Chapter 1. Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) in Red Hat Developer Hub
Role-Based Access Control is a security paradigm that restricts access to authorized users. This feature includes defining roles with specific permissions and then assigning those roles to the users.
The Red Hat Developer Hub uses RBAC to improve the permission system within the platform. The RBAC feature in Developer Hub introduces an administrator role and leverages the organizational structure including teams, groups, and users by facilitating efficient access control.
Chapter 2. Permission policies in Red Hat Developer Hub
Permission policies in Red Hat Developer Hub are a set of rules to govern access to resources or functionalities. These policies state the authorization level that is granted to users based on their roles. The permission policies are implemented to maintain security and confidentiality within a given environment.
You can define the following types of permissions in Developer Hub:
-
resource type
-
basic
The distinction between the two permission types depend on whether a permission includes a defined resource type.
You can define the resource type permission using either the associated resource type or the permission name as shown in the following example:
p, role:default/myrole, catalog.entity.read, read, allow
g, user:default/myuser, role:default/myrole
p, role:default/another-role, catalog-entity, read, allow
g, user:default/another-user, role:default/another-role
You can define the basic permission in Developer Hub using the permission name as shown in the following example:
p, role:default/myrole, catalog.entity.create, create, allow
g, user:default/myuser, role:default/myrole
The following permission policies are supported in the Developer Hub:
- Catalog permissions
Name | Resource type | Policy | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
read |
Allows user or role to read from the catalog |
|
create |
Allows user or role to create catalog entities, including registering an existing component in the catalog |
|
|
|
update |
Allows user or role to refresh a single or multiple entities from the catalog |
|
|
delete |
Allows user or role to delete a single or multiple entities from the catalog |
|
read |
Allows user or role to read a single or multiple locations from the catalog |
|
|
create |
Allows user or role to create locations within the catalog |
|
|
delete |
Allows user or role to delete locations from the catalog |
- Scaffolder permissions
Name | Resource type | Policy | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
Allows the execution of an action from a template |
|
|
|
read |
Allows user or role to read a single or multiple one parameters from a template |
|
|
read |
Allows user or role to read a single or multiple steps from a template |
|
create |
Allows the user or role to trigger software templates which create new scaffolder tasks |
|
|
Allows the user or role to cancel currently running scaffolder tasks |
||
|
read |
Allows user or role to read all scaffolder tasks and their associated events and logs |
- RBAC permissions
Name | Resource type | Policy | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
read |
Allows user or role to read permission policies and roles |
|
|
create |
Allows user or role to create a single or multiple permission policies and roles |
|
|
update |
Allows user or role to update a single or multiple permission policies and roles |
|
|
delete |
Allows user or role to delete a single or multiple permission policies and roles |
- Kubernetes permissions
Name | Resource type | Policy | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
Allows user or role to access the proxy endpoint |
- OCM permissions
Name | Resource type | Policy | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
read |
Allows user or role to read from the OCM plugin |
|
|
read |
Allows user or role to read the cluster information in the OCM plugin |
- Topology permissions
Name | Resource type | Policy | Description |
---|---|---|---|
|
read |
Allows user or role to view the topology plugin |
|
|
Allows user or role to access the proxy endpoint, allowing them to read pod logs and events within RHDH |
2.1. Permission policies configuration
There are two approaches to configure the permission policies in Red Hat Developer Hub, including:
-
Configuration of permission policies administrators
-
Configuration of permission policies defined in an external file
2.1.1. Configuration of permission policies administrators
The permission policies for users and groups in the Developer Hub are managed by permission policy administrators. Only permission policy administrators can access the Role-Based Access Control REST API.
The purpose of configuring policy administrators is to enable a specific, restricted number of authenticated users to access the RBAC REST API. The permission policies are defined in a policy.csv
file, which is referenced in the app-config-rhdh
ConfigMap. OpenShift platform administrators or cluster administrators can perform this task with access to the namespace where Red Hat Developer Hub is deployed.
You can enable a permission policy administrator by configuring the app-config.yaml
file as follows:
permission:
enabled: true
rbac:
admin:
users:
- name: user:default/joeuser
The permission policy role (role:default/rbac_admin
) is a default role in Developer Hub and includes some permissions upon creation, such as creating, reading, updating, and deleting permission policies/roles, as well as reading from the catalog.
If the default permissions are not adequate for your requirements, you can define a new administrator role tailored to your requirements using relevant permission policies. Alternatively, you can use the optional superUsers
configuration value, which grants unrestricted permissions across Developer Hub.
You can set the superUsers
in the app-config.yaml
file as follows:
# ...
permission:
enabled: true
rbac:
admin:
superUsers:
- name: user:default/joeuser
# ...
2.1.2. Configuration of permission policies defined in an external file
You can configure the permission policies before starting the Red Hat Developer Hub. If permission policies are defined in an external file, then you can import the same file in the Developer Hub. You must define the permission policies using the following Casbin rules format:
---
`p, <ROLE>, <PERMISSION_NAME or PERMISSION_RESOURCE_TYPE>, <PERMISSION_POLICY_ACTION>, <ALLOW or DENY>`
---
You can define roles using the following Casbin rules format:
---
`g, <USER or GROUP>, <ROLE>`
---
Note
|
For information about the Casbin rules format, see Basics of Casbin rules. |
The following is an example of permission policies configuration:
---
`p, role:default/guests, catalog-entity, read, allow`
p, role:default/guests, catalog.entity.create, create, allow
g, user:default/<USER_TO_ROLE>, role:default/guests
g, group:default/<GROUP_TO_ROLE>, role:default/guests
---
If a defined permission does not contain an action associated with it, then add use
as a policy. See the following example:
---
`p, role:default/guests, kubernetes.proxy, use, allow`
---
You can define the policy.csv
file path in the app-config.yaml
file:
permission:
enabled: true
rbac:
policies-csv-file: /some/path/rbac-policy.csv
You can use an optional configuration value that enables reloading the CSV file without restarting the Developer Hub instance.
