]> git.proxmox.com Git - pve-docs.git/blame - pveum.adoc
pveum: fix syntax for webauthn config
[pve-docs.git] / pveum.adoc
CommitLineData
80c0adcb 1[[chapter_user_management]]
3c8533f2 2ifdef::manvolnum[]
b2f242ab
DM
3pveum(1)
4========
5f09af76
DM
5:pve-toplevel:
6
3c8533f2
DM
7NAME
8----
9
10pveum - Proxmox VE User Manager
11
12
49a5e11c 13SYNOPSIS
3c8533f2
DM
14--------
15
16include::pveum.1-synopsis.adoc[]
17
18
19DESCRIPTION
20-----------
21endif::manvolnum[]
3c8533f2
DM
22ifndef::manvolnum[]
23User Management
24===============
5f09af76 25:pve-toplevel:
194d2f29 26endif::manvolnum[]
5f09af76 27
3c8533f2
DM
28// Copied from pve wiki: Revision as of 16:10, 27 October 2015
29
96942248 30{pve} supports multiple authentication sources, for example Linux PAM,
5462c161 31an integrated Proxmox VE authentication server, LDAP, Microsoft Active
96942248 32Directory and OpenID Connect.
3c8533f2 33
96942248
DW
34By using role-based user and permission management for all objects (VMs,
35Storage, nodes, etc.), granular access can be defined.
5eba0743 36
3c8533f2 37
80c0adcb 38[[pveum_users]]
c80b9ee6
WB
39Users
40-----
41
42{pve} stores user attributes in `/etc/pve/user.cfg`.
96942248 43Passwords are not stored here; users are instead associated with the
80c0adcb 44<<pveum_authentication_realms,authentication realms>> described below.
96942248 45Therefore, a user is often internally identified by their username and
c80b9ee6
WB
46realm in the form `<userid>@<realm>`.
47
48Each user entry in this file contains the following information:
49
50* First name
51* Last name
52* E-mail address
53* Group memberships
96942248 54* An optional expiration date
c80b9ee6
WB
55* A comment or note about this user
56* Whether this user is enabled or disabled
74662f51 57* Optional two-factor authentication keys
c80b9ee6 58
96942248 59CAUTION: When you disable or delete a user, or if the expiry date set is
f06ba6a6 60in the past, this user will not be able to log in to new sessions or start new
96942248 61tasks. All tasks which have already been started by this user (for example,
f06ba6a6 62terminal sessions) will **not** be terminated automatically by any such event.
8d02d0a2 63
c80b9ee6
WB
64
65System administrator
66~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
67
68The system's root user can always log in via the Linux PAM realm and is an
69unconfined administrator. This user cannot be deleted, but attributes can
96942248 70still be changed. System mails will be sent to the email address
c80b9ee6
WB
71assigned to this user.
72
73
80c0adcb 74[[pveum_groups]]
c80b9ee6 75Groups
a10a91c2 76------
c80b9ee6 77
96942248
DW
78Each user can be a member of several groups. Groups are the preferred
79way to organize access permissions. You should always grant permissions
80to groups instead of individual users. That way you will get a
81much more maintainable access control list.
c80b9ee6 82
181db098
FG
83[[pveum_tokens]]
84API Tokens
a10a91c2 85----------
181db098 86
96942248 87API tokens allow stateless access to most parts of the REST API from another
710713ea
TL
88system, software or API client. Tokens can be generated for individual users
89and can be given separate permissions and expiration dates to limit the scope
96942248 90and duration of the access. Should the API token get compromised, it can be
710713ea 91revoked without disabling the user itself.
181db098
FG
92
93API tokens come in two basic types:
94
96942248
DW
95* Separated privileges: The token needs to be given explicit access with ACLs.
96 Its effective permissions are calculated by intersecting user and token
181db098 97 permissions.
96942248 98* Full privileges: The token's permissions are identical to that of the
181db098
FG
99 associated user.
100
c6e098a2
TL
101CAUTION: The token value is only displayed/returned once when the token is
102generated. It cannot be retrieved again over the API at a later time!
181db098
FG
103
104To use an API token, set the HTTP header 'Authorization' to the displayed value
105of the form `PVEAPIToken=USER@REALM!TOKENID=UUID` when making API requests, or
96942248 106refer to your API client's documentation.
c80b9ee6 107
23b447be
DW
108[[pveum_resource_pools]]
109Resource Pools
110--------------
111
112[thumbnail="screenshot/gui-datacenter-pool-window.png"]
113
114A resource pool is a set of virtual machines, containers, and storage
115devices. It is useful for permission handling in cases where certain users
116should have controlled access to a specific set of resources, as it allows for a
117single permission to be applied to a set of elements, rather than having to
96942248
DW
118manage this on a per-resource basis. Resource pools are often used in tandem
119with groups, so that the members of a group have permissions on a set of
120machines and storage.
23b447be 121
80c0adcb 122[[pveum_authentication_realms]]
3c8533f2
DM
123Authentication Realms
124---------------------
125
d6614202
WB
126As {pve} users are just counterparts for users existing on some external
127realm, the realms have to be configured in `/etc/pve/domains.cfg`.
128The following realms (authentication methods) are available:
3c8533f2 129
78000a64
DW
130Linux PAM Standard Authentication::
131
132Linux PAM is a framework for system-wide user authentication. These users are
133created on the host system with commands such as `adduser`. If PAM users exist
134on the {pve} host system, corresponding entries can be added to {pve}, to allow
135these users to log in via their system username and password.
3c8533f2 136
78000a64
DW
137{pve} Authentication Server::
138
139This is a Unix-like password store, which stores hashed passwords in
140`/etc/pve/priv/shadow.cfg`. Passwords are hashed using the SHA-256 hashing
141algorithm. This is the most convenient realm for small-scale (or even
142mid-scale) installations, where users do not need access to anything outside of
143{pve}. In this case, users are fully managed by {pve} and are able to change
144their own passwords via the GUI.
d6614202
WB
145
146LDAP::
78000a64
DW
147
148LDAP (Lightweight Directory Access Protocol) is an open, cross-platform protocol
149for authentication using directory services. OpenLDAP is a popular open-source
150implementations of the LDAP protocol.
