This document defines how authentication is provided during execution of a
TaskRun
or a PipelineRun
(referred to as Runs
in this document).
The build system supports two types of authentication, using Kubernetes'
first-class Secret
types:
kubernetes.io/basic-auth
kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
Secrets of these types can be made available to the Run
by attaching them to
the ServiceAccount
as which it runs.
In their native form, these secrets are unsuitable for consumption by Git and
Docker. For Git, they need to be turned into (some form of) .gitconfig
. For
Docker, they need to be turned into a ~/.docker/config.json
file. Also, while
each of these supports has multiple credentials for multiple domains, those
credentials typically need to be blended into a single canonical keyring.
To solve this, before any PipelineResources
are retrieved, all pods
execute
a credential initialization process that accesses each of its secrets and
aggregates them into their respective files in $HOME
.
-
Define a
Secret
containing your SSH private key (insecret.yaml
):apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: ssh-key annotations: tekton.dev/git-0: github.com # Described below type: kubernetes.io/ssh-auth data: ssh-privatekey: <base64 encoded> # This is non-standard, but its use is encouraged to make this more secure. known_hosts: <base64 encoded>
tekton.dev/git-0
in the example above specifies which web address these credentials belong to. See Guiding Credential Selection below for more information. -
Generate the value of
ssh-privatekey
by copying the value of (for example)cat ~/.ssh/id_rsa | base64
. -
Copy the value of
cat ~/.ssh/known_hosts | base64
to theknown_hosts
field. -
Next, direct a
ServiceAccount
to use thisSecret
(inserviceaccount.yaml
):apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: build-bot secrets: - name: ssh-key
-
Then use that
ServiceAccount
in yourTaskRun
(inrun.yaml
):
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1alpha1
kind: TaskRun
metadata:
name: build-push-task-run-2
spec:
serviceAccountName: build-bot
taskRef:
name: build-push
-
Or use that
ServiceAccount
in yourPipelineRun
(inrun.yaml
):apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1alpha1 kind: PipelineRun metadata: name: demo-pipeline namespace: default spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot pipelineRef: name: demo-pipeline
-
Execute the
Run
:kubectl apply --filename secret.yaml serviceaccount.yaml run.yaml
When the Run
executes, before steps execute, a ~/.ssh/config
will be
generated containing the key configured in the Secret
. This key is then used
to authenticate when retrieving any PipelineResources
.
-
Define a
Secret
containing the username and password that theRun
should use to authenticate to a Git repository (insecret.yaml
):apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: basic-user-pass annotations: tekton.dev/git-0: https://github.com # Described below type: kubernetes.io/basic-auth stringData: username: <username> password: <password>
tekton.dev/git-0
in the example above specifies which web address these credentials belong to. See Guiding Credential Selection below for more information. -
Next, direct a
ServiceAccount
to use thisSecret
(inserviceaccount.yaml
):apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: build-bot secrets: - name: basic-user-pass
-
Then use that
ServiceAccount
in yourTaskRun
(inrun.yaml
):apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1alpha1 kind: TaskRun metadata: name: build-push-task-run-2 spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot taskRef: name: build-push
-
Or use that
ServiceAccount
in yourPipelineRun
(inrun.yaml
):apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1alpha1 kind: PipelineRun metadata: name: demo-pipeline namespace: default spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot pipelineRef: name: demo-pipeline
-
Execute the
Run
:kubectl apply --filename secret.yaml serviceaccount.yaml run.yaml
When this Run
executes, before steps execute, a ~/.gitconfig
will be
generated containing the credentials configured in the Secret
, and these
credentials are then used to authenticate when retrieving any
PipelineResources
.
-
Define a
Secret
containing the username and password that the build should use to authenticate to a Docker registry (insecret.yaml
):apiVersion: v1 kind: Secret metadata: name: basic-user-pass annotations: tekton.dev/docker-0: https://gcr.io # Described below type: kubernetes.io/basic-auth stringData: username: <username> password: <password>
tekton.dev/docker-0
in the example above specifies which web address these credentials belong to. See Guiding Credential Selection below for more information. -
Next, direct a
ServiceAccount
to use thisSecret
(inserviceaccount.yaml
):apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: build-bot secrets: - name: basic-user-pass
-
Then use that
ServiceAccount
in yourTaskRun
(inrun.yaml
):
apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1alpha1
kind: TaskRun
metadata:
name: build-push-task-run-2
spec:
serviceAccountName: build-bot
taskRef:
name: build-push
-
Or use that
ServiceAccount
in yourPipelineRun
(inrun.yaml
):apiVersion: tekton.dev/v1alpha1 kind: PipelineRun metadata: name: demo-pipeline namespace: default spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot pipelineRef: name: demo-pipeline
-
Execute the
Run
:kubectl apply --filename secret.yaml serviceaccount.yaml run.yaml
When the Run
executes, before steps execute, a ~/.docker/config.json
will be
generated containing the credentials configured in the Secret
, and these
credentials are then used to authenticate when retrieving any
PipelineResources
.