Set the value of the policyFileReload
option in the app-config.yaml
file:
# ...
permission:
enabled: true
rbac:
policies-csv-file: /some/path/rbac-policy.csv
policyFileReload: true
# ...
Mounting policy.csv
file using the Developer Hub Operator
When the Red Hat Developer Hub is deployed with the Operator, you can add your policy.csv
file using the Developer Hub Operator by creating a ConfigMap
and mounting it through your Custom Resource (CR).
-
You are logged in to your OpenShift Container Platform account using the OpenShift Container Platform web console.
-
Red Hat Developer Hub is installed and deployed using the Operator.
-
You have added a custom configuration file to OpenShift Container Platform. For more information, see Adding a custom configuration file to OpenShift Container Platform.
-
In OpenShift Container Platform, create a ConfigMap to hold the policies as shown in the following example:
ExampleConfigMap
kind: ConfigMap apiVersion: v1 metadata: name: rbac-policy data: rbac-policy.csv: | p, role:default/guests, catalog-entity, read, allow p, role:default/guests, catalog.entity.create, create, allow g, user:default/<YOUR_USER>, role:default/guests
-
Update the policy path in your custom
app-config.yaml
ConfigMap as follows:Exampleapp-config.yaml
filepermission: enabled: true rbac: policies-csv-file: ./rbac-policy.csv
-
From the Developer perspective in the OpenShift Container Platform web console, select the Topology view.
-
Click the overflow menu for the Red Hat Developer Hub instance that you want to use and select Edit Backstage to load the YAML view of the Red Hat Developer Hub instance.
-
In the CR, enter the name of the custom
rbac-policy
ConfigMap as the value for thespec.application.extraFiles.configMaps
field. For example:Example custom resourceapiVersion: v1 kind: ConfigMap metadata: name: example spec: application: appConfig: mountPath: /opt/app-root/src configMaps: - name: app-config-rhdh extraEnvs: secrets: - name: secrets-rhdh extraFiles: mountPath: /opt/app-root/src configMaps: - name: rbac-policy replicas: 1 route: enabled: true database: enableLocalDb: true
-
Click Save.
-
Navigate back to the Topology view and wait for the Red Hat Developer Hub pod to start.
-
Click the Open URL icon to access the Red Hat Developer Hub platform with the updated configuration settings.
Mounting policy.csv
file to the Developer Hub Helm chart
When the Red Hat Developer Hub is deployed with the Helm chart, you must define the policy.csv
file by mounting it to the Developer Hub Helm chart.
You can add your policy.csv
file to the Developer Hub Helm Chart by creating a configMap
and mounting it.
-
You are logged in to your OpenShift Container Platform account using the OpenShift Container Platform web console.
-
Red Hat Developer Hub is installed and deployed using Helm Chart.
-
In OpenShift Container Platform, create a ConfigMap to hold the policies as shown in the following example:
ExampleConfigMap
kind: ConfigMap apiVersion: v1 metadata: name: rbac-policy namespace: rhdh data: rbac-policy.csv: | p, role:default/guests, catalog-entity, read, allow p, role:default/guests, catalog.entity.create, create, allow g, user:default/<YOUR_USER>, role:default/guests
-
In the Developer Hub Helm Chart, go to Root Schema → Backstage chart schema → Backstage parameters → Backstage container additional volume mounts.
-
Select Add Backstage container additional volume mounts and add the following values:
-
mountPath:
opt/app-root/src/rbac
-
Name:
rbac-policy
-
-
Add the RBAC policy to the Backstage container additional volumes in the Developer Hub Helm Chart:
-
name:
rbac-policy
-
configMap
-
defaultMode:
420
-
name:
rbac-policy
-
-
-
Update the policy path in the
app-config.yaml
file as follows:Exampleapp-config.yaml
filepermission: enabled: true rbac: policies-csv-file: ./rbac/rbac-policy.csv
Chapter 3. Conditional policies in Red Hat Developer Hub
The permission framework in Red Hat Developer Hub provides conditions, supported by the RBAC backend plugin (backstage-plugin-rbac-backend
). The conditions work as content filters for the Developer Hub resources that are provided by the RBAC backend plugin.
The RBAC backend API stores conditions assigned to roles in the database. When you request to access the frontend resources, the RBAC backend API searches for the corresponding conditions and delegates them to the appropriate plugin using its plugin ID. If you are assigned to multiple roles with different conditions, then the RBAC backend merges the conditions using the anyOf
criteria.
- Conditional criteria
-
A condition in Developer Hub is a simple condition with a rule and parameters. However, a condition can also contain a parameter or an array of parameters combined by conditional criteria. The supported conditional criteria includes:
-
allOf
: Ensures that all conditions within the array must be true for the combined condition to be satisfied. -
anyOf
: Ensures that at least one of the conditions within the array must be true for the combined condition to be satisfied. -
not
: Ensures that the condition within it must not be true for the combined condition to be satisfied.
-
- Conditional object
-
The plugin specifies the parameters supported for conditions. You can access the conditional object schema from the RBAC API endpoint to understand how to construct a conditional JSON object, which is then used by the RBAC backend plugin API.
