Role-Based Access Control (“RBAC”) uses the “rbac.authorization.k8s.io” API group to drive authorization decisions, allowing admins to dynamically configure policies through the Kubernetes API.
As of 1.6 RBAC mode is in beta.
To enable RBAC, start the apiserver with --authorization-mode=RBAC
.
The RBAC API declares four top-level types which will be covered in this
section. Users can interact with these resources as they would with any other
API resource (via kubectl
, API calls, etc.). For instance,
kubectl create -f (resource).yml
can be used with any of these examples,
though readers who wish to follow along should review the section on
bootstrapping first.
In the RBAC API, a role contains rules that represent a set of permissions.
Permissions are purely additive (there are no “deny” rules).
A role can be defined within a namespace with a Role
, or cluster-wide with a ClusterRole
.
A Role
can only be used to grant access to resources within a single namespace.
Here’s an example Role
in the “default” namespace that can be used to grant read access to pods:
kind: Role
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
metadata:
namespace: default
name: pod-reader
rules:
- apiGroups: [""] # "" indicates the core API group
resources: ["pods"]
verbs: ["get", "watch", "list"]
A ClusterRole
can be used to grant the same permissions as a Role
,
but because they are cluster-scoped, they can also be used to grant access to:
kubectl get pods --all-namespaces
, for example)The following ClusterRole
can be used to grant read access to secrets in any particular namespace,
or across all namespaces (depending on how it is bound):
kind: ClusterRole
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
metadata:
# "namespace" omitted since ClusterRoles are not namespaced
name: secret-reader
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["secrets"]
verbs: ["get", "watch", "list"]
A role binding grants the permissions defined in a role to a user or set of users.
It holds a list of subjects (users, groups, or service accounts), and a reference to the role being granted.
Permissions can be granted within a namespace with a RoleBinding
, or cluster-wide with a ClusterRoleBinding
.
A RoleBinding
may reference a Role
in the same namespace.
The following RoleBinding
grants the “pod-reader” role to the user “jane” within the “default” namespace.
This allows “jane” to read pods in the “default” namespace.
# This role binding allows "jane" to read pods in the "default" namespace.
kind: RoleBinding
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
metadata:
name: read-pods
namespace: default
subjects:
- kind: User
name: jane
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
roleRef:
kind: Role
name: pod-reader
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
A RoleBinding
may also reference a ClusterRole
to grant the permissions to namespaced
resources defined in the ClusterRole
within the RoleBinding
’s namespace.
This allows administrators to define a set of common roles for the entire cluster,
then reuse them within multiple namespaces.
For instance, even though the following RoleBinding
refers to a ClusterRole
,
“dave” (the subject) will only be able read secrets in the “development”
namespace (the namespace of the RoleBinding
).
# This role binding allows "dave" to read secrets in the "development" namespace.
kind: RoleBinding
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
metadata:
name: read-secrets
namespace: development # This only grants permissions within the "development" namespace.
subjects:
- kind: User
name: dave
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
roleRef:
kind: ClusterRole
name: secret-reader
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
Finally, a ClusterRoleBinding
may be used to grant permission at the cluster level and in all
namespaces. The following ClusterRoleBinding
allows any user in the group “manager” to read
secrets in any namespace.
# This cluster role binding allows anyone in the "manager" group to read secrets in any namespace.
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
metadata:
name: read-secrets-global
subjects:
- kind: Group
name: manager
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
roleRef:
kind: ClusterRole
name: secret-reader
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
Most resources are represented by a string representation of their name, such as “pods”, just as it appears in the URL for the relevant API endpoint. However, some Kubernetes APIs involve a “subresource”, such as the logs for a pod. The URL for the pods logs endpoint is:
GET /api/v1/namespaces/{namespace}/pods/{name}/log
In this case, “pods” is the namespaced resource, and “log” is a subresource of pods. To represent this in an RBAC role, use a slash to delimit the resource and subresource. To allow a subject to read both pods and pod logs, you would write:
kind: Role
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
metadata:
namespace: default
name: pod-and-pod-logs-reader
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["pods", "pods/log"]
verbs: ["get", "list"]
Resources can also be referred to by name for certain requests through the resourceNames
list.