151
152Microsoft Active Directory (AD)::
153
154Microsoft Active Directory (AD) is a directory service for Windows domain
155networks and is supported as an authentication realm for {pve}. It supports LDAP
156as an authentication protocol.
157
158OpenID Connect::
159
160OpenID Connect is implemented as an identity layer on top of the OATH 2.0
161protocol. It allows clients to verify the identity of the user, based on
162authentication performed by an external authorization server.
163
164Linux PAM Standard Authentication
165~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
166
167As Linux PAM corresponds to host system users, a system user must exist on each
168node which the user is allowed to log in on. The user authenticates with their
169usual system password. This realm is added by default and can't be removed. In
170terms of configurability, an administrator can choose to require two-factor
171authentication with logins from the realm and to set the realm as the default
172authentication realm.
173
174
175{pve} Authentication Server
176~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
177
178The {pve} authentication server realm is a simple Unix-like password store.
179The realm is created by default, and as with Linux PAM, the only configuration
180items available are the ability to require two-factor authentication for users
181of the realm, and to set it as the default realm for login.
182
183Unlike the other {pve} realm types, users are created and authenticated entirely
184through {pve}, rather than authenticating against another system. Hence, you are
185required to set a password for this type of user upon creation.
186
187
188LDAP
189~~~~
190
191You can also use an external LDAP server for user authentication (for examle,
192OpenLDAP). In this realm type, users are searched under a 'Base Domain Name'
193(`base_dn`), using the username attribute specified in the 'User Attribute Name'
d6614202 194(`user_attr`) field.
78000a64
DW
195
196A server and optional fallback server can be configured, and the connection can
197be encrypted via SSL. Furthermore, filters can be configured for directories and
198groups. Filters allow you to further limit the scope of the realm.
199
200For instance, if a user is represented via the following LDIF dataset:
201
d6614202
WB
202----
203# user1 of People at ldap-test.com
204dn: uid=user1,ou=People,dc=ldap-test,dc=com
205objectClass: top
206objectClass: person
207objectClass: organizationalPerson
208objectClass: inetOrgPerson
209uid: user1
210cn: Test User 1
211sn: Testers
212description: This is the first test user.
213----
78000a64 214
d6614202
WB
215The 'Base Domain Name' would be `ou=People,dc=ldap-test,dc=com` and the user
216attribute would be `uid`.
78000a64 217
3a433e9b 218If {pve} needs to authenticate (bind) to the LDAP server before being
d6614202
WB
219able to query and authenticate users, a bind domain name can be
220configured via the `bind_dn` property in `/etc/pve/domains.cfg`. Its
221password then has to be stored in `/etc/pve/priv/ldap/<realmname>.pw`
96942248
DW
222(for example, `/etc/pve/priv/ldap/my-ldap.pw`). This file should contain a
223single line with the raw password.
78000a64 224
96942248 225To verify certificates, you need to set `capath`. You can set it either
4ab527b1
TL
226directly to the CA certificate of your LDAP server, or to the system path
227containing all trusted CA certificates (`/etc/ssl/certs`).
3a433e9b 228Additionally, you need to set the `verify` option, which can also be done over
4ab527b1 229the web interface.
d6614202 230
78000a64
DW
231The main configuration options for an LDAP server realm are as follows:
232
233* `Realm` (`realm`): The realm identifier for {pve} users
234
235* `Base Domain Name` (`base_dn`): The directory which users are searched under
236
237* `User Attribute Name` (`user_attr`): The LDAP attribute containing the
238 username that users will log in with
239
240* `Server` (`server1`): The server hosting the LDAP directory
241
242* `Fallback Server` (`server2`): An optional fallback server address, in case
243 the primary server is unreachable
244
245* `Port` (`port`): The port that the LDAP server listens on
246
96942248 247NOTE: In order to allow a particular user to authenticate using the LDAP server,
78000a64
DW
248you must also add them as a user of that realm from the {pve} server. This can
249be carried out automatically with <<pveum_ldap_sync, syncing>>.
3c8533f2 250
3c8533f2 251
78000a64
DW
252Microsoft Active Directory (AD)
253~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
f3ee27eb 254
78000a64
DW
255To set up Microsoft AD as a realm, a server address and authentication domain
256need to be specified. Active Directory supports most of the same properties as
257LDAP, such as an optional fallback server, port, and SSL encryption.
258Furthermore, users can be added to {pve} automatically via
259<<pveum_ldap_sync, sync>> operations, after configuration.
260
261As with LDAP, if {pve} needs to authenticate before it binds to the AD server,
262you must configure the 'Bind User' (`bind_dn`) property. This property is
263typically required by default for Microsoft AD.
264
265The main configuration settings for Microsoft Active Directory are:
266
267* `Realm` (`realm`): The realm identifier for {pve} users
268
269* `Domain` (`domain`): The AD domain of the server
270
271* `Server` (`server1`): The FQDN or IP address of the server
272
273* `Fallback Server` (`server2`): An optional fallback server address, in case
274 the primary server is unreachable
275
276* `Port` (`port`): The port that the Microsoft AD server listens on
277
278[[pveum_ldap_sync]]
279Syncing LDAP-Based Realms
280~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
281
282[thumbnail="screenshot/gui-datacenter-realm-add-ldap.png"]
283
284It's possible to automatically sync users and groups for LDAP-based realms (LDAP
285& Microsoft Active Directory), rather than having to add them to {pve} manually.
