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Chapter 3. Managing user-owned OAuth access tokens
Users can review their own OAuth access tokens and delete any that are no longer needed.
3.1. Listing user-owned OAuth access tokens
You can list your user-owned OAuth access tokens. Token names are not sensitive and cannot be used to log in.
Procedure
List all user-owned OAuth access tokens:
$ oc get useroauthaccesstokens
Example output
NAME CLIENT NAME CREATED EXPIRES REDIRECT URI SCOPES <token1> openshift-challenging-client 2021-01-11T19:25:35Z 2021-01-12 19:25:35 +0000 UTC https://oauth-openshift.apps.example.com/oauth/token/implicit user:full <token2> openshift-browser-client 2021-01-11T19:27:06Z 2021-01-12 19:27:06 +0000 UTC https://oauth-openshift.apps.example.com/oauth/token/display user:full <token3> console 2021-01-11T19:26:29Z 2021-01-12 19:26:29 +0000 UTC https://console-openshift-console.apps.example.com/auth/callback user:full
List user-owned OAuth access tokens for a particular OAuth client:
$ oc get useroauthaccesstokens --field-selector=clientName="console"
Example output
NAME CLIENT NAME CREATED EXPIRES REDIRECT URI SCOPES <token3> console 2021-01-11T19:26:29Z 2021-01-12 19:26:29 +0000 UTC https://console-openshift-console.apps.example.com/auth/callback user:full
3.2. Viewing the details of a user-owned OAuth access token
You can view the details of a user-owned OAuth access token.
Procedure
Describe the details of a user-owned OAuth access token:
$ oc describe useroauthaccesstokens <token_name>
Example output
Name: <token_name> 1 Namespace: Labels: <none> Annotations: <none> API Version: oauth.openshift.io/v1 Authorize Token: sha256~Ksckkug-9Fg_RWn_AUysPoIg-_HqmFI9zUL_CgD8wr8 Client Name: openshift-browser-client 2 Expires In: 86400 3 Inactivity Timeout Seconds: 317 4 Kind: UserOAuthAccessToken Metadata: Creation Timestamp: 2021-01-11T19:27:06Z Managed Fields: API Version: oauth.openshift.io/v1 Fields Type: FieldsV1 fieldsV1: f:authorizeToken: f:clientName: f:expiresIn: f:redirectURI: f:scopes: f:userName: f:userUID: Manager: oauth-server Operation: Update Time: 2021-01-11T19:27:06Z Resource Version: 30535 Self Link: /apis/oauth.openshift.io/v1/useroauthaccesstokens/<token_name> UID: f9d00b67-ab65-489b-8080-e427fa3c6181 Redirect URI: https://oauth-openshift.apps.example.com/oauth/token/display Scopes: user:full 5 User Name: <user_name> 6 User UID: 82356ab0-95f9-4fb3-9bc0-10f1d6a6a345 Events: <none>
- 1
- The token name, which is the sha256 hash of the token. Token names are not sensitive and cannot be used to log in.
- 2
- The client name, which describes where the token originated from.
- 3
- The value in seconds from the creation time before this token expires.
- 4
- If there is a token inactivity timeout set for the OAuth server, this is the value in seconds from the creation time before this token can no longer be used.
- 5
- The scopes for this token.
- 6
- The user name associated with this token.
3.3. Deleting user-owned OAuth access tokens
The oc logout
command only invalidates the OAuth token for the active session. You can use the following procedure to delete any user-owned OAuth tokens that are no longer needed.
Deleting an OAuth access token logs out the user from all sessions that use the token.
Procedure
Delete the user-owned OAuth access token:
$ oc delete useroauthaccesstokens <token_name>
Example output
useroauthaccesstoken.oauth.openshift.io "<token_name>" deleted
3.4. Adding unauthenticated groups to cluster roles
As a cluster administrator, you can add unauthenticated users to the following cluster roles in OpenShift Dedicated by creating a cluster role binding. Unauthenticated users do not have access to non-public cluster roles. This should only be done in specific use cases when necessary.
You can add unauthenticated users to the following cluster roles:
-
system:scope-impersonation
-
system:webhook
-
system:oauth-token-deleter
-
self-access-reviewer
Always verify compliance with your organization’s security standards when modifying unauthenticated access.
Prerequisites
-
You have access to the cluster as a user with the
cluster-admin
role. -
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
).
Procedure
Create a YAML file named
add-<cluster_role>-unauth.yaml
and add the following content:apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1 kind: ClusterRoleBinding metadata: annotations: rbac.authorization.kubernetes.io/autoupdate: "true" name: <cluster_role>access-unauthenticated roleRef: apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: ClusterRole name: <cluster_role> subjects: - apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io kind: Group name: system:unauthenticated
Apply the configuration by running the following command:
$ oc apply -f add-<cluster_role>.yaml