Authentication at Run Time
This document describes how Tekton handles authentication when executing
TaskRuns and PipelineRuns. Since authentication concepts and processes
apply to both of those entities in the same manner, this document collectively
refers to TaskRuns and PipelineRuns as Runs for the sake of brevity.
- Overview
- Understanding credential selection
- Using
Secretsas a non-root user - Limiting
Secretaccess to specificSteps - Configuring authentication for Git
- Configuring authentication for Docker
- Technical reference
- Disabling Tekton’s Built-In Auth
Overview
Tekton supports authentication via the Kubernetes first-class Secret types listed below.
| Git | Docker |
|---|---|
kubernetes.io/basic-authkubernetes.io/ssh-auth
|
kubernetes.io/basic-authkubernetes.io/dockercfgkubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
|
A Run gains access to these Secrets through its associated ServiceAccount. Tekton requires that each
supported Secret includes a Tekton-specific annotation.
Tekton converts properly annotated Secrets of the supported types and stores them in a Step's container as follows:
- Git: Tekton produces a ~/.gitconfig file or a ~/.ssh directory.
- Docker: Tekton produces a ~/.docker/config.json file.
Each Secret type supports multiple credentials covering multiple domains and establishes specific rules governing
credential formatting and merging. Tekton follows those rules when merging credentials of each supported type.
To consume these Secrets, Tekton performs credential initialization within every Pod it instantiates, before executing
any Steps in the Run. During credential initialization, Tekton accesses each Secret associated with the Run and
aggregates them into a /tekton/creds directory. Tekton then copies or symlinks files from this directory into the user’s
$HOME directory.
TODO(#5357): Update docs to explain recommended methods of passing secrets in via workspaces
Understanding credential selection
A Run might require multiple types of authentication. For example, a Run might require access to
multiple private Git and Docker repositories. You must properly annotate each Secret to specify the
domains for which Tekton can use the credentials that the Secret contains. Tekton ignores all
Secrets that are not properly annotated.
A credential annotation key must begin with tekton.dev/git- or tekton.dev/docker- and its value is the
URL of the host for which you want Tekton to use that credential. In the following example, Tekton uses a
basic-auth (username/password pair) Secret to access Git repositories at github.com and gitlab.com
as well as Docker repositories at gcr.io:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
annotations:
tekton.dev/git-0: https://github.com
tekton.dev/git-1: https://gitlab.com
tekton.dev/docker-0: https://gcr.io
type: kubernetes.io/basic-auth
stringData:
username: <cleartext username>
password: <cleartext password>
And in this example, Tekton uses an ssh-auth Secret to access Git repositories
at github.com only:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
annotations:
tekton.dev/git-0: github.com
type: kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
stringData:
ssh-privatekey: <private-key>
# This is non-standard, but its use is encouraged to make this more secure.
# Omitting this results in the server's public key being blindly accepted.
Using Secrets as a non-root user
In certain scenarios you might need to use Secrets as a non-root user. For example:
- Your platform randomizes the user and/or groups that your containers use to execute.
- The
Stepsin yourTaskdefine a non-rootsecurityContext. - Your
Taskspecifies a global non-rootsecurityContextthat applies to allStepsin theTask.
The following are considerations for executing Runs as a non-root user:
ssh-authfor Git requires the user to have a valid home directory configured in/etc/passwd. Specifying a UID that has no valid home directory results in authentication failure.- Since SSH authentication ignores the
$HOMEenvironment variable, you must either move or symlink the appropriateSecretfiles from the$HOMEdirectory defined by Tekton (/tekton/home) to the non-root user’s valid home directory to use SSH authentication for either Git or Docker.
For an example of configuring SSH authentication in a non-root securityContext,
see authenticating-git-commands.
Limiting Secret access to specific Steps
As described earlier in this document, Tekton stores supported Secrets in
$HOME/tekton/home and makes them available to all Steps within a Task.
If you want to limit a Secret to only be accessible to specific Steps but not
others, you must explicitly specify a Volume using the Secret definition and
manually VolumeMount it into the desired Steps instead of using the procedures
described later in this document.