286You can access the sync options from the Add/Edit window of the web interface's
287`Authentication` panel or via the `pveum realm add/modify` commands. You can
288then carry out the sync operation from the `Authentication` panel of the GUI or
289using the following command:
290
291----
292pveum realm sync <realm>
293----
294
295Users and groups are synced to the cluster-wide configuration file,
296`/etc/pve/user.cfg`.
297
9c2fa0b5
TL
298
299Attributes to Properties
300^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
301
78881712 302If the sync response includes user attributes, they will be synced into the
9c2fa0b5
TL
303matching user property in the `user.cfg`. For example: `firstname` or
304`lastname`.
305
306If the names of the attributes are not matching the {pve} properties, you can
307set a custom field-to-field map in the config by using the `sync_attributes`
78881712 308option.
78000a64 309
9c2fa0b5
TL
310How such properties are handled if anything vanishes can be controlled via the
311sync options, see below.
312
78000a64
DW
313Sync Configuration
314^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
315
316The configuration options for syncing LDAP-based realms can be found in the
317`Sync Options` tab of the Add/Edit window.
318
319The configuration options are as follows:
320
321* `Bind User` (`bind_dn`): Refers to the LDAP account used to query users
322 and groups. This account needs access to all desired entries. If it's set, the
323 search will be carried out via binding; otherwise, the search will be carried
324 out anonymously. The user must be a complete LDAP formatted distinguished name
325 (DN), for example, `cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com`.
326
327* Groupname attr. (group_name_attr): Represents the
328 users' groups. Only entries which adhere to the usual character limitations of
329 the `user.cfg` are synced. Groups are synced with `-$realm` attached to the
330 name, in order to avoid naming conflicts. Please ensure that a sync does not
331 overwrite manually created groups.
332
333* `User classes` (`user_classes`): Objects classes associated with users.
334
335* `Group classes` (`group_classes`): Objects classes associated with groups.
336
337* `E-Mail attribute`: If the LDAP-based server specifies user email addresses,
338 these can also be included in the sync by setting the associated attribute
339 here. From the command line, this is achievable through the
340 `--sync_attributes` parameter.
341
342* `User Filter` (`filter`): For further filter options to target specific users.
343
344* `Group Filter` (`group_filter`): For further filter options to target specific
345 groups.
346
347NOTE: Filters allow you to create a set of additional match criteria, to narrow
348down the scope of a sync. Information on available LDAP filter types and their
349usage can be found at https://ldap.com/ldap-filters/[ldap.com].
350
78000a64
DW
351[[pveum_ldap_sync_options]]
352Sync Options
353^^^^^^^^^^^^
354
355[thumbnail="screenshot/gui-datacenter-realm-add-ldap-sync-options.png"]
356
357In addition to the options specified in the previous section, you can also
358configure further options that describe the behavior of the sync operation.
359
360These options are either set as parameters before the sync, or as defaults via
361the realm option `sync-defaults-options`.
362
363The main options for syncing are:
364
365* `Scope` (`scope`): The scope of what to sync. It can be either `users`,
366 `groups` or `both`.
367
368* `Enable new` (`enable-new`): If set, the newly synced users are enabled and
369 can log in. The default is `true`.
370
217b2cae
DC
371* `Remove Vanished` (`remove-vanished`): This is a list of options which, when
372 activated, determine if they are removed when they are not returned from
373 the sync response. The options are:
78000a64 374
217b2cae
DC
375 - `ACL` (`acl)`: Remove ACLs of users and groups which were not returned
376 returned in the sync response. This most often makes sense together with
377 `Entry`.
378
379 - `Entry` (`entry`): Removes entries (i.e. users and groups) when they are
380 not returned in the sync response.
381
78881712
DC
382 - `Properties` (`properties`): Removes properties of entries where the user
383 in the sync response did not contain those attributes. This includes
384 all properties, even those never set by a sync. Exceptions are tokens
385 and the enable flag, these will be retained even with this option enabled.
78000a64
DW
386
387* `Preview` (`dry-run`): No data is written to the config. This is useful if you
388 want to see which users and groups would get synced to the `user.cfg`.
f3ee27eb
DM
389
390
391[[pveum_openid]]
96942248 392OpenID Connect
f3ee27eb
DM
393~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
394
395The main OpenID Connect configuration options are:
396
78000a64
DW
397* `Issuer URL` (`issuer-url`): This is the URL of the authorization server.
398Proxmox uses the OpenID Connect Discovery protocol to automatically configure
f3ee27eb
DM
399further details.
400+
96942248 401While it is possible to use unencrypted `http://` URLs, we strongly recommend to
f3ee27eb
DM
402use encrypted `https://` connections.
403
78000a64 404* `Realm` (`realm`): The realm identifier for {pve} users
f3ee27eb 405
78000a64 406* `Client ID` (`client-id`): OpenID Client ID.
f3ee27eb 407
78000a64 408* `Client Key` (`client-key`): Optional OpenID Client Key.
f3ee27eb 409
78000a64
DW
410* `Autocreate Users` (`autocreate`): Automatically create users if they do not
411exist. While authentication is done at the OpenID server, all users still need
412an entry in the {pve} user configuration. You can either add them manually, or
413use the `autocreate` option to automatically add new users.
414
415* `Username Claim` (`username-claim`): OpenID claim used to generate the unique
416username (`subject`, `username` or `email`).
f3ee27eb
DM
417
418Username mapping
419^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
420
96942248
DW
421The OpenID Connect specification defines a single unique attribute
422('claim' in OpenID terms) named `subject`. By default, we use the
f3ee27eb
DM
423value of this attribute to generate {pve} usernames, by simple adding
424`@` and the realm name: `${subject}@${realm}`.
