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1[[chapter_user_management]]
2ifdef::manvolnum[]
3pveum(1)
4========
5:pve-toplevel:
6
7NAME
8----
9
10pveum - Proxmox VE User Manager
11
12
13SYNOPSIS
14--------
15
16include::pveum.1-synopsis.adoc[]
17
18
19DESCRIPTION
20-----------
21endif::manvolnum[]
22ifndef::manvolnum[]
23User Management
24===============
25:pve-toplevel:
26endif::manvolnum[]
27
28// Copied from pve wiki: Revision as of 16:10, 27 October 2015
29
30Proxmox VE supports multiple authentication sources, e.g. Linux PAM,
31an integrated Proxmox VE authentication server, LDAP, Microsoft Active
32Directory.
33
34By using the role based user- and permission management for all
35objects (VMs, storages, nodes, etc.) granular access can be defined.
36
37
38[[pveum_users]]
39Users
40-----
41
42{pve} stores user attributes in `/etc/pve/user.cfg`.
43Passwords are not stored here, users are instead associated with
44<<pveum_authentication_realms,authentication realms>> described below.
45Therefore a user is internally often identified by its name and
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
54* An optional Expiration date
55* A comment or note about this user
56* Whether this user is enabled or disabled
57* Optional two factor authentication keys
58
59
60System administrator
61~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
62
63The system's root user can always log in via the Linux PAM realm and is an
64unconfined administrator. This user cannot be deleted, but attributes can
65still be changed and system mails will be sent to the email address
66assigned to this user.
67
68
69[[pveum_groups]]
70Groups
71~~~~~~
72
73Each user can be member of several groups. Groups are the preferred
74way to organize access permissions. You should always grant permission
75to groups instead of using individual users. That way you will get a
76much shorter access control list which is easier to handle.
77
78
79[[pveum_authentication_realms]]
80Authentication Realms
81---------------------
82
83As {pve} users are just counterparts for users existing on some external
84realm, the realms have to be configured in `/etc/pve/domains.cfg`.
85The following realms (authentication methods) are available:
86
87Linux PAM standard authentication::
88In this case a system user has to exist (e.g. created via the `adduser`
89command) on all nodes the user is allowed to login, and the user
90authenticates with their usual system password.
91+
92[source,bash]
93----
94useradd heinz
95passwd heinz
96groupadd watchman
97usermod -a -G watchman heinz
98----
99
100Proxmox VE authentication server::
101This is a unix like password store (`/etc/pve/priv/shadow.cfg`).
102Password are encrypted using the SHA-256 hash method.
103This is the most convenient method for small (or even medium)
104installations where users do not need access to anything outside of
105{pve}. In this case users are fully managed by {pve} and are able to
106change their own passwords via the GUI.
107
108LDAP::
109It is possible to authenticate users via an LDAP server (e.g.
110openldap). The server and an optional fallback server can be
111configured and the connection can be encrypted via SSL.
112+
113Users are searched under a 'Base Domain Name' (`base_dn`), with the
114user name found in the attribute specified in the 'User Attribute Name'
115(`user_attr`) field.
116+
117For instance, if a user is represented via the
118following ldif dataset:
119+
120----
121# user1 of People at ldap-test.com
122dn: uid=user1,ou=People,dc=ldap-test,dc=com
123objectClass: top
124objectClass: person
125objectClass: organizationalPerson
126objectClass: inetOrgPerson
127uid: user1
128cn: Test User 1
129sn: Testers
130description: This is the first test user.
131----
132+
133The 'Base Domain Name' would be `ou=People,dc=ldap-test,dc=com` and the user
134attribute would be `uid`.
135+
136If {pve} needs to authenticate (bind) to the ldap server before being
137able to query and authenticate users, a bind domain name can be
138configured via the `bind_dn` property in `/etc/pve/domains.cfg`. Its
139password then has to be stored in `/etc/pve/priv/ldap/<realmname>.pw`
140(e.g. `/etc/pve/priv/ldap/my-ldap.pw`). This file should contain a
141single line containing the raw password.
142
143Microsoft Active Directory::
144
145A server and authentication domain need to be specified. Like with
146ldap an optional fallback server, optional port, and SSL
147encryption can be configured.
148
149
150Two factor authentication
151-------------------------
152
153Each realm can optionally be secured additionally by two factor
154authentication. This can be done by selecting one of the available methods
155via the 'TFA' dropdown box when adding or editing an Authentication Realm.
156When a realm has TFA enabled it becomes a requirement and only users with
157configured TFA will be able to login.
