The metadataproxy is used to allow containers to acquire IAM roles. By metadata we mean EC2 instance meta data which is normally available to EC2 instances. This proxy exposes the meta data to containers inside or outside of EC2 hosts, allowing you to provide scoped IAM roles to individual containers, rather than giving them the full IAM permissions of an IAM role or IAM user.
From inside of the repo run the following commands:
mkdir -p /srv/metadataproxy
cd /srv/metadataproxy
virtualenv venv
source venv/bin/activate
pip install metadataproxy
deactivate
See the settings file for specific configuration options.
The metadataproxy has two basic modes of operation:
- Running in AWS where it simply proxies most routes to the real metadata service.
- Running outside of AWS where it mocks out most routes.
To enable mocking, use the environment variable:
export MOCK_API=true
metadataproxy relies on boto configuration for its AWS credentials. If metadata IAM credentials are available, it will use this. Otherwise, you'll need to use .aws/credentials, .boto, or environment variables to specify the IAM credentials before the service is started.
For IAM routes, the metadataproxy will use STS to assume roles for containers.
To do so it takes the incoming IP address of metadata requests and finds the
running docker container associated with the IP address. It uses the value of
the container's IAM_ROLE
environment variable as the role it will assume. It
then assumes the role and gives back STS credentials in the metadata response.
STS-attained credentials are cached and automatically rotated as they expire.
To specify the role of a container, simply launch it with the IAM_ROLE
environment variable set to the IAM role you wish the container to run with.
If the trust policy for the role requires an ExternalId, you can set this
using the IAM_EXTERNAL_ID
environment variable. This is most frequently
used with cross-account role access scenarios. For more information on
when you should use an External ID for your roles, see:
http://docs.aws.amazon.com/IAM/latest/UserGuide/id_roles_create_for-user_externalid.html
docker run -e IAM_ROLE=my-role ubuntu:14.04
docker run -e IAM_ROLE=their-role@another-account -e IAM_EXTERNAL_ID=random-unique-string ubuntu:14.04
There are a number of environment variables that can be set to tune metadata proxy's behavior. They can either be exported by the start script, or set via docker environment variables.
Variable | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
DEFAULT_ROLE | String | Role to use if IAM_ROLE is not set in a container's environment. If unset the container will get no IAM credentials. | |
DEFAULT_ACCOUNT_ID | String | The default account ID to assume roles in, if IAM_ROLE does not contain account information. If unset, metadataproxy will attempt to lookup role ARNs using iam:GetRole. | |
ROLE_SESSION_KEY | String | Optional key in container labels or environment variables to use for role session name. Prefix with Labels: or Env: respectively to indicate where key should be found. Useful to pass through metadata such as a CI job ID or launching user for audit purposes, as the role session name is included in the ARN that appears in access logs. |
|
DEBUG | Boolean | False | Enable debug mode. You should not do this in production as it will leak IAM credentials into your logs |
DOCKER_URL | String | unix://var/run/docker.sock | Url of the docker daemon. The default is to access docker via its socket. |
METADATA_URL | String | http://169.254.169.254 | URL of the metadata service. Default is the normal location of the metadata service in AWS. |
MOCK_API | Boolean | False | Whether or not to mock all metadata endpoints. If True, mocked data will be returned to callers. If False, all endpoints except for IAM endpoints will be proxied through to the real metadata service. |
MOCKED_INSTANCE_ID | String | mockedid | When mocking the API, use the following instance id in returned data. |
AWS_ACCOUNT_MAP | JSON String | {} |
A mapping of account names to account IDs. This allows you to use user-friendly names instead of account IDs in IAM_ROLE environment variable values. |
ROLE_EXPIRATION_THRESHOLD | Integer | 15 | The threshold before credentials expire in minutes at which metadataproxy will attempt to load new credentials. |
ROLE_MAPPING_FILE | Path String | A json file that has a dict mapping of IP addresses to role names. Can be used if docker networking has been disabled and you are managing IP addressing for containers through another process. | |
ROLE_REVERSE_LOOKUP | Boolean | False | Enable performing a reverse lookup of incoming IP addresses to match containers by hostname. Useful if you've disabled networking in docker, but set hostnames for containers in /etc/hosts or DNS. |
HOSTNAME_MATCH_REGEX | Regex String | ^.*$ |
Limit reverse lookup container matching to hostnames that match the specified pattern. |
When no role is matched, metadataproxy
will use the role specified in the
DEFAULT_ROLE
metadataproxy
environment variable. If no DEFAULT_ROLE is
specified as a fallback, then your docker container without an IAM_ROLE
environment variable will fail to retrieve credentials.