425
96942248 426Unfortunately, most OpenID servers use random strings for `subject`, like
f3ee27eb 427`DGH76OKH34BNG3245SB`, so a typical username would look like
96942248 428`DGH76OKH34BNG3245SB@yourrealm`. While unique, it is difficult for
f3ee27eb 429humans to remember such random strings, making it quite impossible to
96942248 430associate real users with this.
f3ee27eb
DM
431
432The `username-claim` setting allows you to use other attributes for
96942248
DW
433the username mapping. Setting it to `username` is preferred if the
434OpenID Connect server provides that attribute and guarantees its
f3ee27eb
DM
435uniqueness.
436
96942248 437Another option is to use `email`, which also yields human readable
62547dfa 438usernames. Again, only use this setting if the server guarantees the
f3ee27eb
DM
439uniqueness of this attribute.
440
441Examples
442^^^^^^^^
443
96942248 444Here is an example of creating an OpenID realm using Google. You need to
f3ee27eb 445replace `--client-id` and `--client-key` with the values
96942248 446from your Google OpenID settings.
f3ee27eb
DM
447
448----
449pveum realm add myrealm1 --type openid --issuer-url https://accounts.google.com --client-id XXXX --client-key YYYY --username-claim email
450----
451
96942248
DW
452The above command uses `--username-claim email`, so that the usernames on the
453{pve} side look like `example.user@google.com@myrealm1`.
f3ee27eb 454
96942248
DW
455Keycloak (https://www.keycloak.org/) is a popular open source Identity
456and Access Management tool, which supports OpenID Connect. In the following
f3ee27eb 457example, you need to replace the `--issuer-url` and `--client-id` with
96942248 458your information:
f3ee27eb
DM
459
460----
461pveum realm add myrealm2 --type openid --issuer-url https://your.server:8080/auth/realms/your-realm --client-id XXX --username-claim username
462----
463
96942248 464Using `--username-claim username` enables simple usernames on the
f3ee27eb
DM
465{pve} side, like `example.user@myrealm2`.
466
96942248
DW
467WARNING: You need to ensure that the user is not allowed to edit
468the username setting themselves (on the Keycloak server).
f3ee27eb
DM
469
470
0523992b 471[[pveum_tfa_auth]]
96942248 472Two-Factor Authentication
9e8f2770
WB
473-------------------------
474
74662f51 475There are two ways to use two-factor authentication:
2837cf1d 476
74662f51 477It can be required by the authentication realm, either via 'TOTP'
96942248
DW
478(Time-based One-Time Password) or 'YubiKey OTP'. In this case, a newly
479created user needs to have their keys added immediately, as there is no way to
74662f51
OB
480log in without the second factor. In the case of 'TOTP', users can
481also change the 'TOTP' later on, provided they can log in first.
2837cf1d 482
96942248 483Alternatively, users can choose to opt-in to two-factor authentication
1245cebe
WB
484later on, even if the realm does not enforce it.
485
486Available Second Factors
487~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
488
489You can set up multiple second factors, in order to avoid a situation in
490which losing your smartphone or security key locks you out of your
491account permanently.
492
493The following two-factor authentication methods are available in
494addition to realm-enforced TOTP and YubiKey OTP:
495
496* User configured TOTP
497 (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time-based_One-Time_Password[Time-based One-Time Password]).
498 A short code derived from a shared secret and the current time, it changes
499 every 30 seconds.
500* WebAuthn (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WebAuthn[Web Authentication]).
501 A general standard for authentication. It is implemented by various
502 security devices, like hardware keys or trusted platform modules (TPM)
503 from a computer or smart phone.
504* Single use Recovery Keys. A list of keys which should either be
505 printed out and locked in a secure place or saved digitally in an
506 electronic vault. Each key can be used only once. These are perfect for
507 ensuring that you are not locked out, even if all of your other second
508 factors are lost or corrupt.
509
510Before WebAuthn was supported, U2F could be setup by the user. Existing
511U2F factors can still be used, but it is recommended to switch to
512WebAuthn, once it is configured on the server.
2837cf1d 513
96942248 514Realm Enforced Two-Factor Authentication
2837cf1d
WB
515~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
516
74662f51
OB
517This can be done by selecting one of the available methods via the
518'TFA' dropdown box when adding or editing an Authentication Realm.
96942248
DW
519When a realm has TFA enabled, it becomes a requirement, and only users
520with configured TFA will be able to log in.
9e8f2770
WB
521
522Currently there are two methods available:
523
96942248 524Time-based OATH (TOTP):: This uses the standard HMAC-SHA1 algorithm,
74662f51 525where the current time is hashed with the user's configured key. The
96942248 526time step and password length parameters are configurable.
9e8f2770 527+
74662f51
OB
528A user can have multiple keys configured (separated by spaces), and the keys
529can be specified in Base32 (RFC3548) or hexadecimal notation.
9e8f2770 530+
74662f51 531{pve} provides a key generation tool (`oathkeygen`) which prints out a random
96942248 532key in Base32 notation, that can be used directly with various OTP tools, such
74662f51
OB
533as the `oathtool` command line tool, or on Android Google Authenticator,
534FreeOTP, andOTP or similar applications.
9e8f2770
WB
535
536YubiKey OTP::
537For authenticating via a YubiKey a Yubico API ID, API KEY and validation
538server URL must be configured, and users must have a YubiKey available. In
539order to get the key ID from a YubiKey, you can trigger the YubiKey once
96942248 540after connecting it via USB, and copy the first 12 characters of the typed
9e8f2770 541password into the user's 'Key IDs' field.
74662f51 542
74662f51
OB
543Please refer to the https://developers.yubico.com/OTP/[YubiKey OTP]
544documentation for how to use the
9e8f2770 545https://www.yubico.com/products/services-software/yubicloud/[YubiCloud] or
96942248 546https://developers.yubico.com/Software_Projects/Yubico_OTP/YubiCloud_Validation_Servers/[host your own verification server].