A conditional object contains the following parameters:
Table 1. Conditional object parameters Parameter Type Description result
String
Always has the value
CONDITIONAL
roleEntityRef
String
String entity reference to the RBAC role, such as
role:default/dev
pluginId
String
Corresponding plugin ID, such as
catalog
permissionMapping
String array
Array permission actions, such as
['read', 'update', 'delete']
resourceType
String
Resource type provided by the plugin, such as
catalog-entity
conditions
JSON
Condition JSON with parameters or array parameters joined by criteria
- Conditional policy aliases
-
The RBAC backend plugin (
backstage-plugin-rbac-backend
) supports the use of aliases in conditional policy rule parameters. The conditional policy aliases are dynamically replaced with the corresponding values during policy evaluation. Each alias in conditional policy is prefixed with a$
sign indicating its special function.The supported conditional aliases include:
-
$currentUser
: This alias is replaced with the user entity reference for the user who requests access to the resource. For example, if user Tom from the default namespace requests access,$currentUser
becomesuser:default/tom
.
-
$currentUser
alias{
"result": "CONDITIONAL",
"roleEntityRef": "role:default/developer",
"pluginId": "catalog",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"permissionMapping": ["delete"],
"conditions": {
"rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"params": {
"claims": ["$currentUser"]
}
}
}
-
$ownerRefs
: This alias is replaced with ownership references, usually as an array that includes the user entity reference and the user’s parent group entity reference. For example, for user Tom from team-a,$ownerRefs
becomes['user:default/tom', 'group:default/team-a']
.
$ownerRefs
alias{
"result": "CONDITIONAL",
"roleEntityRef": "role:default/developer",
"pluginId": "catalog",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"permissionMapping": ["delete"],
"conditions": {
"rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"params": {
"claims": ["$ownerRefs"]
}
}
}
3.1. Conditional policies definition
You can access API endpoints for conditional policies in Red Hat Developer Hub. For example, to retrieve the available conditional rules, which can help you define these policies, you can access the GET [api/plugins/condition-rules]
endpoint.
The api/plugins/condition-rules
returns the condition parameters schemas, for example:
[
{
"pluginId": "catalog",
"rules": [
{
"name": "HAS_ANNOTATION",
"description": "Allow entities with the specified annotation",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"paramsSchema": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"annotation": {
"type": "string",
"description": "Name of the annotation to match on"
},
"value": {
"type": "string",
"description": "Value of the annotation to match on"
}
},
"required": [
"annotation"
],
"additionalProperties": false,
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#"
}
},
{
"name": "HAS_LABEL",
"description": "Allow entities with the specified label",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"paramsSchema": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"label": {
"type": "string",
"description": "Name of the label to match on"
}
},
"required": [
"label"
],
"additionalProperties": false,
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#"
}
},
{
"name": "HAS_METADATA",
"description": "Allow entities with the specified metadata subfield",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"paramsSchema": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"key": {
"type": "string",
"description": "Property within the entities metadata to match on"
},
"value": {
"type": "string",
"description": "Value of the given property to match on"
}
},
"required": [
"key"
],
"additionalProperties": false,
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#"
}
},
{
"name": "HAS_SPEC",
"description": "Allow entities with the specified spec subfield",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"paramsSchema": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"key": {
"type": "string",
"description": "Property within the entities spec to match on"
},
"value": {
"type": "string",
"description": "Value of the given property to match on"
}
},
"required": [
"key"
],
"additionalProperties": false,
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#"
}
},
{
"name": "IS_ENTITY_KIND",
"description": "Allow entities matching a specified kind",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"paramsSchema": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"kinds": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string"
},
"description": "List of kinds to match at least one of"
}
},
"required": [
"kinds"
],
"additionalProperties": false,
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#"
}
},
{
"name": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER",
"description": "Allow entities owned by a specified claim",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"paramsSchema": {
"type": "object",
"properties": {
"claims": {
"type": "array",
"items": {
"type": "string"
},
"description": "List of claims to match at least one on within ownedBy"
}
},
"required": [
"claims"
],
"additionalProperties": false,
"$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#"
}
}
]
}
... <another plugin condition parameter schemas>
]
The RBAC backend API constructs a condition JSON object based on the previous condition schema.
3.1.1. Examples of conditional policies
In Red Hat Developer Hub, you can define conditional policies with or without criteria. You can use the following examples to define the conditions based on your use case:
- A condition without criteria
-
Consider a condition without criteria displaying catalogs only if user is a member of the owner group. To add this condition, you can use the catalog plugin schema
IS_ENTITY_OWNER
as follows:Example condition without criteria{ "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": ["group:default/team-a"] } }
In the previous example, the only conditional parameter used is
claims
, which contains a list of user or group entity references.You can apply the previous example condition to the RBAC REST API by adding additional parameters as follows:
{ "result": "CONDITIONAL", "roleEntityRef": "role:default/test", "pluginId": "catalog", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "permissionMapping": ["read"], "conditions": { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": ["group:default/team-a"] } } }
- A condition with criteria
-
Consider a condition with criteria, which displays catalogs only if user is a member of owner group OR displays list of all catalog user groups.
To add the criteria, you can add another rule as
IS_ENTITY_KIND
in the condition as follows:Example condition with criteria{ "anyOf": [ { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": ["group:default/team-a"] } }, { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "kinds": ["Group"] } } ] }
NoteRunning conditions in parallel during creation is not supported. Therefore, consider defining nested conditional policies based on the available criteria.
