Chapter 8. Using service accounts in applications


8.1. 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:

GroupDescription

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.

8.2. Default service accounts

Your OpenShift Container Platform cluster contains default service accounts for cluster management and generates more service accounts for each project.

8.2.1. Default cluster service accounts

Several infrastructure controllers run using service account credentials. The following service accounts are created in the OpenShift Container Platform infrastructure project (openshift-infra) at server start, and given the following roles cluster-wide:

Service AccountDescription

replication-controller

Assigned the system:replication-controller role

deployment-controller

Assigned the system:deployment-controller role

build-controller

Assigned the system:build-controller role. Additionally, the build-controller service account is included in the privileged security context constraint in order to create privileged build pods.

8.2.2. Default project service accounts and roles

Three service accounts are automatically created in each project:

Service AccountUsage

builder

Used by build pods. It is given the system:image-builder role, which allows pushing images to any imagestream in the project using the internal Docker registry.

deployer

Used by deployment pods and given the system:deployer role, which allows viewing and modifying replication controllers and pods in the project.

default

Used to run all other pods unless they specify a different service account.

All service accounts in a project are given the system:image-puller role, which allows pulling images from any imagestream in the project using the internal container image registry.

8.3. Creating service accounts

You can create a service account in a project and grant it permissions by binding it to a role.

Procedure

  1. Optional: To view the service accounts in the current project:

    $ oc get sa

    Example output

    NAME       SECRETS   AGE
    builder    2         2d
    default    2         2d
    deployer   2         2d

  2. To create a new service account in the current project:

    $ oc create sa <service_account_name> 1
    1
    To create a service account in a different project, specify -n <project_name>.

    Example output

    serviceaccount "robot" created

  3. Optional: View the secrets for the service account:

    $ oc describe sa robot

    Example output

    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

8.4. Using a service account’s credentials externally

You can distribute a service account’s token to external applications that must authenticate to the API.

In order to pull an image, the authenticated user must have get rights on the requested imagestreams/layers. In order to push an image, the authenticated user must have update rights on the requested imagestreams/layers.

By default, all service accounts in a project have rights to pull any image in the same project, and the builder service account has rights to push any image in the same project.

Procedure

  1. View the service account’s API token:

    $ oc describe secret <secret_name>

    For example:

    $ oc describe secret robot-token-uzkbh -n top-secret

    Example output

    Name:		robot-token-uzkbh
    Labels:		<none>
    Annotations:	kubernetes.io/service-account.name=robot,kubernetes.io/service-account.uid=49f19e2e-16c6-11e5-afdc-3c970e4b7ffe
    
    Type:	kubernetes.io/service-account-token
    
    Data
    
    token:	eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9...

  2. Log in using the token that you obtained:

    $ oc login --token=eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9...

    Example output

    Logged into "https://server:8443" as "system:serviceaccount:top-secret:robot" using the token provided.
    
    You don't have any projects. You can try to create a new project, by running
    
        $ oc new-project <projectname>

  3. Confirm that you logged in as the service account:

    $ oc whoami

    Example output

    system:serviceaccount:top-secret:robot

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