This is a kubectl plugin for Kubernetes OpenID Connect (OIDC) authentication, also known as kubectl oidc-login
.
Here is an example of Kubernetes authentication with the Google Identity Platform:
Kubelogin is designed to run as a client-go credential plugin. When you run kubectl, kubelogin opens the browser and you can log in to the provider. Then kubelogin gets a token from the provider and kubectl access Kubernetes APIs with the token. Take a look at the diagram:
Install the latest release from Homebrew, Krew or GitHub Releases as follows:
# Homebrew
brew install int128/kubelogin/kubelogin
# Krew
kubectl krew install oidc-login
# GitHub Releases
curl -LO https://github.com/int128/kubelogin/releases/download/v1.15.0/kubelogin_linux_amd64.zip
unzip kubelogin_linux_amd64.zip
ln -s kubelogin kubectl-oidc_login
You need to set up the OIDC provider, cluster role binding, Kubernetes API server and kubeconfig. The kubeconfig looks like:
users:
- name: oidc
user:
exec:
apiVersion: client.authentication.k8s.io/v1beta1
command: kubectl
args:
- oidc-login
- get-token
- --oidc-issuer-url=ISSUER_URL
- --oidc-client-id=YOUR_CLIENT_ID
- --oidc-client-secret=YOUR_CLIENT_SECRET
See the setup guide for more.
Run kubectl.
kubectl get pods
Kubectl executes kubelogin before calling the Kubernetes APIs. Kubelogin automatically opens the browser and you can log in to the provider.
After authentication, kubelogin returns the credentials to kubectl and finally kubectl calls the Kubernetes APIs with the credential.
% kubectl get pods
Open http://localhost:8000 for authentication
You got a valid token until 2019-05-18 10:28:51 +0900 JST
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
echoserver-86c78fdccd-nzmd5 1/1 Running 0 26d
Kubelogin writes the ID token and refresh token to the token cache file.
If the cached ID token is valid, kubelogin just returns it. If the cached ID token has expired, kubelogin will refresh the token using the refresh token. If the refresh token has expired, kubelogin will perform reauthentication.
You can log out by removing the token cache directory (default ~/.kube/cache/oidc-login
).
Kubelogin will perform authentication if the token cache file does not exist.
This document is for the development version. If you are looking for a specific version, see the release tags.
Kubelogin supports the following options:
% kubectl oidc-login get-token -h
Run as a kubectl credential plugin
Usage:
kubelogin get-token [flags]
Flags:
--oidc-issuer-url string Issuer URL of the provider (mandatory)
--oidc-client-id string Client ID of the provider (mandatory)
--oidc-client-secret string Client secret of the provider
--oidc-extra-scope strings Scopes to request to the provider
--certificate-authority string Path to a cert file for the certificate authority
--insecure-skip-tls-verify If true, the server's certificate will not be checked for validity. This will make your HTTPS connections insecure
--token-cache-dir string Path to a directory for caching tokens (default "~/.kube/cache/oidc-login")
--grant-type string The authorization grant type to use. One of (auto|authcode|authcode-keyboard|password) (default "auto")
--listen-port ints Port to bind to the local server. If multiple ports are given, it will try the ports in order (default [8000,18000])
--skip-open-browser If true, it does not open the browser on authentication
--username string If set, perform the resource owner password credentials grant
--password string If set, use the password instead of asking it
-h, --help help for get-token
Global Flags:
--add_dir_header If true, adds the file directory to the header
--alsologtostderr log to standard error as well as files
--log_backtrace_at traceLocation when logging hits line file:N, emit a stack trace (default :0)
--log_dir string If non-empty, write log files in this directory
--log_file string If non-empty, use this log file
--log_file_max_size uint Defines the maximum size a log file can grow to. Unit is megabytes. If the value is 0, the maximum file size is unlimited. (default 1800)
--logtostderr log to standard error instead of files (default true)
--skip_headers If true, avoid header prefixes in the log messages
--skip_log_headers If true, avoid headers when opening log files
--stderrthreshold severity logs at or above this threshold go to stderr (default 2)
-v, --v Level number for the log level verbosity
--vmodule moduleSpec comma-separated list of pattern=N settings for file-filtered logging
See also the options of standalone mode.
You can set the extra scopes to request to the provider by --oidc-extra-scope
.
- --oidc-extra-scope=email
- --oidc-extra-scope=profile
You can use your self-signed certificate for the provider.
- --certificate-authority=/home/user/.kube/keycloak-ca.pem
You can set the following environment variables if you are behind a proxy: HTTP_PROXY
, HTTPS_PROXY
and NO_PROXY
.
See also net/http#ProxyFromEnvironment.
Kubelogin performs the authorization code flow by default.
It starts the local server at port 8000 or 18000 by default. You need to register the following redirect URIs to the provider:
http://localhost:8000
http://localhost:18000
(used if port 8000 is already in use)
You can change the ports by the option:
- --listen-port=12345
- --listen-port=23456
If you cannot access the browser, instead use the authorization code flow with keyboard interactive.
- --grant-type=authcode-keyboard
Kubelogin will show the URL and prompt. Open the URL in the browser and then copy the code shown.
% kubectl get pods
Open https://accounts.google.com/o/oauth2/v2/auth?access_type=offline&client_id=...
Enter code: YOUR_CODE
Note that this flow uses the redirect URI urn:ietf:wg:oauth:2.0:oob
and
some OIDC providers do not support it.
Kubelogin performs the resource owner password credentials grant flow
when --grant-type=password
or --username
is set.
Note that most OIDC providers do not support this flow. Keycloak supports this flow but you need to explicitly enable the "Direct Access Grants" feature in the client settings.
You can set the username and password.
- --username=USERNAME
- --password=PASSWORD
If the password is not set, kubelogin will show the prompt for the password.
- --username=USERNAME
% kubectl get pods
Password:
If the username is not set, kubelogin will show the prompt for the username and password.
- --grant-type=password
% kubectl get pods
Username: foo
Password:
You can access the Kubernetes Dashboard using kubelogin and kauthproxy.
This is an open source software licensed under Apache License 2.0. Feel free to open issues and pull requests for improving code and documents.
Go 1.12 or later is required.
# Run lint and tests
make check
# Compile and run the command
make
./kubelogin