API keys
Authenticate requests by using an API key.
If you import or export resources across workspaces, your policies might not apply. For more information, see Import and export policies.
About API keys
API keys are secure, long-lived UUIDs that clients provide when they send a request to your service. You might use API keys in the following scenarios:
- You know the set of users that need access to your service. These users do not change often, or you have automation that easily generates or deletes the API key when the users do change.
- You want direct control over how the credentials are generated and expire.
When you use API keys, your services are only as secure as the API keys. Storing and rotating the API key securely is up to the user.
API keys in Gloo Mesh Gateway
To secure your services with API keys, first provide Gloo Mesh Gateway with your API keys in the form of Kubernetes secrets. Then in the external auth policy, you refer to the secrets in one of two ways.
- Specify a label selector that matches the label of one or more API key secrets. Labels are the more flexible, scalable approach.
- Refer to the name and namespace of each secret.
Gloo Mesh Gateway matches a request to a route that is secured by the external auth policy. The request must have a valid API key in a header. You can configure the name of the expected header. If the header is missing, or the API key is invalid, Gloo Mesh Gateway denies the request and returns a 401
response.
Internally, Gloo Mesh Gateway maps API keys to user identities for all API keys in the system. The user identity for an API key is the name of the secret that has the API key. Gloo Mesh Gateway adds the user identity to the request as a header, x-user-id
by default. Gloo Mesh Gateway can use this header in subsequent filters. Note that for security purposes, Gloo Mesh Gateway sanitizes the header from the response before the response leaves the gateway proxy.
Before you begin
This guide assumes that you use the same names for components like clusters, workspaces, and namespaces as in the getting started. If you have different names, make sure to update the sample configuration files in this guide.
- Set up Gloo Mesh Gateway in a single cluster.
- Install Bookinfo and other sample apps.
Configure an HTTP listener on your gateway and set up basic routing for the sample apps.
Make sure that the external auth service is installed and running. If not, install the external auth service.
kubectl get pods -A -l app=ext-auth-service
Configure an external auth policy with an API key
Create the external auth policy that uses API keys to verify identity.
You can do the following steps in a different order, depending on when you want the policy to take effect. For example, you might want the policy to always take effect as soon as the route is created. To do so, you can create the policy before you add the route to the route table.
From your API management tool such as Gloo Portal or Google Developer Portal, generate an API key to use for your app’s domain. For example, your key might be
N2YwMDIxZTEtNGUzNS1jNzgzLTRkYjAtYjE2YzRkZGVmNjcy
.Store the encoded API key and any additional data as a Kubernetes secret in the workload cluster that you want to create the external auth policy in. Make sure to use a label so that you can select the secret later.
kubectl apply --context $REMOTE_CONTEXT1 -f - <<EOF apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: user-id-12345 namespace: bookinfo labels: extauth: apikey type: extauth.solo.io/apikey stringData: api-key: N2YwMDIxZTEtNGUzNS1jNzgzLTRkYjAtYjE2YzRkZGVmNjcy user-id: user-id-12345 user-email: user12345@email.com EOF
Include any secret metadata instringData
that you want to use in additional validation checks. For example, this API key secret includes the user ID and email. Gloo Mesh Gateway automatically forwards this metadata along with the API key in authenticated requests so that other external auth modules, such as OPA, can process them in validation checks. To find an example of combining API key and OPA to authenticate requests, see API key and OPA.Create an external auth server to use for your policy. The following example refers directly to the default Gloo Mesh Gateway external auth service, but you can also use a virtual destination instead. For more information, see External auth server setup.
kubectl apply -f - <<EOF apiVersion: admin.gloo.solo.io/v2 kind: ExtAuthServer metadata: name: ext-auth-server namespace: bookinfo spec: destinationServer: port: number: 8083 ref: cluster: $CLUSTER_NAME name: ext-auth-service namespace: gloo-mesh EOF
Create an external auth policy that uses the API key.
kubectl apply -f - <<EOF apiVersion: security.policy.gloo.solo.io/v2 kind: ExtAuthPolicy metadata: name: ratings-apikey namespace: bookinfo labels: route: ratings spec: applyToRoutes: - route: labels: route: ratings config: server: name: ext-auth-server namespace: bookinfo cluster: $CLUSTER_NAME glooAuth: configs: - apiKeyAuth: headerName: api-key k8sSecretApikeyStorage: labelSelector: extauth: apikey EOF
Review the following table to understand this configuration. For more information, see the API reference.
Setting Description applyToRoutes
Use labels to configure which routes to apply the policy to. This example label matches the app and route from the example route table that you apply separately. If omitted and you do not have another selector such as applyToDestinations
, the policy applies to all routes in the workspace.server
The external auth server to use for the policy. apiKeyAuth
Configure the API key authentication details. headerName
The header that the Gloo Mesh Gateway external auth server looks at to get the API key. If not set, the default api-key
header name is used.k8sSecretApikeyStorage
The label to match the policy with valid API key secrets. Any secrets that match the label are selected and can be used to authenticate requests. The API key secrets must be in the same workspace as the external auth server.
Verify the external auth API key policy
Send a request to the app without authorization. Now, the request is blocked with a 401 response.
- HTTP:
curl -vik --resolve www.example.com:80:${INGRESS_GW_IP} http://www.example.com:80/ratings/1 -H "api-key: N2YwMDIxZTEtNGUzNS1jNzgzLTRkYjAtYjE2YzRkZGVmNjcy"
- HTTPS:
curl -vik --resolve www.example.com:443:${INGRESS_GW_IP} https://www.example.com:443/ratings/1 -H "api-key: N2YwMDIxZTEtNGUzNS1jNzgzLTRkYjAtYjE2YzRkZGVmNjcy"
Example output:
> GET /posts/1 HTTP/1.1 > Host: foo > User-Agent: curl/7.54.0 > Accept: */* > < HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized < www-authenticate: API key is missing or invalid < date: Mon, 07 Oct 2019 19:28:14 GMT < server: envoy < content-length: 0
- HTTP:
Send another request to the app, this time with a header that has your API key data.
- HTTP:
curl -vik --resolve www.example.com:80:${INGRESS_GW_IP} http://www.example.com:80/ratings/1 -H "api-key: N2YwMDIxZTEtNGUzNS1jNzgzLTRkYjAtYjE2YzRkZGVmNjcy"
- HTTPS:
curl -vik --resolve www.example.com:443:${INGRESS_GW_IP} https://www.example.com:443/ratings/1 -H "api-key: N2YwMDIxZTEtNGUzNS1jNzgzLTRkYjAtYjE2YzRkZGVmNjcy"
You can reach the ratings app again!
{"id":1,"ratings":{"Reviewer1":5,"Reviewer2":4}}
- HTTP:
Cleanup
You can optionally remove the resources that you set up as part of this guide.
kubectl -n bookinfo delete Secret user-id-12345
kubectl -n bookinfo delete ExtAuthPolicy ratings-apikey
kubectl -n bookinfo delete ExtAuthServer ext-auth-server