4 title: Securing API access with scoped tokens
8 Copyright (C) The Arvados Authors. All rights reserved.
10 SPDX-License-Identifier: CC-BY-SA-3.0
13 By default, Arvados API tokens grant unlimited access to a user account, and admin account tokens have unlimited access to the whole system. If you want to grant restricted access to a user account, you can create a "scoped token" which is an Arvados API token which is limited to accessing specific APIs.
15 One use of token scopes is to grant access to data, such as a collection, to users who do not have an Arvados accounts on your cluster. This is done by creating scoped token that only allows getting a specific record. An example of this is "creating a collection sharing link.":{{site.baseurl}}/sdk/python/cookbook.html#sharing_link
17 Another example is situations where admin access is required but there is risk of the token being compromised. Setting a scope prevents the token from being used for any action other than the specific action the token is intended for. For example, "synchronizing user accounts on a shell node.":{{site.baseurl}}/install/install-shell-server.html#scoped-token
21 A "scope" consists of a HTTP method and API path. A token can have multiple scopes. Token scopes act as a whitelist, and the API server checks the HTTP method and the API path of every request against the scopes of the request token. Scopes are also described on the "API Authorization":{{site.baseurl}}/api/tokens.html#scopes page of the "API documentation":{{site.baseurl}}/api/index.html.
23 These examples use @/arvados/v1/collections@, but can be applied to any endpoint. Consult the "API documentation":{{site.baseurl}}/api/index.html to determine the endpoints for specific methods.
25 The scope @["GET", "/arvados/v1/collections"]@ will allow only GET or HEAD requests for the list of collections. Any other HTTP method or path (including requests for a specific collection record, eg a request with path @/arvados/v1/collections/zzzzz-4zz18-0123456789abcde@) will return a permission error.
27 A trailing slash in a scope is signficant. The scope @["GET", "/arvados/v1/collections/"]@ will allow only GET or HEAD requests *starting with* @/arvados/v1/collections/@. A request for an individual record path @/arvados/v1/collections/zzzzz-4zz18-0123456789abcde@) is allowed but a request to list collections (@/arvados/v1/collections@) will be denied because it does not end with @/@ (API requests with a trailing @/@ will have the slash stripped before the scope is checked.)
29 The scope can include an object uuid. The scope @["GET", "/arvados/v1/collections/zzzzz-4zz18-0123456789abcde"]@ only permits requests to read the record @zzzzz-4zz18-0123456789abcde@.
31 Since a token can have multiple scopes, use @[["GET", "/arvados/v1/collections"], ["GET", "/arvados/v1/collections/"]]@ to allow both listing collections and fetching individual collection records. This will reject requests to create or change collections, or access any other API method.
33 Object create calls use the @POST@ method. A scope of @["POST", "/arvados/v1/collections"]@ will allow creating collections, but not reading, listing or updating them (or accessing anything else).
35 Object update calls use the @PATCH@ method. A scope of @["PATCH", "/arvados/v1/collections/"]@ will allow updating collections, but not listing or creating them. (Note: while GET requests are denied an object can be read indirectly by using an empty PATCH which will return the unmodified object as the result).
37 Similarly, you can use a scope of @["PATCH", "/arvados/v1/collections/zzzzz-4zz18-0123456789abcde"]@ to restrict updates to a single collection.
39 There is one special exception to the scope rules: a valid token is always allowed to issue a request to "@GET /arvados/v1/api_client_authorizations/current@":{{ site.baseurl }}/api/methods/api_client_authorizations.html#current regardless of its scopes. This allows clients to reliably determine whether a request failed because a token is invalid, or because the token is not permitted to perform a particular request. The API server itself needs to be able to do this to validate tokens issued by other clusters in a federation.
41 h2. Creating a scoped token
43 A scoped token can be created at the command line:
46 <pre><code>$ <span class="userinput">arv api_client_authorization create --api-client-authorization '{"scopes": [["GET", "/arvados/v1/collections"], ["GET", "/arvados/v1/collections/"]]}'</span>
48 "href":"/api_client_authorizations/zzzzz-gj3su-bizbsw0mx5pju3w",
49 "kind":"arvados#apiClientAuthorization",
50 "etag":"9yk144t0v6cvyp0342exoh2vq",
51 "uuid":"zzzzz-gj3su-bizbsw0mx5pju3w",
52 "owner_uuid":"zzzzz-tpzed-fr97h9t4m5jffxs",
53 "created_at":"2020-03-12T20:36:12.517375422Z",
54 "modified_by_client_uuid":null,
55 "modified_by_user_uuid":null,
59 "api_token":"5a74htnoqwkhtfo2upekpfbsg04hv7cy5v4nowf7dtpxer086m",
60 "created_by_ip_address":null,
61 "default_owner_uuid":null,
64 "last_used_by_ip_address":null,
68 "/arvados/v1/collections"
72 "/arvados/v1/collections/"
79 The response will include @api_token@ field which is the newly issued secret token. It can be passed directly to the API server that issued it, or can be used to construct a @v2@ token. A @v2@ format token is required if the token will be used to access other clusters in an Arvados federation. An Arvados @v2@ format token consists of three fields separate by slashes: the prefix @v2@, followed by the token uuid, followed by the token secret. For example: @v2/x1u39-gj3su-bizbsw0mx5pju3w/5a74htnoqwkhtfo2upekpfbsg04hv7cy5v4nowf7dtpxer086m@.