9e8f2770 547
0523992b 548[[pveum_user_configured_totp]]
96942248 549User Configured TOTP Authentication
2837cf1d
WB
550~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
551
1245cebe
WB
552Users can choose to enable 'TOTP' or 'WebAuthn' as a second factor on login, via
553the 'TFA' button in the user list (unless the realm enforces 'YubiKey OTP').
2837cf1d 554
1245cebe
WB
555Users can always add and use one time 'Recovery Keys'.
556
557[thumbnail="screenshot/gui-datacenter-two-factor.png"]
2b59fcfb 558
96942248
DW
559After opening the 'TFA' window, the user is presented with a dialog to set up
560'TOTP' authentication. The 'Secret' field contains the key, which can be
561randomly generated via the 'Randomize' button. An optional 'Issuer Name' can be
562added to provide information to the 'TOTP' app about what the key belongs to.
2837cf1d 563Most 'TOTP' apps will show the issuer name together with the corresponding
96942248 564'OTP' values. The username is also included in the QR code for the 'TOTP' app.
2837cf1d 565
96942248
DW
566After generating a key, a QR code will be displayed, which can be used with most
567OTP apps such as FreeOTP. The user then needs to verify the current user
2837cf1d 568password (unless logged in as 'root'), as well as the ability to correctly use
96942248
DW
569the 'TOTP' key, by typing the current 'OTP' value into the 'Verification Code'
570field and pressing the 'Apply' button.
2837cf1d 571
1245cebe
WB
572[[user_tfa_setup_totp]]
573=== TOTP
574
575[thumbnail="screenshot/pve-gui-tfa-add-totp.png"]
576
577There is no server setup required. Simply install a TOTP app on your
578smartphone (for example, https://freeotp.github.io/[FreeOTP]) and use
579the Proxmox Backup Server web-interface to add a TOTP factor.
580
581[[user_tfa_setup_webauthn]]
582=== WebAuthn
583
584For WebAuthn to work, you need to have two things:
585
586* A trusted HTTPS certificate (for example, by using
587 https://pve.proxmox.com/wiki/Certificate_Management[Let's Encrypt]).
588 While it probably works with an untrusted certificate, some browsers may
589 warn or refuse WebAuthn operations if it is not trusted.
590* Setup the WebAuthn configuration (see *Datacenter -> Options ->
591 WebAuthn Settings* in the Proxmox VE web interface). This can be
592 auto-filled in most setups.
593
594Once you have fulfilled both of these requirements, you can add a WebAuthn
595configuration in the *Two Factor* panel under *Datacenter -> Permissions -> Two
596Factor*.
597
598[[user_tfa_setup_recovery_keys]]
599=== Recovery Keys
600
601[thumbnail="screenshot/pve-gui-tfa-add-recovery-keys.png"]
602
603Recovery key codes do not need any preparation; you can simply create a
604set of recovery keys in the *Two Factor* panel under *Datacenter -> Permissions
605-> Two Factor*.
606
607NOTE: There can only be one set of single-use recovery keys per user at any
608time.
609
610
e455949b 611[[pveum_configure_webauthn]]
1245cebe
WB
612Server Side Webauthn Configuration
613~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
614
615[thumbnail="screenshot/gui-datacenter-webauthn-edit.png"]
616
617To allow users to use 'WebAuthn' authentication, it is necessaary to use a valid
618domain with a valid SSL certificate, otherwise some browsers may warn or refuse
619to authenticate altogether.
620
621NOTE: Changing the 'WebAuthn' configuration may render all existing 'WebAuthn'
622registrations unusable!
623
624This is done via `/etc/pve/datacenter.cfg`. For instance:
625
626----
5d993771 627webauthn: rp=mypve.example.com,origin=https://mypve.example.com:8006,id=mypve.example.com
1245cebe
WB
628----
629
97d63abc 630[[pveum_configure_u2f]]
96942248 631Server Side U2F Configuration
2837cf1d
WB
632~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
633
1245cebe
WB
634NOTE: It is recommended to use WebAuthn instead.
635
58df830b 636To allow users to use 'U2F' authentication, it may be necessary to use a valid
96942248
DW
637domain with a valid SSL certificate, otherwise, some browsers may print
638a warning or reject U2F usage altogether. Initially, an 'AppId'
2837cf1d
WB
639footnote:[AppId https://developers.yubico.com/U2F/App_ID.html]
640needs to be configured.
641
642NOTE: Changing the 'AppId' will render all existing 'U2F' registrations
643unusable!
644
96942248 645This is done via `/etc/pve/datacenter.cfg`. For instance:
2837cf1d
WB
646
647----
648u2f: appid=https://mypve.example.com:8006
649----
650
96942248
DW
651For a single node, the 'AppId' can simply be the address of the web-interface,
652exactly as it is used in the browser, including the 'https://' and the port, as
653shown above. Please note that some browsers may be more strict than others when
654matching 'AppIds'.
2837cf1d
WB
655
656When using multiple nodes, it is best to have a separate `https` server
657providing an `appid.json`
658footnote:[Multi-facet apps: https://developers.yubico.com/U2F/App_ID.html]
659file, as it seems to be compatible with most
660browsers. If all nodes use subdomains of the same top level domain, it may be
96942248
DW
661enough to use the TLD as 'AppId'. It should however be noted that some browsers
662may not accept this.
2837cf1d
WB
663
664NOTE: A bad 'AppId' will usually produce an error, but we have encountered
96942248
DW
665situations when this does not happen, particularly when using a top level domain
666'AppId' for a node that is accessed via a subdomain in Chromium. For this reason
667it is recommended to test the configuration with multiple browsers, as changing
668the 'AppId' later will render existing 'U2F' registrations unusable.
2837cf1d 669
0523992b 670[[pveum_user_configured_u2f]]
96942248 671Activating U2F as a User
2837cf1d
WB
672~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
673
674To enable 'U2F' authentication, open the 'TFA' window's 'U2F' tab, type in the
675current password (unless logged in as root), and press the 'Register' button.