Example of nested conditions{ "anyOf": [ { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": ["group:default/team-a"] } }, { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "kinds": ["Group"] } } ], "not": { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "kinds": ["Api"] } } }
You can apply the previous example condition to the RBAC REST API by adding additional parameters as follows:
{ "result": "CONDITIONAL", "roleEntityRef": "role:default/test", "pluginId": "catalog", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "permissionMapping": ["read"], "conditions": { "anyOf": [ { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": ["group:default/team-a"] } }, { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "kinds": ["Group"] } } ] } }
The following examples can be used with Developer Hub plugins. These examples can help you determine how to define conditional policies:
{
"result": "CONDITIONAL",
"roleEntityRef": "role:default/developer",
"pluginId": "catalog",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"permissionMapping": ["update", "delete"],
"conditions": {
"not": {
"rule": "HAS_ANNOTATION",
"resourceType": "catalog-entity",
"params": { "annotation": "keycloak.org/realm", "value": "<YOUR_REALM>" }
}
}
}
The previous example of Keycloak plugin prevents users in the role:default/developer
from updating or deleting users that are ingested into the catalog from the Keycloak plugin.
Note
|
In the previous example, the annotation |
{
"result": "CONDITIONAL",
"roleEntityRef": "role:default/developer",
"pluginId": "scaffolder",
"resourceType": "scaffolder-action",
"permissionMapping": ["use"],
"conditions": {
"not": {
"rule": "HAS_ACTION_ID",
"resourceType": "scaffolder-action",
"params": { "actionId": "quay:create-repository" }
}
}
}
The previous example of Quay plugin prevents the role role:default/developer
from using the Quay scaffolder action. Note that permissionMapping
contains use
, signifying that scaffolder-action
resource type permission does not have a permission policy.
For more information about permissions in Red Hat Developer Hub, see Permission policies in Red Hat Developer Hub.
3.2. Configuring conditional policies defined in an external file
You can configure and manage conditional policies that are defined in an external file. To define conditional policies, you can directly edit the configuration files and pass them to Developer Hub, instead of using the Developer Hub web UI or API. You can configure Developer Hub to use these files instead of the default files.
-
You are logged in to your OpenShift Container Platform account using the OpenShift Container Platform web console.
-
You have defined roles and associated policies in a CSV file that serves as a basis for creating roles and permissions. Ensure that you mount the CSV file to Developer Hub.
For more information, see Conditional policies definition and Configuration of permission policies defined in an external file.
-
Define conditional policies in a YAML file, which includes role references, permission mappings, and conditions.
The following is an example of a YAML file defining conditional policies:
Example YAML file defining conditional policies--- result: CONDITIONAL roleEntityRef: 'role:default/test' pluginId: catalog resourceType: catalog-entity permissionMapping: - read - update conditions: rule: IS_ENTITY_OWNER resourceType: catalog-entity params: claims: - 'group:default/team-a' - 'group:default/team-b' --- result: CONDITIONAL roleEntityRef: 'role:default/test' pluginId: catalog resourceType: catalog-entity permissionMapping: - delete conditions: rule: IS_ENTITY_OWNER resourceType: catalog-entity params: claims: - 'group:default/team-a'
-
In OpenShift Container Platform, create a ConfigMap to hold the policies as shown in the following example:
Example ConfigMapkind: ConfigMap apiVersion: v1 metadata: name: rbac-conditional-policy namespace: rhdh data: rbac-policy.yaml: | p, role:default/guests, catalog-entity, read, allow result: CONDITIONAL roleEntityRef: 'role:default/test' pluginId: catalog resourceType: catalog-entity permissionMapping: - read - update conditions: rule: IS_ENTITY_OWNER resourceType: catalog-entity params: claims: - 'group:default/team-a' - 'group:default/team-b'
-
Open
app-config.yaml
file and specify the path toconditionalPoliciesFile
as shown in the following example:Exampleapp-config.yaml
filepermission: enabled: true rbac: conditionalPoliciesFile: /some/path/conditional-policies.yaml
-
To enable automatic reloading of the policy file without restarting the application, add the
policyFileReload
option and set it totrue
:Exampleapp-config.yaml
filepermission: enabled: true rbac: conditionalPoliciesFile: /some/path/conditional-policies.yaml policies-csv-file: /some/path/rbac-policy.csv policyFileReload: true
-
Optional: Define nested conditional policies in the YAML file as needed.
Example for nested conditional policies{ "result": "CONDITIONAL", "roleEntityRef": "role:default/developer", "pluginId": "catalog", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "permissionMapping": ["delete"], "conditions": { "allOf": [ { "anyOf": [ { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "kinds": [ "group" ] } }, { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": [ "$ownerRefs" ] } } ] }, { "not": { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "kinds": [ "api" ] } } } ] } }
In the previous example, the
role:default/developer
is granted the condition to delete catalog entities only if they are the entity owner or if the catalog entity belongs to a group. However, this condition does not apply if the catalog entity is an API.
Chapter 4. Managing role-based access controls (RBAC) using the Red Hat Developer Hub Web UI
Administrators can use the Developer Hub web interface (Web UI) to allocate specific roles and permissions to individual users or groups. Allocating roles ensures that access to resources and functionalities is regulated across the Developer Hub.
With the administrator role in Developer Hub, you can assign permissions to users and groups, which allow users or groups to view, create, modify, and delete the roles using the Developer Hub Web UI.
To access the RBAC features in the Web UI, you must install and configure the @janus-idp/backstage-plugin-rbac
plugin as a dynamic plugin. For more information about installing a dynamic plugin, see Configuring plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub.
After you install the @janus-idp/backstage-plugin-rbac
plugin, the Administration option appears at the bottom of the sidebar. When you can click Administration, the RBAC tab appears by default, displaying all of the existing roles created in the Developer Hub. In the RBAC tab, you can also view the total number of users, groups, and the total number of permission policies associated with a role. You can also edit or delete a role using the Actions column.
4.1. Creating a role in the Red Hat Developer Hub Web UI
You can create a role in the Red Hat Developer Hub using the Web UI.
-
You have an administrator role in the Developer Hub.
