Chapter 7. Understanding and creating service accounts
7.1. Service accounts overview
A service account is an OpenShift Container Platform account that allows a component to directly access the API. Service accounts are API objects that exist within each project. Service accounts provide a flexible way to control API access without sharing a regular user’s credentials.
When you use the OpenShift Container Platform CLI or web console, your API token authenticates you to the API. You can associate a component with a service account so that they can access the API without using a regular user’s credentials. For example, service accounts can allow:
- Replication controllers to make API calls to create or delete pods.
- Applications inside containers to make API calls for discovery purposes.
- External applications to make API calls for monitoring or integration purposes.
Each service account’s user name is derived from its project and name:
system:serviceaccount:<project>:<name>
Every service account is also a member of two groups:
- system:serviceaccounts
- Includes all service accounts in the system.
- system:serviceaccounts:<project>
- Includes all service accounts in the specified project.
Each service account automatically contains two secrets:
- An API token
- Credentials for the OpenShift Container Registry
The generated API token and registry credentials do not expire, but you can revoke them by deleting the secret. When you delete the secret, a new one is automatically generated to take its place.
7.2. Creating service accounts
You can create a service account in a project and grant it permissions by binding it to a role.
Procedure
Optional: To view the service accounts in the current project:
$ oc get sa NAME SECRETS AGE builder 2 2d default 2 2d deployer 2 2d
To create a new service account in the current project:
$ oc create sa <service_account_name> 1 serviceaccount "robot" created
- 1
- To create a service account in a different project, specify
-n <project_name>
.
Optional: View the secrets for the service account:
$ oc describe sa robot Name: robot Namespace: project1 Labels: <none> Annotations: <none> Image pull secrets: robot-dockercfg-qzbhb Mountable secrets: robot-token-f4khf robot-dockercfg-qzbhb Tokens: robot-token-f4khf robot-token-z8h44
7.3. Examples of granting roles to service accounts
You can grant roles to service accounts in the same way that you grant roles to a regular user account.
You can modify the service accounts for the current project. For example, to add the
view
role to therobot
service account in thetop-secret
project:$ oc policy add-role-to-user view system:serviceaccount:top-secret:robot
You can also grant access to a specific service account in a project. For example, from the project to which the service account belongs, use the
-z
flag and specify the<service_account_name>
$ oc policy add-role-to-user <role_name> -z <service_account_name>
ImportantIf you want to grant access to a specific service account in a project, use the
-z
flag. Using this flag helps prevent typos and ensures that access is granted to only the specified service account.To modify a different namespace, you can use the
-n
option to indicate the project namespace it applies to, as shown in the following examples.For example, to allow all service accounts in all projects to view resources in the
top-secret
project:$ oc policy add-role-to-group view system:serviceaccounts -n top-secret
To allow all service accounts in the
managers
project to edit resources in thetop-secret
project:$ oc policy add-role-to-group edit system:serviceaccounts:managers -n top-secret