96942248 676If the server is set up correctly and the browser accepts the server's provided
2837cf1d 677'AppId', a message will appear prompting the user to press the button on the
96942248
DW
678'U2F' device (if it is a 'YubiKey', the button light should be toggling on and
679off steadily, roughly twice per second).
2837cf1d
WB
680
681Firefox users may need to enable 'security.webauth.u2f' via 'about:config'
682before they can use a 'U2F' token.
9e8f2770 683
80c0adcb 684[[pveum_permission_management]]
04f44730 685Permission Management
3c8533f2
DM
686---------------------
687
04f44730 688In order for a user to perform an action (such as listing, modifying or
96942248 689deleting parts of a VM's configuration), the user needs to have the
04f44730
WB
690appropriate permissions.
691
692{pve} uses a role and path based permission management system. An entry in
181db098 693the permissions table allows a user, group or token to take on a specific role
96942248 694when accessing an 'object' or 'path'. This means that such an access rule can
181db098
FG
695be represented as a triple of '(path, user, role)', '(path, group,
696role)' or '(path, token, role)', with the role containing a set of allowed
697actions, and the path representing the target of these actions.
04f44730 698
5eba0743 699
80c0adcb 700[[pveum_roles]]
853d288b
WB
701Roles
702~~~~~
703
704A role is simply a list of privileges. Proxmox VE comes with a number
96942248 705of predefined roles, which satisfy most requirements.
853d288b 706
96942248 707* `Administrator`: has full privileges
853d288b 708* `NoAccess`: has no privileges (used to forbid access)
96942248
DW
709* `PVEAdmin`: can do most tasks, but has no rights to modify system settings (`Sys.PowerMgmt`, `Sys.Modify`, `Realm.Allocate`)
710* `PVEAuditor`: has read only access
853d288b
WB
711* `PVEDatastoreAdmin`: create and allocate backup space and templates
712* `PVEDatastoreUser`: allocate backup space and view storage
713* `PVEPoolAdmin`: allocate pools
714* `PVESysAdmin`: User ACLs, audit, system console and system logs
715* `PVETemplateUser`: view and clone templates
96942248 716* `PVEUserAdmin`: manage users
853d288b 717* `PVEVMAdmin`: fully administer VMs
96942248 718* `PVEVMUser`: view, backup, configure CD-ROM, VM console, VM power management
853d288b 719
96942248 720You can see the whole set of predefined roles in the GUI.
853d288b 721
96942248 722You can add new roles via the GUI or the command line.
5e6b02ff
TL
723
724[thumbnail="screenshot/gui-datacenter-role-add.png"]
96942248
DW
725From the GUI, navigate to the 'Permissions -> Roles' tab from 'Datacenter' and
726click on the 'Create' button. There you can set a role name and select any
727desired privileges from the 'Privileges' drop-down menu.
853d288b 728
96942248
DW
729To add a role through the command line, you can use the 'pveum' CLI tool, for
730example:
853d288b
WB
731[source,bash]
732----
96942248
DW
733pveum role add PVE_Power-only --privs "VM.PowerMgmt VM.Console"
734pveum role add Sys_Power-only --privs "Sys.PowerMgmt Sys.Console"
853d288b
WB
735----
736
737
3c8533f2
DM
738Privileges
739~~~~~~~~~~
740
741A privilege is the right to perform a specific action. To simplify
742management, lists of privileges are grouped into roles, which can then
96942248 743be used in the permission table. Note that privileges cannot be directly
0e1fda70 744assigned to users and paths without being part of a role.
3c8533f2 745
96942248 746We currently support the following privileges:
3c8533f2
DM
747
748Node / System related privileges::
749
750* `Permissions.Modify`: modify access permissions
96942248
DW
751* `Sys.PowerMgmt`: node power management (start, stop, reset, shutdown, ...)
752* `Sys.Console`: console access to node
753* `Sys.Syslog`: view syslog
754* `Sys.Audit`: view node status/config, Corosync cluster config, and HA config
755* `Sys.Modify`: create/modify/remove node network parameters
756* `Group.Allocate`: create/modify/remove groups
757* `Pool.Allocate`: create/modify/remove a pool
696ebb3c 758* `Pool.Audit`: view a pool
96942248 759* `Realm.Allocate`: create/modify/remove authentication realms
3c8533f2 760* `Realm.AllocateUser`: assign user to a realm
96942248 761* `User.Modify`: create/modify/remove user access and details.
3c8533f2
DM
762
763Virtual machine related privileges::
764
96942248 765* `VM.Allocate`: create/remove VM on a server
3c8533f2
DM
766* `VM.Migrate`: migrate VM to alternate server on cluster
767* `VM.PowerMgmt`: power management (start, stop, reset, shutdown, ...)
768* `VM.Console`: console access to VM
769* `VM.Monitor`: access to VM monitor (kvm)
770* `VM.Backup`: backup/restore VMs
771* `VM.Audit`: view VM config
772* `VM.Clone`: clone/copy a VM
96942248 773* `VM.Config.Disk`: add/modify/remove disks
3a433e9b 774* `VM.Config.CDROM`: eject/change CD-ROM
3c8533f2 775* `VM.Config.CPU`: modify CPU settings
96942248
DW
776* `VM.Config.Memory`: modify memory settings
777* `VM.Config.Network`: add/modify/remove network devices
778* `VM.Config.HWType`: modify emulated hardware types
3c8533f2 779* `VM.Config.Options`: modify any other VM configuration
96942248 780* `VM.Snapshot`: create/delete VM snapshots
3c8533f2
DM
781
782Storage related privileges::
783
96942248 784* `Datastore.Allocate`: create/modify/remove a datastore and delete volumes
3c8533f2 785* `Datastore.AllocateSpace`: allocate space on a datastore
96942248 786* `Datastore.AllocateTemplate`: allocate/upload templates and ISO images
3c8533f2
DM
787* `Datastore.Audit`: view/browse a datastore
788
5eba0743 789
b8eeec52
WB
790Objects and Paths
791~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
792
96942248
DW
793Access permissions are assigned to objects, such as virtual machines,
794storages or resource pools.
b8eeec52 795We use file system like paths to address these objects. These paths form a
96942248 796natural tree, and permissions of higher levels (shorter paths) can
b8eeec52
WB
797optionally be propagated down within this hierarchy.