-
You have installed the
@janus-idp/backstage-plugin-rbac
plugin in Developer Hub. For more information, see Configuring plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub. -
You have configured the required permission policies. For more information, see Permission policies configuration.
-
Go to Administration at the bottom of the sidebar in the Developer Hub.
The RBAC tab appears, displaying all the created roles in the Developer Hub.
-
(Optional) Click any role to view the role information on the OVERVIEW page.
-
Click CREATE to create a role.
-
Enter the name and description of the role in the given fields and click NEXT.
-
Add users and groups using the search field, and click NEXT.
-
Select Plugin and Permission from the drop-downs in the Add permission policies section.
-
Select or clear the Policy that you want to set in the Add permission policies section, and click NEXT.
-
Review the added information in the Review and create section.
-
Click CREATE.
The created role appears in the list available in the RBAC tab.
4.2. Editing a role in the Red Hat Developer Hub Web UI
You can edit a role in the Red Hat Developer Hub using the Web UI.
Note
|
The policies generated from a |
-
You have an administrator role in the Developer Hub.
-
You have installed the
@janus-idp/backstage-plugin-rbac
plugin in Developer Hub. For more information, see Configuring plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub. -
You have configured the required permission policies. For more information, see Permission policies configuration.
-
The role that you want to edit is created in the Developer Hub.
-
Go to Administration at the bottom of the sidebar in the Developer Hub.
The RBAC tab appears, displaying all the created roles in the Developer Hub.
-
(Optional) Click any role to view the role information on the OVERVIEW page.
-
Select the edit icon for the role that you want to edit.
-
Edit the details of the role, such as name, description, users and groups, and permission policies, and click NEXT.
-
Review the edited details of the role and click SAVE.
After editing a role, you can view the edited details of a role on the OVERVIEW page of a role. You can also edit a role’s users and groups or permissions by using the edit icon on the respective cards on the OVERVIEW page.
4.3. Deleting a role in the Red Hat Developer Hub Web UI
You can delete a role in the Red Hat Developer Hub using the Web UI.
Note
|
The policies generated from a |
-
You have an administrator role in the Developer Hub.
-
You have installed the
@janus-idp/backstage-plugin-rbac
plugin in Developer Hub. For more information, see Configuring plugins in Red Hat Developer Hub. -
You have configured the required permission policies. For more information, see Permission policies configuration.
-
The role that you want to delete is created in the Developer Hub.
-
Go to Administration at the bottom of the sidebar in the Developer Hub.
The RBAC tab appears, displaying all the created roles in the Developer Hub.
-
(Optional) Click any role to view the role information on the OVERVIEW page.
-
Select the delete icon from the Actions column for the role that you want to delete.
Delete this role? pop-up appears on the screen.
-
Click DELETE.
Chapter 5. User statistics in Red Hat Developer Hub
In Red Hat Developer Hub, the licensed-users-info-backend
plugin provides statistical information about the logged-in users using the Web UI or REST API endpoints.
The licensed-users-info-backend
plugin enables administrators to monitor the number of active users on Developer Hub. Using this feature, organizations can compare their actual usage with the number of licenses they have purchased. Additionally, you can share the user metrics with Red Hat for transparency and accurate licensing.
The licensed-users-info-backend
plugin is enabled by default. This plugin enables a Download User List link at the bottom of the Administration → RBAC tab.
5.1. Downloading active users list in Red Hat Developer Hub
You can download the list of users in CSV format using the Developer Hub web interface.
-
RBAC plugins (
@janus-idp/backstage-plugin-rbac
and@janus-idp/backstage-plugin-rbac-backend
) must be enabled in Red Hat Developer Hub. -
An administrator role must be assigned.
-
In Red Hat Developer Hub, navigate to Administration and select the RBAC tab.
-
At the bottom of the RBAC page, click Download User List.
-
Optional: Modify the file name in the Save as field and click Save.
-
To access the downloaded users list, go to the Downloads folder on your local machine and open the CSV file.
Chapter 6. Role-based Access Control (RBAC) REST API
Red Hat Developer Hub provides RBAC REST API that you can use to manage the permissions and roles in the Developer Hub. This API supports you to facilitate and automate the maintenance of Developer Hub permission policies and roles.
Using the RBAC REST API, you can perform the following actions:
-
Retrieve information about all permission policies or specific permission policies, or roles
-
Create, update, or delete a permission policy or a role
-
Retrieve permission policy information about static plugins
The RBAC REST API requires the following components:
- Authorization
-
The RBAC REST API requires Bearer token authorization for the permitted user role. For development purposes, you can access a web console in a browser. When you refresh a token request in the list of network requests, you find the token in the response JSON.