158
159Currently there are two methods available:
160
161Time based OATH (TOTP)::
162This uses the standard HMAC-SHA1 algorithm where the current time is hashed
163with the user's configured key. The time step and password length
164parameters are configured.
165+
166A user can have multiple keys configured (separated by spaces), and the
167keys can be specified in Base32 (RFC3548) or hexadecimal notation.
168+
169{pve} provides a key generation tool (`oathkeygen`) which prints out a
170random key in Base32 notation which can be used directly with various OTP
171tools, such as the `oathtool` command line tool, the Google authenticator
172or FreeOTP Android apps.
173
174YubiKey OTP::
175For authenticating via a YubiKey a Yubico API ID, API KEY and validation
176server URL must be configured, and users must have a YubiKey available. In
177order to get the key ID from a YubiKey, you can trigger the YubiKey once
178after connecting it to USB and copy the first 12 characters of the typed
179password into the user's 'Key IDs' field.
180+
181Please refer to the
182https://developers.yubico.com/OTP/[YubiKey OTP] documentation for how to use the
183https://www.yubico.com/products/services-software/yubicloud/[YubiCloud] or
184https://developers.yubico.com/Software_Projects/YubiKey_OTP/YubiCloud_Validation_Servers/[
185host your own verification server].
186
187
188[[pveum_permission_management]]
189Permission Management
190---------------------
191
192In order for a user to perform an action (such as listing, modifying or
193deleting a parts of a VM configuration), the user needs to have the
194appropriate permissions.
195
196{pve} uses a role and path based permission management system. An entry in
197the permissions table allows a user or group to take on a specific role
198when accessing an 'object' or 'path'. This means an such an access rule can
199be represented as a triple of '(path, user, role)' or '(path, group,
200role)', with the role containing a set of allowed actions, and the path
201representing the target of these actions.
202
203
204[[pveum_roles]]
205Roles
206~~~~~
207
208A role is simply a list of privileges. Proxmox VE comes with a number
209of predefined roles which satisfies most needs.
210
211* `Administrator`: has all privileges
212* `NoAccess`: has no privileges (used to forbid access)
213* `PVEAdmin`: can do most things, but miss rights to modify system settings (`Sys.PowerMgmt`, `Sys.Modify`, `Realm.Allocate`).
214* `PVEAuditor`: read only access
215* `PVEDatastoreAdmin`: create and allocate backup space and templates
216* `PVEDatastoreUser`: allocate backup space and view storage
217* `PVEPoolAdmin`: allocate pools
218* `PVESysAdmin`: User ACLs, audit, system console and system logs
219* `PVETemplateUser`: view and clone templates
220* `PVEUserAdmin`: user administration
221* `PVEVMAdmin`: fully administer VMs
222* `PVEVMUser`: view, backup, config CDROM, VM console, VM power management
223
224You can see the whole set of predefined roles on the GUI.
225
226Adding new roles can be done via both GUI and the command line, like
227this:
228
229[source,bash]
230----
231pveum roleadd PVE_Power-only -privs "VM.PowerMgmt VM.Console"
232pveum roleadd Sys_Power-only -privs "Sys.PowerMgmt Sys.Console"
233----
234
235
236Privileges
237~~~~~~~~~~
238
239A privilege is the right to perform a specific action. To simplify
240management, lists of privileges are grouped into roles, which can then
241be used in the permission table. Note that privileges cannot directly be
242assigned to users and paths without being part of a role.
243
244We currently use the following privileges:
245
246Node / System related privileges::
247
248* `Permissions.Modify`: modify access permissions
249* `Sys.PowerMgmt`: Node power management (start, stop, reset, shutdown, ...)
250* `Sys.Console`: console access to Node
251* `Sys.Syslog`: view Syslog
252* `Sys.Audit`: view node status/config, Corosync cluster config and HA config
253* `Sys.Modify`: create/remove/modify node network parameters
254* `Group.Allocate`: create/remove/modify groups
255* `Pool.Allocate`: create/remove/modify a pool
256* `Realm.Allocate`: create/remove/modify authentication realms
257* `Realm.AllocateUser`: assign user to a realm
258* `User.Modify`: create/remove/modify user access and details.
259
260Virtual machine related privileges::
261
262* `VM.Allocate`: create/remove new VM to server inventory
263* `VM.Migrate`: migrate VM to alternate server on cluster
264* `VM.PowerMgmt`: power management (start, stop, reset, shutdown, ...)