When specified, requests using the “get”, “delete”, “update”, and “patch” verbs can be restricted
to individual instances of a resource. To restrict a subject to only “get” and “update” a single
configmap, you would write:
kind: Role
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
metadata:
namespace: default
name: configmap-updater
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["configmap"]
resourceNames: ["my-configmap"]
verbs: ["update", "get"]
Notably, if resourceNames
are set, then the verb must not be list, watch, create, or deletecollection.
Because resource names are not present in the URL for create, list, watch, and deletecollection API requests,
those verbs would not be allowed by a rule with resourceNames set, since the resourceNames portion of the
rule would not match the request.
Only the rules
section is shown in the following examples.
Allow reading the resource “pods” in the core API group:
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["pods"]
verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
Allow reading/writing “deployments” in both the “extensions” and “apps” API groups:
rules:
- apiGroups: ["extensions", "apps"]
resources: ["deployments"]
verbs: ["get", "list", "watch", "create", "update", "patch", "delete"]
Allow reading “pods” and reading/writing “jobs”:
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["pods"]
verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
- apiGroups: ["batch", "extensions"]
resources: ["jobs"]
verbs: ["get", "list", "watch", "create", "update", "patch", "delete"]
Allow reading a ConfigMap
named “my-config” (must be bound with a RoleBinding
to limit to a single ConfigMap
in a single namespace):
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["configmaps"]
resourceNames: ["my-config"]
verbs: ["get"]
Allow reading the resource “nodes” in the core group (because a Node
is cluster-scoped, this must be in a ClusterRole
bound with a ClusterRoleBinding
to be effective):
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources: ["nodes"]
verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
Allow “GET” and “POST” requests to the non-resource endpoint “/healthz” and all subpaths (must be in a ClusterRole
bound with a ClusterRoleBinding
to be effective):
rules:
- nonResourceURLs: ["/healthz", "/healthz/*"] # '*' in a nonResourceURL is a suffix glob match
verbs: ["get", "post"]
A RoleBinding
or ClusterRoleBinding
binds a role to subjects.
Subjects can be groups, users or service accounts.
Users are represented by strings. These can be plain usernames, like
“alice”, email-style names, like “bob@example.com”, or numeric ids
represented as a string. It is up to the Kubernetes admin to configure
the authentication modules to produce
usernames in the desired format. The RBAC authorization system does
not require any particular format. However, the prefix system:
is
reserved for Kubernetes system use, and so the admin should ensure
usernames do not contain this prefix by accident.
Group information in Kubernetes is currently provided by the Authenticator
modules. Groups, like users, are represented as strings, and that string
has no format requirements, other than that the prefix system:
is reserved.
Service Accounts have usernames with the system:serviceaccount:
prefix and belong
to groups with the system:serviceaccounts:
prefix.
Only the subjects
section of a RoleBinding
is shown in the following examples.
For a user named “alice@example.com”:
subjects:
- kind: User
name: "alice@example.com"
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
For a group named “frontend-admins”:
subjects:
- kind: Group
name: "frontend-admins"
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
For the default service account in the kube-system namespace:
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: default
namespace: kube-system
For all service accounts in the “qa” namespace:
subjects:
- kind: Group
name: system:serviceaccounts:qa
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
For all service accounts everywhere:
subjects:
- kind: Group
name: system:serviceaccounts
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
For all authenticated users (version 1.5+):
subjects:
- kind: Group
name: system:authenticated
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
For all unauthenticated users (version 1.5+):
subjects:
- kind: Group
name: system:unauthenticated
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
For all users (version 1.5+):
subjects:
- kind: Group
name: system:authenticated
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
- kind: Group
name: system:unauthenticated
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
API servers create a set of default ClusterRole
and ClusterRoleBinding
objects.
Many of these are system:
prefixed, which indicates that the resource is “owned” by the infrastructure.
