authz: add QAuthZPAM object type for authorizing using PAM

Add an authorization backend that talks to PAM to check whether the user
identity is allowed. This only uses the PAM account validation facility,
which is essentially just a check to see if the provided username is permitted
access. It doesn't use the authentication or session parts of PAM, since
that's dealt with by the relevant part of QEMU (eg VNC server).

Consider starting QEMU with a VNC server and telling it to use TLS with
x509 client certificates and configuring it to use an PAM to validate
the x509 distinguished name. In this example we're telling it to use PAM
for the QAuthZ impl with a service name of "qemu-vnc"

 $ qemu-system-x86_64 \
     -object tls-creds-x509,id=tls0,dir=/home/berrange/security/qemutls,\
             endpoint=server,verify-peer=yes \
     -object authz-pam,id=authz0,service=qemu-vnc \
     -vnc :1,tls-creds=tls0,tls-authz=authz0

This requires an /etc/pam/qemu-vnc file to be created with the auth
rules. A very simple file based whitelist can be setup using

  $ cat > /etc/pam/qemu-vnc <<EOF
  account         requisite       pam_listfile.so item=user sense=allow file=/etc/qemu/vnc.allow
  EOF

The /etc/qemu/vnc.allow file simply contains one username per line. Any
username not in the file is denied. The usernames in this example are
the x509 distinguished name from the client's x509 cert.

  $ cat > /etc/qemu/vnc.allow <<EOF
  CN=laptop.berrange.com,O=Berrange Home,L=London,ST=London,C=GB
  EOF

More interesting would be to configure PAM to use an LDAP backend, so
that the QEMU authorization check data can be centralized instead of
requiring each compute host to have file maintained.

The main limitation with this PAM module is that the rules apply to all
QEMU instances on the host. Setting up different rules per VM, would
require creating a separate PAM service name & config file for every
guest. An alternative approach for the future might be to not pass in
the plain username to PAM, but instead combine the VM name or UUID with
the username. This requires further consideration though.

Tested-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com>
Reviewed-by: Philippe Mathieu-Daudé <philmd@redhat.com>
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange@redhat.com>
This commit is contained in:
Daniel P. Berrange 2016-07-27 14:13:56 +01:00 committed by Daniel P. Berrangé
parent 55d869846d
commit 8953caf3cd
8 changed files with 452 additions and 0 deletions

View file

@ -4435,6 +4435,41 @@ would look like:
...
@end example
@item -object authz-pam,id=@var{id},service=@var{string}
Create an authorization object that will control access to network services.
The @option{service} parameter provides the name of a PAM service to use
for authorization. It requires that a file @code{/etc/pam.d/@var{service}}
exist to provide the configuration for the @code{account} subsystem.
An example authorization object to validate a TLS x509 distinguished
name would look like:
@example
# $QEMU \
...
-object authz-pam,id=auth0,service=qemu-vnc
...
@end example
There would then be a corresponding config file for PAM at
@code{/etc/pam.d/qemu-vnc} that contains:
@example
account requisite pam_listfile.so item=user sense=allow \
file=/etc/qemu/vnc.allow
@end example
Finally the @code{/etc/qemu/vnc.allow} file would contain
the list of x509 distingished names that are permitted
access
@example
CN=laptop.example.com,O=Example Home,L=London,ST=London,C=GB
@end example
@end table
ETEXI