Authorization: Bearer $token
For example, on the Developer Hub Homepage, navigate to the Network tab and search for the
query?term=
network call. Alternatively, you can go to the Catalog page and select any Catalog API network call to acquire the Bearer token. - HTTP methods
-
The RBAC REST API supports the following HTTP methods for API requests:
-
GET
: Retrieves specified information from a specified resource endpoint -
POST
: Creates or updates a resource -
PUT
: Updates a resource -
DELETE
: Deletes a resource
-
- Base URL
-
The base URL for RBAC REST API requests is
http://SERVER:PORT/api/permission/policies
, such ashttp://localhost:7007/api/permission/policies
. - Endpoints
-
RBAC REST API endpoints, such as
/api/permission/policies/[kind]/[namespace]/[name]
for specifiedkind
,namespace
, andname
, are the URI that you append to the base URL to access the corresponding resource.Example request URL for
/api/permission/policies/[kind]/[namespace]/[name]
endpoint is:http://localhost:7007/api/permission/policies/user/default/johndoe
NoteIf at least one permission is assigned to
user:default/johndoe
, then the example request URL mentioned previously returns a result if sent in aGET
response with a valid authorization token. However, if permission is only assigned to roles, then the example request URL does not return an output. - Request data
-
HTTP
POST
requests in the RBAC REST API may require a JSON request body with data to accompany the request.Example
POST
request URL and JSON request body data forhttp://localhost:7007/api/permission/policies
:{ "entityReference": "role:default/test", "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "delete", "effect": "allow" }
- HTTP status codes
-
The RBAC REST API supports the following HTTP status codes to return as responses:
-
200
OK: The request was successful. -
201
Created: The request resulted in a new resource being successfully created. -
204
No Content: The request was successful, but there is no additional content to send in the response payload. -
400
Bad Request: input error with the request -
401
Unauthorized: lacks valid authentication for the requested resource -
403
Forbidden: refusal to authorize request -
404
Not Found: could not find requested resource -
409
Conflict: request conflict with the current state and the target resource
-
- Source
-
Each permission policy and role created using the RBAC plugin is associated with a source to maintain data consistency within the plugin. You can manipulate permission policies and roles based on the following designated source information:
-
CSV file
-
Configuration file
-
REST API
-
Legacy
Managing roles and permission policies originating from CSV files and REST API involves straightforward modification based on their initial source information.
The Configuration file pertains to the default
role:default/rbac_admin
role provided by the RBAC plugin. The default role has limited permissions to create, read, update, and delete permission policies or roles, and to read catalog entities.NoteIn case the default permissions are insufficient for your administrative requirements, you can create a custom admin role with required permission policies.
The legacy source applies to policies and roles defined before RBAC backend plugin version
2.1.3
, and is the least restrictive among the source location options. You must update the permissions and roles in legacy source to use either REST API or the CSV file sources.You can use the
GET
requests to query roles and policies and determine the source information, if required. -
6.1. Sending requests with the RBAC REST API using a REST client or curl utility
The RBAC REST API enables you to interact with the permission policies and roles in Developer Hub without using the user interface. You can send RBAC REST API requests using any REST client or curl utility.
-
Red Hat Developer Hub is installed and running.
-
You have access to the Developer Hub.
-
Identify a relevant API endpoint to which you want to send a request, such as
POST /api/permission/policies
. Adjust any request details according to your use case.For REST client:
-
Authorization: Enter the generated token from the web console.
-
HTTP method: Set to
POST
. -
URL: Enter the RBAC REST API base URL and endpoint such as
http://localhost:7007/api/permission/policies
.
For curl utility:
-
-X
: Set toPOST
-
-H
: Set the following header:Content-type: application/json
Authorization: Bearer $token
$token
is the requested token from the web console in a browser. -
URL: Enter the following RBAC REST API base URL endpoint, such as
http://localhost:7007/api/permission/policies
-
-d
: Add a request JSON body
Example requests:
curl -X POST "http://localhost:7007/api/permission/roles" -d '{"memberReferences": ["group:default/example"], "name": "role:default/test", "metadata": { "description": "This is a test role" } }' -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Authorization: Bearer $token" -v
curl -X POST "http://localhost:7007/api/permission/policies" -d '[{"entityReference":"role:default/test", "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "read", "effect":"allow"}]' -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Authorization: Bearer $token" -v
curl -X POST "http://localhost:7007/api/permission/roles/conditions" -d '{"result": "CONDITIONAL", "roleEntityRef": "role:default/test", "pluginId": "catalog", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "permissionMapping": ["read"], "conditions": {"rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": {"claims": ["group:default/janus-authors"]}}}' -H "Content-Type: application/json" -H "Authorization: Bearer $token" -v
-
-
Execute the request and review the response.
6.2. Supported RBAC REST API endpoints
The RBAC REST API provides endpoints for managing roles, permissions, and conditional policies in the Developer Hub and for retrieving information about the roles and policies.
6.2.1. Roles
The RBAC REST API supports the following endpoints for managing roles in the Red Hat Developer Hub.
- [GET] /api/permission/roles
-
Returns all roles in Developer Hub.
Example response (JSON)[ { "memberReferences": ["user:default/username"], "name": "role:default/guests" }, { "memberReferences": [ "group:default/groupname", "user:default/username" ], "name": "role:default/rbac_admin" } ]
- [GET] /api/permission/roles/{kind}/{namespace}/{name}
-
Returns information for a single role in Developer Hub.
Example response (JSON)[ { "memberReferences": [ "group:default/groupname", "user:default/username" ], "name": "role:default/rbac_admin" } ]
- [POST] /api/permission/roles/{kind}/{namespace}/{name}
-
Creates a role in Developer Hub.
Table 2. Request parameters Name Description Type Presence body
The
memberReferences
,group
,namespace
, andname
the new role to be created.Request body
Required
Example request body (JSON){ "memberReferences": ["group:default/test"], "name": "role:default/test_admin" }
Example response201 Created
- [PUT] /api/permission/roles/{kind}/{namespace}/{name}
-
Updates
memberReferences
,kind
,namespace
, orname
for a role in Developer Hub.Request parametersThe request body contains the
oldRole
andnewRole
objects:Name Description Type Presence body
The
memberReferences
,group
,namespace
, andname
the new role to be created.Request body
Required
Example request body (JSON){ "oldRole": { "memberReferences": ["group:default/test"], "name": "role:default/test_admin" }, "newRole": { "memberReferences": ["group:default/test", "user:default/test2"], "name": "role:default/test_admin" } }
Example response200 OK
- [DELETE] /api/permission/roles/{kind}/{namespace}/{name}?memberReferences=<VALUE>
-
Deletes the specified user or group from a role in Developer Hub.