The following are all supported formats for specifying roles:
-
By Role:
IAM_ROLE=my-role
-
By Role@AccountId
IAM_ROLE=my-role@012345678910
-
By ARN:
IAM_ROLE=arn:aws:iam::012345678910:role/my-role
A useful way to deploy this metadataproxy is with a two-tier role structure:
-
The first tier is the EC2 service role for the instances running your containers. Call it
DockerHostRole
. Your instances must be launched with a policy that assigns this role. -
The second tier is the role that each container will use. These roles must trust your own account ("Role for Cross-Account Access" in AWS terms). Call it
ContainerRole1
. -
metadataproxy needs to query and assume the container role. So the
DockerHostRole
policy must permit this for each container role. For example:"Statement": [ { "Effect": "Allow", "Action": [ "iam:GetRole", "sts:AssumeRole" ], "Resource": [ "arn:aws:iam::012345678901:role/ContainerRole1", "arn:aws:iam::012345678901:role/ContainerRole2" ] } ]
-
Now customize
ContainerRole1
& friends as you like
Note: The ContainerRole1
role should have a trust relationship that allows it to be assumed by the user
which is associated to the host machine running the sts:AssumeRole
command. An example trust relationship for ContainRole1
may look like:
{
"Version": "2012-10-17",
"Statement": [
{
"Effect": "Allow",
"Principal": {
"AWS": "arn:aws:iam::012345678901:root",
"Service": "ec2.amazonaws.com"
},
"Action": "sts:AssumeRole"
}
]
}
Using iptables, we can forward traffic meant to 169.254.169.254 from docker0 to the metadataproxy. The following example assumes the metadataproxy is run on the host, and not in a container:
/sbin/iptables \
--append PREROUTING \
--destination 169.254.169.254 \
--protocol tcp \
--dport 80 \
--in-interface docker0 \
--jump DNAT \
--table nat \
--to-destination 127.0.0.1:8000 \
--wait
If you'd like to start the metadataproxy in a container, it's recommended to use host-only networking. Also, it's necessary to volume mount in the docker socket, as metadataproxy must be able to interact with docker.
Be aware that non-host-mode containers will not be able to contact 127.0.0.1 in the host network stack. As an alternative, you can use the meta-data service to find the local address. In this case, you probably want to restrict proxy access to the docker0 interface!
LOCAL_IPV4=$(curl http://169.254.169.254/latest/meta-data/local-ipv4)
/sbin/iptables \
--append PREROUTING \
--destination 169.254.169.254 \
--protocol tcp \
--dport 80 \
--in-interface docker0 \
--jump DNAT \
--table nat \
--to-destination $LOCAL_IPV4:8000 \
--wait
/sbin/iptables \
--wait \
--insert INPUT 1 \
--protocol tcp \
--dport 80 \
\! \
--in-interface docker0 \
--jump DROP
In the following we assume _my_config_ is a bash file with exports for all of the necessary settings discussed in the configuration section.
source my_config
cd /srv/metadataproxy
source venv/bin/activate
gunicorn metadataproxy:app --workers=2 -k gevent
For production purposes, you'll want to kick up a container to run. You can build one with the included Dockerfile. To run, do something like:
docker run --net=host \
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
lyft/metadataproxy
The following environment variables can be set to configure gunicorn (defaults are set in the examples):
# Change the IP address the gunicorn worker is listening on. You likely want to
# leave this as the default
HOST=0.0.0.0
# Change the port the gunicorn worker is listening on.
PORT=8000
# Change the number of worker processes gunicorn will run with. The default is
# 1, which is likely enough since metadataproxy is using gevent and its work is
# completely IO bound. Increasing the number of workers will likely make your
# in-memory cache less efficient
WORKERS=1
# Enable debug mode (you should not do this in production as it will leak IAM
# credentials into your logs)
DEBUG=False
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