Modifications to these resources can result in non-functional clusters. One example is the system:node
ClusterRole.
This role defines permissions for kubelets. If the role is modified, it can prevent kubelets from working.
All of the default cluster roles and rolebindings are labeled with kubernetes.io/bootstrapping=rbac-defaults
.
At each start-up, the API server updates default cluster roles with any missing permissions, and updates default cluster role bindings with any missing subjects. This allows the cluster to repair accidental modifications, and to keep roles and rolebindings up-to-date as permissions and subjects change in new releases.
To opt out of this reconciliation, set the rbac.authorization.kubernetes.io/autoupdate
annotation on a default cluster role or rolebinding to false
.
Be aware that missing default permissions and subjects can result in non-functional clusters.
Auto-reconciliation is enabled in Kubernetes version 1.6+ when the RBAC authorizer is active.
Default ClusterRole | Default ClusterRoleBinding | Description |
---|---|---|
system:basic-user | system:authenticated and system:unauthenticated groups | Allows a user read-only access to basic information about themselves. |
system:discovery | system:authenticated and system:unauthenticated groups | Allows read-only access to API discovery endpoints needed to discover and negotiate an API level. |
Some of the default roles are not system:
prefixed. These are intended to be user-facing roles.
They include super-user roles (cluster-admin
),
roles intended to be granted cluster-wide using ClusterRoleBindings (cluster-status
),
and roles intended to be granted within particular namespaces using RoleBindings (admin
, edit
, view
).
Default ClusterRole | Default ClusterRoleBinding | Description |
---|---|---|
cluster-admin | system:masters group | Allows super-user access to perform any action on any resource. When used in a ClusterRoleBinding, it gives full control over every resource in the cluster and in all namespaces. When used in a RoleBinding, it gives full control over every resource in the rolebinding's namespace, including the namespace itself. |
admin | None | Allows admin access, intended to be granted within a namespace using a RoleBinding. If used in a RoleBinding, allows read/write access to most resources in a namespace, including the ability to create roles and rolebindings within the namespace. It does not allow write access to resource quota or to the namespace itself. |
edit | None | Allows read/write access to most objects in a namespace. It does not allow viewing or modifying roles or rolebindings. |
view | None | Allows read-only access to see most objects in a namespace. It does not allow viewing roles or rolebindings. It does not allow viewing secrets, since those are escalating. |
Default ClusterRole | Default ClusterRoleBinding | Description |
---|---|---|
system:kube-scheduler | system:kube-scheduler user | Allows access to the resources required by the kube-scheduler component. |
system:kube-controller-manager | system:kube-controller-manager user | Allows access to the resources required by the kube-controller-manager component. The permissions required by individual control loops are contained in the controller roles. |
system:node | system:nodes group | Allows access to resources required by the kubelet component, including read access to secrets, and write access to pods. In the future, read access to secrets and write access to pods will be restricted to objects scheduled to the node. To maintain permissions in the future, Kubelets must identify themselves with the group system:nodes and a username in the form system:node:<node-name>. See https://pr.k8s.io/40476 for details. |
system:node-proxier | system:kube-proxy user | Allows access to the resources required by the kube-proxy component. |
Default ClusterRole | Default ClusterRoleBinding | Description |
---|---|---|
system:auth-delegator | None | Allows delegated authentication and authorization checks. This is commonly used by add-on API servers for unified authentication and authorization. |
system:heapster | None | Role for the Heapster component. |
system:kube-aggregator | None | Role for the kube-aggregator component. |
system:kube-dns | kube-dns service account in the kube-system namespace | Role for the kube-dns component. |
system:node-bootstrapper | None | Allows access to the resources required to perform Kubelet TLS bootstrapping. |
system:node-problem-detector | None | Role for the node-problem-detector component. |
system:persistent-volume-provisioner | None | Allows access to the resources required by most dynamic volume provisioners. |
The Kubernetes controller manager runs core control loops.
When invoked with --use-service-account-credentials
, each control loop is started using a separate service account.