265* `VM.Console`: console access to VM
266* `VM.Monitor`: access to VM monitor (kvm)
267* `VM.Backup`: backup/restore VMs
268* `VM.Audit`: view VM config
269* `VM.Clone`: clone/copy a VM
270* `VM.Config.Disk`: add/modify/delete Disks
271* `VM.Config.CDROM`: eject/change CDROM
272* `VM.Config.CPU`: modify CPU settings
273* `VM.Config.Memory`: modify Memory settings
274* `VM.Config.Network`: add/modify/delete Network devices
275* `VM.Config.HWType`: modify emulated HW type
276* `VM.Config.Options`: modify any other VM configuration
277* `VM.Snapshot`: create/remove VM snapshots
278
279Storage related privileges::
280
281* `Datastore.Allocate`: create/remove/modify a data store, delete volumes
282* `Datastore.AllocateSpace`: allocate space on a datastore
283* `Datastore.AllocateTemplate`: allocate/upload templates and iso images
284* `Datastore.Audit`: view/browse a datastore
285
286
287Objects and Paths
288~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
289
290Access permissions are assigned to objects, such as a virtual machines,
291storages or pools of resources.
292We use file system like paths to address these objects. These paths form a
293natural tree, and permissions of higher levels (shorter path) can
294optionally be propagated down within this hierarchy.
295
296[[pveum_templated_paths]]
297Paths can be templated. When an API call requires permissions on a
298templated path, the path may contain references to parameters of the API
299call. These references are specified in curly braces. Some parameters are
300implicitly taken from the API call's URI. For instance the permission path
301`/nodes/{node}` when calling '/nodes/mynode/status' requires permissions on
302`/nodes/mynode`, while the path `{path}` in a PUT request to `/access/acl`
303refers to the method's `path` parameter.
304
305Some examples are:
306
307* `/nodes/{node}`: Access to {pve} server machines
308* `/vms`: Covers all VMs
309* `/vms/{vmid}`: Access to specific VMs
310* `/storage/{storeid}`: Access to a storages
311* `/pool/{poolname}`: Access to VMs part of a <<pveum_pools,pool>>
312* `/access/groups`: Group administration
313* `/access/realms/{realmid}`: Administrative access to realms
314
315
316Inheritance
317^^^^^^^^^^^
318
319As mentioned earlier, object paths form a file system like tree, and
320permissions can be inherited down that tree (the propagate flag is set
321by default). We use the following inheritance rules:
322
323* Permissions for individual users always replace group permissions.
324* Permissions for groups apply when the user is member of that group.
325* Permissions replace the ones inherited from an upper level.
326
327
328[[pveum_pools]]
329Pools
330~~~~~
331
332Pools can be used to group a set of virtual machines and data
333stores. You can then simply set permissions on pools (`/pool/{poolid}`),
334which are inherited to all pool members. This is a great way simplify
335access control.
336
337
338What permission do I need?
339~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
340
341The required API permissions are documented for each individual
342method, and can be found at http://pve.proxmox.com/pve-docs/api-viewer/
343
344The permissions are specified as a list which can be interpreted as a
345tree of logic and access-check functions:
346
347`["and", <subtests>...]` and `["or", <subtests>...]`::
348Each(`and`) or any(`or`) further element in the current list has to be true.
349
350`["perm", <path>, [ <privileges>... ], <options>...]`::
351The `path` is a templated parameter (see
352<<pveum_templated_paths,Objects and Paths>>). All (or , if the `any`
353option is used, any) of the listed
354privileges must be allowed on the specified path. If a `require-param`
355option is specified, then its specified parameter is required even if the
356API call's schema otherwise lists it as being optional.
357
358`["userid-group", [ <privileges>... ], <options>...]`::
359The caller must have any of the listed privileges on `/access/groups`. In
360addition there are two possible checks depending on whether the
361`groups_param` option is set:
362+
363* `groups_param` is set: The API call has a non-optional `groups` parameter
364and the caller must have any of the listed privileges on all of the listed
365groups.
366* `groups_param` is not set: The user passed via the `userid` parameter
367must exist and be part of a group on which the caller has any of the listed
368privileges (via the `/access/groups/<group>` path).
369
370`["userid-param", "self"]`::
371The value provided for the API call's `userid` parameter must refer to the
372user performing the action. (Usually in conjunction with `or`, to allow
373users to perform an action on themselves even if they don't have elevated
374privileges.)
375
376`["userid-param", "Realm.AllocateUser"]`::
377The user needs `Realm.AllocateUser` access to `/access/realm/<realm>`, with
378`<realm>` referring to the realm of the user passed via the `userid`
379parameter. Note that the user does not need to exist in order to be
380associated with a realm, since user IDs are passed in the form of
381`<username>@<realm>`.