Kubernetes defines two types of secrets for Docker registries :
the old format kubernetes.io/dockercfg
and the new
kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
. Tekton supports those secrets in
addition to the one described above.
-
Define a
Secret
from a Docker client configuration file, as documented in Pull an Image from a Private Registrykubectl create secret generic regcred \ --from-file=.dockerconfigjson=<path/to/.docker/config.json> \ --type=kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
-
Instruct a
ServiceAccount
to use thisSecret
:apiVersion: v1 kind: ServiceAccount metadata: name: build-bot secrets: - name: regcred
-
Use that
ServiceAccount
in yourTaskRun
:apiVersion: tetkon.dev/v1alpha1 kind: TaskRun metadata: name: build-with-basic-auth spec: serviceAccountName: build-bot steps: ...
-
Execute the build:
kubectl apply --filename secret.yaml --filename serviceaccount.yaml --filename taskrun.yaml
When this TaskRun executes, before the steps are getting executed, a
~/.docker/config.json
will be generated containing the credentials
configured in the Secret
, and these credentials are then used to
authenticate with the Docker registry.
If both kubernetes.io/*
and tekton flavored basic authentication secret are
provided, tekton will merge the credentials from those two ; tekton flavored
credentials taking precedence over kubernetes.io/dockerconfigjson
(or
kubernetes.io/dockercfg
) ones.
A Run
might require many different types of authentication. For instance, a
Run
might require access to multiple private Git repositories, and access to
many private Docker repositories. You can use annotations to guide which secret
to use to authenticate to different resources, for example:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
annotations:
tekton.dev/git-0: https://github.com
tekton.dev/git-1: https://gitlab.com
tekton.dev/docker-0: https://gcr.io
type: kubernetes.io/basic-auth
stringData:
username: <cleartext non-encoded>
password: <cleartext non-encoded>
This describes a "Basic Auth" (username and password) secret that should be used to access Git repos at github.com and gitlab.com, as well as Docker repositories at gcr.io.
Similarly, for SSH:
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
annotations:
tekton.dev/git-0: github.com
type: kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
data:
ssh-privatekey: <base64 encoded>
# This is non-standard, but its use is encouraged to make this more secure.
# Omitting this results in the use of ssh-keyscan (see below).
known_hosts: <base64 encoded>
This describes an SSH key secret that should be used to access Git repos at github.com only.
Credential annotation keys must begin with tekton.dev/docker-
or
tekton.dev/git-
, and the value describes the URL of the host with which to use
the credential.
Given URLs, usernames, and passwords of the form: https://url{n}.com
,
user{n}
, and pass{n}
, generate the following for Docker:
=== ~/.docker/config.json ===
{
"auths": {
"https://url1.com": {
"auth": "$(echo -n user1:pass1 | base64)",
"email": "not@val.id",
},
"https://url2.com": {
"auth": "$(echo -n user2:pass2 | base64)",
"email": "not@val.id",
},
...
}
}
Docker doesn't support kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
, so annotations on these types
are ignored.
Given URLs, usernames, and passwords of the form: https://url{n}.com
,
user{n}
, and pass{n}
, generate the following for Git:
=== ~/.gitconfig ===
[credential]
helper = store
[credential "https://url1.com"]
username = "user1"
[credential "https://url2.com"]
username = "user2"
...
=== ~/.git-credentials ===
https://user1:pass1@url1.com
https://user2:pass2@url2.com
...
Given hostnames, private keys, and known_hosts
of the form: url{n}.com
,
key{n}
, and known_hosts{n}
, generate the following for Git:
=== ~/.ssh/id_key1 ===
{contents of key1}
=== ~/.ssh/id_key2 ===
{contents of key2}
...
=== ~/.ssh/config ===
Host url1.com
HostName url1.com
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_key1
Host url2.com
HostName url2.com
IdentityFile ~/.ssh/id_key2
...
=== ~/.ssh/known_hosts ===
{contents of known_hosts1}
{contents of known_hosts2}
...
Note: Because known_hosts
is a non-standard extension of
kubernetes.io/ssh-auth
, when it is not present this will be generated through
ssh-keygen url{n}.com
instead.
The secrets as outlined here will be stored into $HOME
(by convention the
volume: /builder/home
), and will be available to Source
and all Steps
.
For sensitive credentials that should not be made available to some steps, do
not use the mechanisms outlined here. Instead, the user should declare an
explicit Volume
from the Secret
and manually VolumeMount
it into the
Step
.
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