Corresponding roles exist for each control loop, prefixed with system:controller:
.
If the controller manager is not started with --use-service-account-credentials
,
it runs all control loops using its own credential, which must be granted all the relevant roles.
These roles include:
The RBAC API prevents users from escalating privileges by editing roles or role bindings. Because this is enforced at the API level, it applies even when the RBAC authorizer is not in use.
A user can only create/update a role if they already have all the permissions contained in the role,
at the same scope as the role (cluster-wide for a ClusterRole
, within the same namespace or cluster-wide for a Role
).
For example, if “user-1” does not have the ability to list secrets cluster-wide, they cannot create a ClusterRole
containing that permission. To allow a user to create/update roles:
Role
or ClusterRole
objects, as desired.Role
or ClusterRole
. If they attempt to create or modify a Role
or ClusterRole
with permissions they themselves have not been granted, the API request will be forbidden.A user can only create/update a role binding if they already have all the permissions contained in the referenced role
(at the same scope as the role binding) or if they’ve been given explicit permission to perform the bind
verb on the referenced role.
For example, if “user-1” does not have the ability to list secrets cluster-wide, they cannot create a ClusterRoleBinding
to a role that grants that permission. To allow a user to create/update role bindings:
RoleBinding
or ClusterRoleBinding
objects, as desired.bind
verb on the particular role (or cluster role).For example, this cluster role and role binding would allow “user-1” to grant other users the admin
, edit
, and view
roles in the “user-1-namespace” namespace:
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
name: role-grantor
rules:
- apiGroups: ["rbac.authorization.k8s.io"]
resources: ["rolebindings"]
verbs: ["create"]
- apiGroups: ["rbac.authorization.k8s.io"]
resources: ["clusterroles"]
verbs: ["bind"]
resourceNames: ["admin","edit","view"]
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1beta1
kind: RoleBinding
metadata:
name: role-grantor-binding
namespace: user-1-namespace
roleRef:
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
kind: ClusterRole
name: role-grantor
subjects:
- apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
kind: User
name: user-1
When bootstrapping the first roles and role bindings, it is necessary for the initial user to grant permissions they do not yet have. To bootstrap initial roles and role bindings:
system:masters
group, which is bound to the cluster-admin
super-user role by the default bindings.--insecure-port
), you can also make API calls via that port, which does not enforce authentication or authorization.Two kubectl
commands exist to grant roles within a namespace or across the entire cluster.
kubectl create rolebinding
Grants a Role
or ClusterRole
within a specific namespace. Examples:
Grant the admin
ClusterRole
to a user named “bob” in the namespace “acme”:
kubectl create rolebinding bob-admin-binding --clusterrole=admin --user=bob --namespace=acme
Grant the view
ClusterRole
to a service account named “myapp” in the namespace “acme”:
kubectl create rolebinding myapp-view-binding --clusterrole=view --serviceaccount=acme:myapp --namespace=acme
kubectl create clusterrolebinding
Grants a ClusterRole
across the entire cluster, including all namespaces. Examples:
Grant the cluster-admin
ClusterRole
to a user named “root” across the entire cluster:
kubectl create clusterrolebinding root-cluster-admin-binding --clusterrole=cluster-admin --user=root
Grant the system:node
ClusterRole
to a user named “kubelet” across the entire cluster:
kubectl create clusterrolebinding kubelet-node-binding --clusterrole=system:node --user=kubelet
Grant the view
ClusterRole
to a service account named “myapp” in the namespace “acme” across the entire cluster:
kubectl create clusterrolebinding myapp-view-binding --clusterrole=view --serviceaccount=acme:myapp
See the CLI help for detailed usage
Default RBAC policies grant scoped permissions to control-plane components, nodes, and controllers, but grant no permissions to service accounts outside the “kube-system” namespace (beyond discovery permissions given to all authenticated users).
This allows you to grant particular roles to particular service accounts as needed. Fine-grained role bindings provide greater security, but require more effort to administrate. Broader grants can give unnecessary (and potentially escalating) API access to service accounts, but are easier to administrate.