382
383`["perm-modify", <path>]`::
384The `path` is a templated parameter (see
385<<pveum_templated_paths,Objects and Paths>>). The user needs either the
386`Permissions.Modify` privilege, or,
387depending on the path, the following privileges as a possible substitute:
388+
389* `/storage/...`: additionally requires 'Datastore.Allocate`
390* `/vms/...`: additionally requires 'VM.Allocate`
391* `/pool/...`: additionally requires 'Pool.Allocate`
392+
393If the path is empty, `Permission.Modify` on `/access` is required.
394
395Command Line Tool
396-----------------
397
398Most users will simply use the GUI to manage users. But there is also
399a full featured command line tool called `pveum` (short for ``**P**roxmox
400**VE** **U**ser **M**anager''). Please note that all Proxmox VE command
401line tools are wrappers around the API, so you can also access those
402function through the REST API.
403
404Here are some simple usage examples. To show help type:
405
406[source,bash]
407 pveum
408
409or (to show detailed help about a specific command)
410
411[source,bash]
412 pveum help useradd
413
414Create a new user:
415
416[source,bash]
417 pveum useradd testuser@pve -comment "Just a test"
418
419Set or Change the password (not all realms support that):
420
421[source,bash]
422 pveum passwd testuser@pve
423
424Disable a user:
425
426[source,bash]
427 pveum usermod testuser@pve -enable 0
428
429Create a new group:
430
431[source,bash]
432 pveum groupadd testgroup
433
434Create a new role:
435
436[source,bash]
437 pveum roleadd PVE_Power-only -privs "VM.PowerMgmt VM.Console"
438
439
440Real World Examples
441-------------------
442
443
444Administrator Group
445~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
446
447One of the most wanted features was the ability to define a group of
448users with full administrator rights (without using the root account).
449
450Define the group:
451
452[source,bash]
453 pveum groupadd admin -comment "System Administrators"
454
455Then add the permission:
456
457[source,bash]
458 pveum aclmod / -group admin -role Administrator
459
460You can finally add users to the new 'admin' group:
461
462[source,bash]
463 pveum usermod testuser@pve -group admin
464
465
466Auditors
467~~~~~~~~
468
469You can give read only access to users by assigning the `PVEAuditor`
470role to users or groups.
471
472Example1: Allow user `joe@pve` to see everything
473
474[source,bash]
475 pveum aclmod / -user joe@pve -role PVEAuditor
476
477Example1: Allow user `joe@pve` to see all virtual machines
478
479[source,bash]
480 pveum aclmod /vms -user joe@pve -role PVEAuditor
481
482
483Delegate User Management
484~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
485
486If you want to delegate user management to user `joe@pve` you can do
487that with:
488
489[source,bash]
490 pveum aclmod /access -user joe@pve -role PVEUserAdmin
491
492User `joe@pve` can now add and remove users, change passwords and
493other user attributes. This is a very powerful role, and you most
494likely want to limit that to selected realms and groups. The following
495example allows `joe@pve` to modify users within realm `pve` if they
496are members of group `customers`:
497
498[source,bash]
499 pveum aclmod /access/realm/pve -user joe@pve -role PVEUserAdmin
500 pveum aclmod /access/groups/customers -user joe@pve -role PVEUserAdmin
501
502NOTE: The user is able to add other users, but only if they are
503members of group `customers` and within realm `pve`.
504
505
506Pools
507~~~~~
508
509An enterprise is usually structured into several smaller departments,
510and it is common that you want to assign resources to them and
511delegate management tasks. A pool is simply a set of virtual machines
512and data stores. You can create pools on the GUI. After that you can
513add resources to the pool (VMs, Storage).
514
515You can also assign permissions to the pool. Those permissions are
516inherited to all pool members.
517
518Lets assume you have a software development department, so we first
519create a group
520
521[source,bash]
522 pveum groupadd developers -comment "Our software developers"
523
524Now we create a new user which is a member of that group
525
526[source,bash]
527 pveum useradd developer1@pve -group developers -password
528
529NOTE: The -password parameter will prompt you for a password
530
531I assume we already created a pool called ``dev-pool'' on the GUI. So we can now assign permission to that pool:
532
533[source,bash]
534 pveum aclmod /pool/dev-pool/ -group developers -role PVEAdmin
535
536Our software developers can now administrate the resources assigned to
537that pool.
538
539
540ifdef::manvolnum[]
541include::pve-copyright.adoc[]
542endif::manvolnum[]
543