Table 3. Request parameters Name Description Type Presence kind
Kind of the entity
String
Required
namespace
Namespace of the entity
String
Required
name
Name of the entity
String
Required
memberReferences
Associated group information
String
Required
Example response204
- [DELETE] /api/permission/roles/{kind}/{namespace}/{name}
-
Deletes a specified role from Developer Hub.
Table 4. Request parameters Name Description Type Presence kind
Kind of the entity
String
Required
namespace
Namespace of the entity
String
Required
name
Name of the entity
String
Required
Example response204
6.2.2. Permission policies
The RBAC REST API supports the following endpoints for managing permission policies in the Red Hat Developer Hub.
- [GET] /api/permission/policies
-
Returns permission policies list for all users.
Example response (JSON)[ { "entityReference": "role:default/test", "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "read", "effect": "allow", "metadata": { "source": "csv-file" } }, { "entityReference": "role:default/test", "permission": "catalog.entity.create", "policy": "use", "effect": "allow", "metadata": { "source": "csv-file" } }, ]
- [GET] /api/permission/policies/{kind}/{namespace}/{name}
-
Returns permission policies related to the specified entity reference.
Table 5. Request parameters Name Description Type Presence kind
Kind of the entity
String
Required
namespace
Namespace of the entity
String
Required
name
Name related to the entity
String
Required
Example response (JSON)[ { "entityReference": "role:default/test", "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "read", "effect": "allow", "metadata": { "source": "csv-file" } }, { "entityReference": "role:default/test", "permission": "catalog.entity.create", "policy": "use", "effect": "allow", "metadata": { "source": "csv-file" } } ]
- [POST] /api/permission/policies
-
Creates a permission policy for a specified entity.
Table 6. Request parameters Name Description Type Presence entityReference
Reference values of an entity including
kind
,namespace
, andname
String
Required
permission
Permission from a specific plugin, resource type, or name
String
Required
policy
Policy action for the permission, such as
create
,read
,update
,delete
, oruse
String
Required
effect
Indication of allowing or not allowing the policy
String
Required
Example request body (JSON)[ { "entityReference": "role:default/test", "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "read", "effect": "allow" } ]
Example response201 Created
- [PUT] /api/permission/policies/{kind}/{namespace}/{name}
-
Updates a permission policy for a specified entity.
Request parametersThe request body contains the
oldPolicy
andnewPolicy
objects:Name Description Type Presence permission
Permission from a specific plugin, resource type, or name
String
Required
policy
Policy action for the permission, such as
create
,read
,update
,delete
, oruse
String
Required
effect
Indication of allowing or not allowing the policy
String
Required
Example request body (JSON){ "oldPolicy": [ { "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "read", "effect": "allow" }, { "permission": "catalog.entity.create", "policy": "create", "effect": "allow" } ], "newPolicy": [ { "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "read", "effect": "deny" }, { "permission": "policy-entity", "policy": "read", "effect": "allow" } ] }
Example response200
- [DELETE] /api/permission/policies/{kind}/{namespace}/{name}?permission={value1}&policy={value2}&effect={value3}
-
Deletes a permission policy added to the specified entity.
Table 7. Request parameters Name Description Type Presence kind
Kind of the entity
String
Required
namespace
Namespace of the entity
String
Required
name
Name related to the entity
String
Required
permission
Permission from a specific plugin, resource type, or name
String
Required
policy
Policy action for the permission, such as
create
,read
,update
,delete
, oruse
String
Required
effect
Indication of allowing or not allowing the policy
String
Required
Example response204 No Content
- [DELETE] /api/permission/policies/{kind}/{namespace}/{name}
-
Deletes all permission policies added to the specified entity.
Table 8. Request parameters Name Description Type Presence kind
Kind of the entity
String
Required
namespace
Namespace of the entity
String
Required
name
Name related to the entity
String
Required
Example response204 No Content
- [GET] /api/permission/plugins/policies
-
Returns permission policies for all static plugins.
Example response (JSON)[ { "pluginId": "catalog", "policies": [ { "isResourced": true, "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "read" }, { "isResourced": false, "permission": "catalog.entity.create", "policy": "create" }, { "isResourced": true, "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "delete" }, { "isResourced": true, "permission": "catalog-entity", "policy": "update" }, { "isResourced": false, "permission": "catalog.location.read", "policy": "read" }, { "isResourced": false, "permission": "catalog.location.create", "policy": "create" }, { "isResourced": false, "permission": "catalog.location.delete", "policy": "delete" } ] }, ... ]
6.2.3. Conditional policies
The RBAC REST API supports the following endpoints for managing conditional policies in the Red Hat Developer Hub.
- [GET] /api/permission/plugins/condition-rules
-
Returns available conditional rule parameter schemas for the available plugins that are enabled in Developer Hub.