Configuring authentication for Git
This section describes how to configure the following authentication schemes for use with Git:
- Configuring
basic-authauthentication for Git - Configuring
ssh-authauthentication for Git - Using a custom port for SSH authentication
- Using SSH authentication in
gittypeTasks
Configuring basic-auth authentication for Git
This section describes how to configure a basic-auth type Secret for use with Git. In the example below,
before executing any Steps in the Run, Tekton creates a ~/.gitconfig file containing the credentials
specified in the Secret.
Note: Github deprecated basic authentication with username and password. You can still use basic authentication, but you wil need to use a personal access token instead of the cleartext password in the following example. You can find out how to create such a token on the Github documentation site.
-
In
secret.yaml, define aSecretthat specifies the username and password that you want Tekton to use to access the target Git repository:apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: basic-user-pass annotations: tekton.dev/git-0: https://github.com # Described below type: kubernetes.io/basic-auth stringData: username: <cleartext username> password: <cleartext password>In the above example, the value for
tekton.dev/git-0specifies the URL for which Tekton will use thisSecret, as described in Understanding credential selection. -
In
serviceaccount.yaml, associate theSecretwith the desiredServiceAccount:apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: build-bot secrets: - name: basic-user-pass -
In
run.yaml, associate theServiceAccountwith yourRunby doing one of the following:-
Associate the
ServiceAccountwith yourTaskRun:apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1 kind: TaskRun metadata: name: build-push-task-run-2 spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot taskRef: name: build-push -
Associate the
ServiceAccountwith yourPipelineRun:apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1 kind: PipelineRun metadata: name: demo-pipeline namespace: default spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot pipelineRef: name: demo-pipeline
-
-
Execute the
Run:kubectl apply --filename secret.yaml serviceaccount.yaml run.yaml
Configuring ssh-auth authentication for Git
This section describes how to configure an ssh-auth type Secret for use with Git. In the example below,
before executing any Steps in the Run, Tekton creates a ~/.ssh/config file containing the SSH key
specified in the Secret.
-
In
secret.yaml, define aSecretthat specifies your SSH private key:apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: ssh-key annotations: tekton.dev/git-0: github.com # Described below type: kubernetes.io/ssh-auth stringData: ssh-privatekey: <private-key> # This is non-standard, but its use is encouraged to make this more secure. # If it is not provided then the git server's public key will be requested # when the repo is first fetched. known_hosts: <known-hosts>In the above example, the value for
tekton.dev/git-0specifies the URL for which Tekton will use thisSecret, as described in Understanding credential selection. -
Generate the
ssh-privatekeyvalue. For example:cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa -
Set the value of the
known_hostsfield to the generatedssh-privatekeyvalue from the previous step. -
In
serviceaccount.yaml, associate theSecretwith the desiredServiceAccount:apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: build-bot secrets: - name: ssh-key -
In
run.yaml, associate theServiceAccountwith yourRunby doing one of the following:-
Associate the
ServiceAccountwith yourTaskRun:apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1 kind: TaskRun metadata: name: build-push-task-run-2 spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot taskRef: name: build-push -
Associate the
ServiceAccountwith yourPipelineRun:
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1 kind: PipelineRun metadata: name: demo-pipeline namespace: default spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot pipelineRef: name: demo-pipeline -
-
Execute the
Run:kubectl apply --filename secret.yaml,serviceaccount.yaml,run.yaml
Using a custom port for SSH authentication
You can specify a custom SSH port in your Secret.
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: ssh-key-custom-port
annotations:
tekton.dev/git-0: example.com:2222
type: kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
stringData:
ssh-privatekey: <private-key>
known_hosts: <known-hosts>
Using SSH authentication in git type Tasks
You can use SSH authentication as described earlier in this document when invoking git commands
directly in the Steps of a Task. Since ssh ignores the $HOME variable and only uses the
user’s home directory specified in /etc/passwd, each Step must symlink /tekton/home/.ssh
to the home directory of its associated user.
Note: This explicit symlinking is not necessary when using the
git-clone Task from Tekton Catalog.
For example usage, see authenticating-git-commands.
Configuring authentication for Docker
This section describes how to configure the following authentication schemes for use with Docker:
Configuring basic-auth authentication for Docker
This section describes how to configure the basic-auth (username/password pair) type Secret for use with Docker.