798
7d48940b 799[[pveum_templated_paths]]
b8eeec52
WB
800Paths can be templated. When an API call requires permissions on a
801templated path, the path may contain references to parameters of the API
802call. These references are specified in curly braces. Some parameters are
96942248 803implicitly taken from the API call's URI. For instance, the permission path
b8eeec52
WB
804`/nodes/{node}` when calling '/nodes/mynode/status' requires permissions on
805`/nodes/mynode`, while the path `{path}` in a PUT request to `/access/acl`
806refers to the method's `path` parameter.
807
808Some examples are:
809
810* `/nodes/{node}`: Access to {pve} server machines
811* `/vms`: Covers all VMs
812* `/vms/{vmid}`: Access to specific VMs
96942248
DW
813* `/storage/{storeid}`: Access to a specific storage
814* `/pool/{poolname}`: Access to resources contained in a specific <<pveum_pools,pool>>
b8eeec52
WB
815* `/access/groups`: Group administration
816* `/access/realms/{realmid}`: Administrative access to realms
817
818
3c8533f2
DM
819Inheritance
820^^^^^^^^^^^
821
5eba0743 822As mentioned earlier, object paths form a file system like tree, and
96942248
DW
823permissions can be inherited by objects down that tree (the propagate flag is
824set by default). We use the following inheritance rules:
3c8533f2 825
74936daf
WB
826* Permissions for individual users always replace group permissions.
827* Permissions for groups apply when the user is member of that group.
96942248 828* Permissions on deeper levels replace those inherited from an upper level.
3c8533f2 829
96942248 830Additionally, privilege separated tokens can never have permissions on any
181db098 831given path that their associated user does not have.
5eba0743 832
80c0adcb 833[[pveum_pools]]
3c8533f2
DM
834Pools
835~~~~~
836
96942248
DW
837Pools can be used to group a set of virtual machines and datastores. You can
838then simply set permissions on pools (`/pool/{poolid}`), which are inherited by
839all pool members. This is a great way to simplify access control.
3c8533f2 840
74936daf 841
96942248
DW
842Which Permissions Do I Need?
843~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
74936daf
WB
844
845The required API permissions are documented for each individual
96942248 846method, and can be found at https://pve.proxmox.com/pve-docs/api-viewer/.
74936daf 847
96942248 848The permissions are specified as a list, which can be interpreted as a
74936daf
WB
849tree of logic and access-check functions:
850
851`["and", <subtests>...]` and `["or", <subtests>...]`::
852Each(`and`) or any(`or`) further element in the current list has to be true.
853
854`["perm", <path>, [ <privileges>... ], <options>...]`::
7d48940b 855The `path` is a templated parameter (see
87ba80b0 856<<pveum_templated_paths,Objects and Paths>>). All (or, if the `any`
7d48940b 857option is used, any) of the listed
74936daf
WB
858privileges must be allowed on the specified path. If a `require-param`
859option is specified, then its specified parameter is required even if the
860API call's schema otherwise lists it as being optional.
861
862`["userid-group", [ <privileges>... ], <options>...]`::
470d4313 863The caller must have any of the listed privileges on `/access/groups`. In
96942248 864addition, there are two possible checks, depending on whether the
74936daf
WB
865`groups_param` option is set:
866+
867* `groups_param` is set: The API call has a non-optional `groups` parameter
868and the caller must have any of the listed privileges on all of the listed
869groups.
870* `groups_param` is not set: The user passed via the `userid` parameter
871must exist and be part of a group on which the caller has any of the listed
872privileges (via the `/access/groups/<group>` path).
873
874`["userid-param", "self"]`::
875The value provided for the API call's `userid` parameter must refer to the
96942248
DW
876user performing the action (usually in conjunction with `or`, to allow
877users to perform an action on themselves, even if they don't have elevated
878privileges).
74936daf
WB
879
880`["userid-param", "Realm.AllocateUser"]`::
881The user needs `Realm.AllocateUser` access to `/access/realm/<realm>`, with
470d4313 882`<realm>` referring to the realm of the user passed via the `userid`
74936daf
WB
883parameter. Note that the user does not need to exist in order to be
884associated with a realm, since user IDs are passed in the form of
885`<username>@<realm>`.
886
887`["perm-modify", <path>]`::
7d48940b
DM
888The `path` is a templated parameter (see
889<<pveum_templated_paths,Objects and Paths>>). The user needs either the
96942248 890`Permissions.Modify` privilege or,
74936daf
WB
891depending on the path, the following privileges as a possible substitute:
892+
893* `/storage/...`: additionally requires 'Datastore.Allocate`
894* `/vms/...`: additionally requires 'VM.Allocate`
895* `/pool/...`: additionally requires 'Pool.Allocate`
896+
897If the path is empty, `Permission.Modify` on `/access` is required.
898
3c8533f2
DM
899Command Line Tool
900-----------------
901
902Most users will simply use the GUI to manage users. But there is also
87ba80b0 903a fully featured command line tool called `pveum` (short for ``**P**roxmox
4f6e7e05
WB
904**VE** **U**ser **M**anager''). Please note that all Proxmox VE command
905line tools are wrappers around the API, so you can also access those
87ba80b0 906functions through the REST API.