In order from most secure to least secure, the approaches are:
Grant a role to an application-specific service account (best practice)
This requires the application to specify a serviceAccountName
in its pod spec,
and for the service account to be created (via the API, application manifest, kubectl create serviceaccount
, etc.).
For example, grant read-only permission within “my-namespace” to the “my-sa” service account:
kubectl create rolebinding my-sa-view \
--clusterrole=view \
--serviceaccount=my-namespace:my-sa \
--namespace=my-namespace
Grant a role to the “default” service account in a namespace
If an application does not specify a serviceAccountName
, it uses the “default” service account.
NOTE: Permissions given to the “default” service account are available to any pod in the namespace that does not specify a serviceAccountName
.
For example, grant read-only permission within “my-namespace” to the “default” service account:
shell
kubectl create rolebinding default-view \
--clusterrole=view \
--serviceaccount=my-namespace:default \
--namespace=my-namespace
Many add-ons currently run as the “default” service account in the “kube-system” namespace. To allow those add-ons to run with super-user access, grant cluster-admin permissions to the “default” service account in the “kube-system” namespace. NOTE: Enabling this means the “kube-system” namespace contains secrets that grant super-user access to the API.
kubectl create clusterrolebinding add-on-cluster-admin \
--clusterrole=cluster-admin \
--serviceaccount=kube-system:default
Grant a role to all service accounts in a namespace
If you want all applications in a namespace to have a role, no matter what service account they use, you can grant a role to the service account group for that namespace.
For example, grant read-only permission within “my-namespace” to to all service accounts in that namespace:
kubectl create rolebinding serviceaccounts-view \
--clusterrole=view \
--group=system:serviceaccounts:my-namespace \
--namespace=my-namespace
Grant a limited role to all service accounts cluster-wide (discouraged)
If you don’t want to manage permissions per-namespace, you can grant a cluster-wide role to all service accounts.
For example, grant read-only permission across all namespaces to all service accounts in the cluster:
kubectl create clusterrolebinding serviceaccounts-view \
--clusterrole=view \
--group=system:serviceaccounts
Grant super-user access to all service accounts cluster-wide (strongly discouraged)
If you don’t care about partitioning permissions at all, you can grant super-user access to all service accounts.
WARNING: This allows any user with read access to secrets or the ability to create a pod to access super-user credentials.
kubectl create clusterrolebinding serviceaccounts-cluster-admin \
--clusterrole=cluster-admin \
--group=system:serviceaccounts
Prior to Kubernetes 1.6, many deployments used very permissive ABAC policies, including granting full API access to all service accounts.
Default RBAC policies grant scoped permissions to control-plane components, nodes, and controllers, but grant no permissions to service accounts outside the “kube-system” namespace (beyond discovery permissions given to all authenticated users).
While far more secure, this can be disruptive to existing workloads expecting to automatically receive API permissions. Here are two approaches for managing this transition:
Run both the RBAC and ABAC authorizers, and include the legacy ABAC policy:
--authorization-mode=RBAC,ABAC --authorization-policy-file=mypolicy.jsonl
The RBAC authorizer will attempt to authorize requests first. If it denies an API request, the ABAC authorizer is then run. This means that any request allowed by either the RBAC or ABAC policies is allowed.
When run with a log level of 2 or higher (--v=2
), you can see RBAC denials in the apiserver log (prefixed with RBAC DENY:
).
You can use that information to determine which roles need to be granted to which users, groups, or service accounts.
Once you have granted roles to service accounts and workloads are running with no RBAC denial messages
in the server logs, you can remove the ABAC authorizer.
You can replicate a permissive policy using RBAC role bindings.
WARNING: The following policy allows ALL service accounts to act as cluster administrators. Any application running in a container receives service account credentials automatically, and could perform any action against the API, including viewing secrets and modifying permissions. This is not a recommended policy.
kubectl create clusterrolebinding permissive-binding \
--clusterrole=cluster-admin \
--user=admin \
--user=kubelet \
--group=system:serviceaccounts