally even though the admin role has access to all APIs it's not explicitly listed everywhere. This is not because the admin role is special, this is because administrators are expected to be part of the admingroup, which has all the roles in the system.
Groups
To keep the ACLs manageable I used the concept of JAAS groups. Typically you want to give an administrator access to everything in the system, but it's very cumbersome (and ugly) to add 'admin' to every single ACL definition in the system. Therefore the idea is that an administrator is not directly assigned the admin role, but is rather added to the admingroup. This group then has all the roles defined in the system. And no, it's not magic. If you decide to add a new group then the admingroup needs to be updated. Here's what the definition of some users might look like:
karaf@root()> jaas:realm-manage --realm karaf
karaf@root()> jaas:user-list
User Name | Group | Role
----------------------------------
karaf | admingroup | admin
karaf | admingroup | manager
karaf | admingroup | viewer
joe | managergroup | manager
joe | managergroup | viewer
mo | | viewer
Default Configuration
There is default configuration that applies to any MBean if it doesn't have specific configuration. This can be found at the top of the hierarchy in the jmx.acl.cfg file:
list* = viewer
get* = viewer
is* = viewer
set* = admin
* = admin
So the default is that any operation on any MBean starting with 'list', 'get' or 'is' is assumed to be an operation that you only need the viewer role for, while set* or any other operation name requires the admin role by default. This also maps well to MBeans that define JMX attributes. Obviously these defaults don't apply if a more specific definition for the MBean can be found...
Redefine to suit
While the Karaf distro comes with some predefined configuration in the form of jmx.acl.**.cfg files, it might be possible that this doesn't map 100% to the roles being used in your organization. Therefore all of this can be changed by the administrator. Nothing is hard coded, so feel free to add new roles, new groups and new ACLs to suit your organizational structure.
ACL definition details
The ACL examples in this posting are on the method level, but in some cases you want to define roles based on the arguments being passed into the operation. For example, you might need admin rights to uninstall a karaf system bundle, but maybe the manager role is enough to uninstall other bundles. Therefore you can define roles based on arguments passed in to the JMX operation either as literal arguments or using regular expressions. For more information on this, see the original commit message in github:
What MBeans can I use?
If you're writing a rich client or other tool over JMX it can be nice to know in advance whether the current user can invoke certain operations or not. It allows the tool to only show the relevant widgets (buttons, menus etc) if it's actually possible to use the associated MBeans. For this use-case I added an MBean org.apache.karaf:type=security,area=jmx that has a number of canInvoke() operations. It allows you to check whether the currently logged in user can invoke any methods on a given MBean at all or whether it can invoke a certain method. There is also a bulk query operation that lets you check a whole bunch of operations in one go. The nice thing about this approach is that the client doesn't need to know anything about how the roles are mapped by the administrator. It simply checks whether the currently logged in user has the appropriate roles for the operations requested. This means that if the administrator decides to revamp the whole role-mapping on the back-end the client console will automatically adapt: no duplication of information or hard-coded role names needed. For more details about the canInvoke() method see: https://github.com/bosschaert/karaf/blob/f793e70612c47d16a95ef12287514c603613f2c0/management/server/src/main/java/org/apache/karaf/management/JMXSecurityMBean.java
Changing permissions at Runtime
As with nearly everything in OSGi, the Configuration Admin service is dynamic, which means that you can change the information at runtime. This means that you can change the role mappings while the system is running and even for a user that is logged in. You can add or take away privileges dynamically, for example if a trusted user is all of a sudden causing havoc, you can remove the rights associated with the roles of that user dynamically and stop any further damage instantly.
3 comments:
Have a look at JB's blog post about this stuff too! Find it here: http://blog.nanthrax.net/2013/10/coming-in-karaf-3-0-0-jaas-users-groups-roles-and-acls/
Hi ,
I have added new MBean , and in jmx.acl.cfg file follwing entries are present
list* = viewer
get* = viewer
is* = viewer
set* = admin
removeEntity = admin
* = admin, manager, viewer.
I restarted the server and installed my app again
Now i am trying to invoke removeEntity from JConsole but still it is giving permission issue.
any solution for it .
I am using karaf 3.0.0
Hi prithviraj mane,
I would post this question on the Karaf User List: http://karaf.apache.org/index/community/mailing-lists.html
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