Example response (JSON)[ { "pluginId": "catalog", "rules": [ { "name": "HAS_ANNOTATION", "description": "Allow entities with the specified annotation", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "paramsSchema": { "type": "object", "properties": { "annotation": { "type": "string", "description": "Name of the annotation to match on" }, "value": { "type": "string", "description": "Value of the annotation to match on" } }, "required": [ "annotation" ], "additionalProperties": false, "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#" } }, { "name": "HAS_LABEL", "description": "Allow entities with the specified label", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "paramsSchema": { "type": "object", "properties": { "label": { "type": "string", "description": "Name of the label to match on" } }, "required": [ "label" ], "additionalProperties": false, "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#" } }, { "name": "HAS_METADATA", "description": "Allow entities with the specified metadata subfield", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "paramsSchema": { "type": "object", "properties": { "key": { "type": "string", "description": "Property within the entities metadata to match on" }, "value": { "type": "string", "description": "Value of the given property to match on" } }, "required": [ "key" ], "additionalProperties": false, "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#" } }, { "name": "HAS_SPEC", "description": "Allow entities with the specified spec subfield", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "paramsSchema": { "type": "object", "properties": { "key": { "type": "string", "description": "Property within the entities spec to match on" }, "value": { "type": "string", "description": "Value of the given property to match on" } }, "required": [ "key" ], "additionalProperties": false, "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#" } }, { "name": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "description": "Allow entities matching a specified kind", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "paramsSchema": { "type": "object", "properties": { "kinds": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "description": "List of kinds to match at least one of" } }, "required": [ "kinds" ], "additionalProperties": false, "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#" } }, { "name": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "description": "Allow entities owned by a specified claim", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "paramsSchema": { "type": "object", "properties": { "claims": { "type": "array", "items": { "type": "string" }, "description": "List of claims to match at least one on within ownedBy" } }, "required": [ "claims" ], "additionalProperties": false, "$schema": "http://json-schema.org/draft-07/schema#" } } ] } ... <another plugin condition parameter schemas> ]
- [GET] /api/permission/roles/conditions/:id
-
Returns conditions for the specified ID.
Example response (JSON){ "id": 1, "result": "CONDITIONAL", "roleEntityRef": "role:default/test", "pluginId": "catalog", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "permissionMapping": ["read"], "conditions": { "anyOf": [ { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": ["group:default/team-a"] } }, { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "kinds": ["Group"] } } ] } }
- [GET] /api/permission/roles/conditions
-
Returns list of all conditions for all roles.
Example response (JSON)[ { "id": 1, "result": "CONDITIONAL", "roleEntityRef": "role:default/test", "pluginId": "catalog", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "permissionMapping": ["read"], "conditions": { "anyOf": [ { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": ["group:default/team-a"] } }, { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "kinds": ["Group"] } } ] } } ]
- [POST] /api/permission/roles/conditions
-
Creates a conditional policy for the specified role.
Table 9. Request parameters Name Description Type Presence result
Always has the value
CONDITIONAL
String
Required
roleEntityRef
String entity reference to the RBAC role, such as
role:default/dev
String
Required
pluginId
Corresponding plugin ID, such as
catalog
String
Required
permissionMapping
Array permission action, such as
['read', 'update', 'delete']
String array
Required
resourceType
Resource type provided by the plugin, such as
catalog-entity
String
Required
conditions
Condition JSON with parameters or array parameters joined by criteria
JSON
Required
name
Name of the role
String
Required
metadata.description
The description of the role
String
Optional
Example request body (JSON){ "result": "CONDITIONAL", "roleEntityRef": "role:default/test", "pluginId": "catalog", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "permissionMapping": ["read"], "conditions": { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": ["group:default/team-a"] } } }
Example response (JSON){ "id": 1 }
- [PUT] /permission/roles/conditions/:id
-
Updates a condition policy for a specified ID.
Table 10. Request parameters Name Description Type Presence result
Always has the value
CONDITIONAL
String
Required
roleEntityRef
String entity reference to the RBAC role, such as
role:default/dev
String
Required
pluginId
Corresponding plugin ID, such as
catalog
String
Required
permissionMapping
Array permission action, such as
['read', 'update', 'delete']
String array
Required
resourceType
Resource type provided by the plugin, such as
catalog-entity
String
Required
conditions
Condition JSON with parameters or array parameters joined by criteria
JSON
Required
name
Name of the role
String
Required
metadata.description
The description of the role
String
Optional
Example request body (JSON){ "result": "CONDITIONAL", "roleEntityRef": "role:default/test", "pluginId": "catalog", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "permissionMapping": ["read"], "conditions": { "anyOf": [ { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_OWNER", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "claims": ["group:default/team-a"] } }, { "rule": "IS_ENTITY_KIND", "resourceType": "catalog-entity", "params": { "kinds": ["Group"] } } ] } }
Example response200
- [DELETE] /api/permission/roles/conditions/:id
-
Deletes a conditional policy for the specified ID.
Example response204
6.2.4. User statistics
The licensed-users-info-backend
plugin exposes various REST API endpoints to retrieve data related to logged-in users.
No additional configuration is required for the licensed-users-info-backend
plugin. If the RBAC backend plugin is enabled, then an administrator role must be assigned to access the endpoints, as the endpoints are protected by the policy.entity.read
permission.
The base URL for user statistics endpoints is http://SERVER:PORT/api/licensed-users-info
, such as http://localhost:7007/api/licensed-users-info
.
- [GET] /users/quantity
-
Returns the total number of logged-in users.
Example requestcurl -X GET "http://localhost:7007/api/licensed-users-info/users/quantity" \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ -H "Authorization: Bearer $token"
Example response{ "quantity": "2" }
- [GET] /users
-
Returns a list of logged-in users with their details.
Example requestcurl -X GET "http://localhost:7007/api/licensed-users-info/users" \ -H "Content-Type: application/json" \ -H "Authorization: Bearer $token"
Example response[ { "userEntityRef": "user:default/dev", "lastTimeLogin": "Thu, 22 Aug 2024 16:27:41 GMT", "displayName": "John Leavy", "email": "dev@redhat.com" } ]
- [GET] /users
-
Returns a list of logged-in users in CSV format.
Example requestcurl -X GET "http://localhost:7007/api/licensed-users-info/users" \ -H "Content-Type: text/csv" \ -H "Authorization: Bearer $token"
Example responseuserEntityRef,displayName,email,lastTimeLogin user:default/dev,John Leavy,dev@redhat.com,"Thu, 22 Aug 2024 16:27:41 GMT"