3c8533f2 907
96942248 908Here are some simple usage examples. To show help, type:
3c8533f2
DM
909
910[source,bash]
911 pveum
912
913or (to show detailed help about a specific command)
914
915[source,bash]
9135e321 916 pveum help user add
3c8533f2
DM
917
918Create a new user:
919
920[source,bash]
9135e321 921 pveum user add testuser@pve -comment "Just a test"
3c8533f2 922
96942248 923Set or change the password (not all realms support this):
3c8533f2
DM
924
925[source,bash]
926 pveum passwd testuser@pve
927
928Disable a user:
929
930[source,bash]
9135e321 931 pveum user modify testuser@pve -enable 0
3c8533f2
DM
932
933Create a new group:
934
935[source,bash]
9135e321 936 pveum group add testgroup
3c8533f2
DM
937
938Create a new role:
939
940[source,bash]
9135e321 941 pveum role add PVE_Power-only -privs "VM.PowerMgmt VM.Console"
3c8533f2
DM
942
943
944Real World Examples
945-------------------
946
5eba0743 947
3c8533f2
DM
948Administrator Group
949~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
950
96942248
DW
951It is possible that an administrator would want to create a group of users with
952full administrator rights (without using the root account).
3c8533f2 953
96942248 954To do this, first define the group:
3c8533f2
DM
955
956[source,bash]
9135e321 957 pveum group add admin -comment "System Administrators"
3c8533f2 958
96942248 959Then assign the role:
3c8533f2
DM
960
961[source,bash]
9135e321 962 pveum acl modify / -group admin -role Administrator
3c8533f2 963
96942248 964Finally, you can add users to the new 'admin' group:
3c8533f2
DM
965
966[source,bash]
9135e321 967 pveum user modify testuser@pve -group admin
3c8533f2
DM
968
969
970Auditors
971~~~~~~~~
972
973You can give read only access to users by assigning the `PVEAuditor`
974role to users or groups.
975
96942248 976Example 1: Allow user `joe@pve` to see everything
3c8533f2
DM
977
978[source,bash]
9135e321 979 pveum acl modify / -user joe@pve -role PVEAuditor
3c8533f2 980
96942248 981Example 2: Allow user `joe@pve` to see all virtual machines
3c8533f2
DM
982
983[source,bash]
9135e321 984 pveum acl modify /vms -user joe@pve -role PVEAuditor
3c8533f2 985
5eba0743 986
3c8533f2
DM
987Delegate User Management
988~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
989
96942248 990If you want to delegate user management to user `joe@pve`, you can do
3c8533f2
DM
991that with:
992
993[source,bash]
9135e321 994 pveum acl modify /access -user joe@pve -role PVEUserAdmin
3c8533f2 995
96942248
DW
996User `joe@pve` can now add and remove users, and change other user attributes,
997such as passwords. This is a very powerful role, and you most
998likely want to limit it to selected realms and groups. The following
999example allows `joe@pve` to modify users within the realm `pve`, if they
8c1189b6 1000are members of group `customers`:
3c8533f2
DM
1001
1002[source,bash]
9135e321
TL
1003 pveum acl modify /access/realm/pve -user joe@pve -role PVEUserAdmin
1004 pveum acl modify /access/groups/customers -user joe@pve -role PVEUserAdmin
3c8533f2 1005
0abc65b0 1006NOTE: The user is able to add other users, but only if they are
96942248 1007members of the group `customers` and within the realm `pve`.
8c1189b6 1008
96942248 1009Limited API Token for Monitoring
181db098
FG
1010~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
1011
a13a971d
DW
1012Permissions on API tokens are always a subset of those of their corresponding
1013user, meaning that an API token can't be used to carry out a task that the
1014backing user has no permission to do. This section will demonstrate how you can
1015use an API token with separate privileges, to limit the token owner's
1016permissions further.
1017
1018Give the user `joe@pve` the role PVEVMAdmin on all VMs:
181db098
FG
1019
1020[source,bash]
9135e321 1021 pveum acl modify /vms -user joe@pve -role PVEVMAdmin
181db098
FG
1022
1023Add a new API token with separate privileges, which is only allowed to view VM
96942248 1024information (for example, for monitoring purposes):
181db098
FG
1025
1026[source,bash]
1027 pveum user token add joe@pve monitoring -privsep 1
9135e321 1028 pveum acl modify /vms -token 'joe@pve!monitoring' -role PVEAuditor
181db098
FG
1029
1030Verify the permissions of the user and token:
1031
1032[source,bash]
1033 pveum user permissions joe@pve
1034 pveum user token permissions joe@pve monitoring
3c8533f2 1035
23b447be
DW
1036Resource Pools
1037~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
3c8533f2 1038
23b447be
DW
1039An enterprise is usually structured into several smaller departments, and it is
1040common that you want to assign resources and delegate management tasks to each
1041of these. Let's assume that you want to set up a pool for a software development
96942248 1042department. First, create a group:
3c8533f2
DM
1043
1044[source,bash]
9135e321 1045 pveum group add developers -comment "Our software developers"
3c8533f2 1046
96942248 1047Now we create a new user which is a member of that group:
3c8533f2
DM
1048
1049[source,bash]
9135e321 1050 pveum user add developer1@pve -group developers -password
3c8533f2 1051
96942248 1052NOTE: The "-password" parameter will prompt you for a password
3c8533f2 1053
96942248 1054Then we create a resource pool for our development department to use:
23b447be
DW
1055
1056[source,bash]
9135e321 1057 pveum pool add dev-pool --comment "IT development pool"
23b447be 1058
96942248 1059Finally, we can assign permissions to that pool:
3c8533f2
DM
1060
1061[source,bash]
9135e321 1062 pveum acl modify /pool/dev-pool/ -group developers -role PVEAdmin
3c8533f2 1063
96942248 1064Our software developers can now administer the resources assigned to
3c8533f2
DM
1065that pool.
1066
1067
1068ifdef::manvolnum[]
1069include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
1070endif::manvolnum[]
1071