In the example below, before executing any Steps in the Run, Tekton creates a ~/.docker/config.json file containing
the credentials specified in the Secret.
-
In
secret.yaml, define aSecretthat specifies the username and password that you want Tekton to use to access the target Docker registry:apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: basic-user-pass annotations: tekton.dev/docker-0: https://gcr.io # Described below type: kubernetes.io/basic-auth stringData: username: <cleartext username> password: <cleartext password>In the above example, the value for
tekton.dev/docker-0specifies the URL for which Tekton will use thisSecret, as described in Understanding credential selection. -
In
serviceaccount.yaml, associate theSecretwith the desiredServiceAccount:apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: build-bot secrets: - name: basic-user-pass -
In
run.yaml, associate theServiceAccountwith yourRunby doing one of the following:-
Associate the
ServiceAccountwith yourTaskRun:apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1 kind: TaskRun metadata: name: build-push-task-run-2 spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot taskRef: name: build-push -
Associate the
ServiceAccountwith yourPipelineRun:apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1 kind: PipelineRun metadata: name: demo-pipeline namespace: default spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot pipelineRef: name: demo-pipeline
-
-
Execute the
Run:kubectl apply --filename secret.yaml serviceaccount.yaml run.yaml
Configuring docker* authentication for Docker
This section describes how to configure authentication using the dockercfg and dockerconfigjson type
Secrets for use with Docker. In the example below, before executing any Steps in the Run, Tekton creates
a ~/.docker/config.json file containing the credentials specified in the Secret. When the Steps execute,
Tekton uses those credentials to access the target Docker registry.
f
Note: If you specify both the Tekton basic-auth and the above Kubernetes Secrets, Tekton merges all
credentials from all specified Secrets but Tekton’s basic-auth Secret overrides either of the
Kubernetes Secrets.
-
Define a
Secretbased on your Docker client configuration file.kubectl create secret generic regcred \ --from-file=.dockerconfigjson=<path/to/.docker/config.json> \ --type=kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjsonFor more information, see Pull an Image from a Private Registry in the Kubernetes documentation.
-
In
serviceaccount.yaml, associate theSecretwith the desiredServiceAccount:apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: build-bot secrets: - name: regcred -
In
run.yaml, associate theServiceAccountwith yourRunby doing one of the following:-
Associate the
ServiceAccountwith yourTaskRun:apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1 kind: TaskRun metadata: name: build-with-basic-auth spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot steps: # ... -
Associate the
ServiceAccountwith yourPipelineRun:apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1beta1 kind: PipelineRun metadata: name: demo-pipeline namespace: default spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot pipelineRef: name: demo-pipeline
-
-
Execute the build:
kubectl apply --filename secret.yaml --filename serviceaccount.yaml --filename taskrun.yaml
Technical reference
This section provides a technical reference for the implementation of the authentication mechanisms described earlier in this document.
basic-auth for Git
Given URLs, usernames, and passwords of the form: https://url{n}.com,
user{n}, and pass{n}, Tekton generates the following:
=== ~/.gitconfig ===
[credential]
helper = store
[credential "https://url1.com"]
username = "user1"
[credential "https://url2.com"]
username = "user2"
...
=== ~/.git-credentials ===
https://user1:pass1@url1.com
https://user2:pass2@url2.com
...
ssh-auth for Git
Given hostnames, private keys, and known_hosts of the form: url{n}.com,
key{n}, and known_hosts{n}, Tekton generates the following.
By default, if no value is specified for known_hosts, Tekton configures SSH to accept
any public key returned by the server on first query. Tekton does this
by setting Git’s core.sshCommand variable to ssh -o StrictHostKeyChecking=accept-new.
This behaviour can be prevented
using a feature-flag: require-git-ssh-secret-known-hosts.
Set this flag to true and all Git SSH Secrets must include a known_hosts.
=== ~/.ssh/id_key1 ===
{contents of key1}
=== ~/.ssh/id_key2 ===
{contents of key2}
...
=== ~/.ssh/config ===
Host url1.com
HostName url1.com
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_key1
Host url2.com
HostName url2.com
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_key2
...
