Authentication plugins provide a generic means by which to extend the authentication mechanisms known to OpenStack clients.
In the vast majority of cases the authentication plugins used will be those written for use with the OpenStack Identity Service (Keystone), however this is not the only possible case, and the mechanisms by which authentication plugins are used and implemented should be generic enough to cover completely customized authentication solutions.
The subset of authentication plugins intended for use with an OpenStack Identity server (such as Keystone) are called Identity Plugins.
Keystoneclient ships with a number of plugins and particularly Identity Plugins.
Standard V2 identity plugins are defined in the module: keystoneclient.auth.identity.v2
They include:
Standard V3 identity plugins are defined in the module keystoneclient.auth.identity.v3.
V3 Identity plugins are slightly different from their V2 counterparts as a V3 authentication request can contain multiple authentication methods. To handle this V3 defines a number of different AuthMethod classes:
The AuthMethod objects are then passed to the Auth plugin:
>>> from keystoneclient import session
>>> from keystoneclient.auth.identity import v3
>>> password = v3.PasswordMethod(username='user',
... password='password')
>>> auth = v3.Auth(auth_url='http://my.keystone.com:5000/v3',
... auth_methods=[password],
... project_id='projectid')
>>> sess = session.Session(auth=auth)
As in the majority of cases you will only want to use one AuthMethod there are also helper authentication plugins for the various AuthMethod which can be used more like the V2 plugins:
>>> auth = v3.Password(auth_url='http://my.keystone.com:5000/v3',
... username='username',
... password='password',
... project_id='projectid')
>>> sess = session.Session(auth=auth)
This will have exactly the same effect as using the single PasswordMethod above.
In addition to the Identity plugins a simple plugin that will always use the same provided token and endpoint is available. This is useful in situations where you have an ADMIN_TOKEN or in testing when you specifically know the endpoint you want to communicate with.
It can be found at keystoneclient.auth.token_endpoint.Token.
If you have implemented a new authentication mechanism into the Identity service then you will be able to reuse a lot of the infrastructure available for the existing Identity mechanisms. As the V2 identity API is essentially frozen, it is expected that new plugins are for the V3 API.
To implement a new V3 plugin that can be combined with others you should implement the base keystoneclient.auth.identity.v3.AuthMethod class and implement the get_auth_data() function. If your Plugin cannot be used in conjunction with existing keystoneclient.auth.identity.v3.AuthMethod then you should just override keystoneclient.auth.identity.v3.Auth directly.
The new AuthMethod should take all the required parameters via __init__() and return from get_auth_data() a tuple with the unique identifier of this plugin (e.g. password) and a dictionary containing the payload of values to send to the authentication server. The session, calling auth object and request headers are also passed to this function so that the plugin may use or manipulate them.
You should also provide a class that inherits from keystoneclient.auth.identity.v3.Auth with an instance of your new AuthMethod as the auth_methods parameter to keystoneclient.auth.identity.v3.Auth.
By convention (and like above) these are named PluginType and PluginTypeMethod (for example Password and PasswordMethod).
To implement an entirely new plugin you should implement the base class keystoneclient.auth.base.BaseAuthPlugin and provide the get_endpoint(), get_token() and invalidate() functions.
get_token() is called to retrieve the string token from a plugin. It is intended that a plugin will cache a received token and so if the token is still valid then it should be re-used rather than fetching a new one. A session object is provided with which the plugin can contact it’s server. (Note: use authenticated=False when making those requests or it will end up being called recursively). The return value should be the token as a string.
get_endpoint() is called to determine a base URL for a particular service’s requests. The keyword arguments provided to the function are those that are given by the endpoint_filter variable in keystoneclient.session.Session.request(). A session object is also provided so that the plugin may contact an external source to determine the endpoint. Again this will be generally be called once per request and so it is up to the plugin to cache these responses if appropriate. The return value should be the base URL to communicate with.
invalidate() should also be implemented to clear the current user credentials so that on the next get_token() call a new token can be retrieved.
The most simple example of a plugin is the keystoneclient.auth.token_endpoint.Token plugin.