=== ~/.ssh/known_hosts ===
{contents of known_hosts1}
{contents of known_hosts2}
...
basic-auth for Docker
Given URLs, usernames, and passwords of the form: https://url{n}.com,
user{n}, and pass{n}, Tekton generates the following. Since Docker doesn’t
support the kubernetes.io/ssh-auth type Secret, Tekton ignores annotations
on Secrets of that type.
=== ~/.docker/config.json ===
{
"auths": {
"https://url1.com": {
"auth": "$(echo -n user1:pass1 | base64)",
"email": "not@val.id",
},
"https://url2.com": {
"auth": "$(echo -n user2:pass2 | base64)",
"email": "not@val.id",
},
...
}
}
Errors and their meaning
“unsuccessful cred copy” Warning
This message has the following format:
warning: unsuccessful cred copy: ".docker" from "/tekton/creds" to "/tekton/home": unable to open destination: open /tekton/home/.docker/config.json: permission denied
The precise credential and paths mentioned can vary. This message is only a warning but can be indicative of the following problems:
Multiple Steps with varying UIDs
Multiple Steps with different users / UIDs are trying to initialize docker or git credentials in the same Task. If those Steps need access to the credentials then they may fail as they might not have permission to access them.
This happens because, by default, /tekton/home is set to be a Step user’s home
directory and Tekton makes this directory a shared volume that all Steps in a
Task have access to. Any credentials initialized by one Step are overwritten
by subsequent Steps also initializing credentials.
If the Steps reporting this warning do not use the credentials mentioned in the message then you can safely ignore it.
This can most easily be resolved by ensuring that each Step executing in your
Task and TaskRun runs with the same UID. A blanket UID can be set with a
TaskRun’s Pod template field.
If you require Steps to run with different UIDs then you should disable Tekton’s built-in credential initialization and use Workspaces to mount credentials from Secrets instead. See the section on disabling Tekton’s credential initialization.
A Workspace or Volume is also Mounted for the same credentials
A Task has mounted both a Workspace (or Volume) for credentials and the TaskRun has attached a service account with git or docker credentials that Tekton will try to initialize.
The simplest solution to this problem is to not mix credentials mounted via Workspace with those initialized using the process described in this document. See the section on disabling Tekton’s credential initialization.
A Task employs a read-only Workspace or Volume for $HOME
A Task has mounted a read-only Workspace (or Volume) for the user’s HOME
directory and the TaskRun attaches a service account with git or docker
credentials that Tekton will try to initialize.
The simplest solution to this problem is to not mix credentials mounted via Workspace with those initialized using the process described in this document. See the section on disabling Tekton’s credential initialization.
The contents of $HOME are chowned to a different user
A Task Step that modifies the ownership of files in the user home directory
may prevent subsequent Steps from initializing credentials in that same home
directory. The simplest solution to this problem is to avoid running chown
on files and directories under /tekton. Another option is to run all Steps
with the same UID.
The Step is named image-digest-exporter
If you see this warning reported specifically by an image-digest-exporter Step
you can safely ignore this message. The reason it appears is that this Step is
injected by Tekton and it runs with a non-root UID
that can differ from those of the Steps in the Task. The Step does not use
these credentials.
Disabling Tekton’s Built-In Auth
Why would an organization want to do this?
There are a number of reasons that an organization may want to disable Tekton’s built-in credential handling:
- The mechanism can be quite difficult to debug.
- There are an extremely limited set of supported credential types.
- Tasks with Steps that have different UIDs can break if multiple Steps are trying to share access to the same credentials.
- Tasks with Steps that have different UIDs can log more warning messages, creating more noise in TaskRun logs. Again this is because multiple Steps with differing UIDs cannot share access to the same credential files.
What are the effects of making this change?
- Credentials must now be passed explicitly to Tasks either with Workspaces,
environment variables (using
envFromin your Steps and a Task param to specify a Secret), or a custom volume and volumeMount definition.
How to disable the built-in auth
To disable Tekton’s built-in auth, edit the feature-flag ConfigMap in the
tekton-pipelines namespace and update the value of disable-creds-init
from "false" to "true".
Except as otherwise noted, the content of this page is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 License, and code samples are licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.
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