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4
sg481na9d21082017-09-23 14:26:06 +00005AAF - Application Authorization Framework
sg481nfaf7f2d2017-09-22 17:17:23 +00006==================================================
Youssef-Chawki5c121c42018-08-20 12:18:37 +02007.. The purpose of AAF (Application Authorization Framework) is to organize software authorizations so that applications, tools and services can match the access needed to perform job functions.
sg481nfaf7f2d2017-09-22 17:17:23 +00008
9AAF is designed to cover Fine-Grained Authorization, meaning that the Authorizations provided are able to used an Application's detailed authorizations, such as whether a user may be on a particular page, or has access to a particular Pub-SUB topic controlled within the App.
10
11This is a critical function for Cloud environments, as Services need to be able to be installed and running in a very short time, and should not be encumbered with local configurations of Users, Permissions and Passwords.
12
13To be effective during a computer transaction, Security must not only be secure, but very fast. Given that each transaction must be checked and validated for Authorization and Authentication, it is critical that all elements on this path perform optimally.
14
15
Instrumentalbbe71542018-05-25 12:29:38 -050016Sections
17++++++++
sg481nfaf7f2d2017-09-22 17:17:23 +000018
19.. toctree::
Instrumental91a983a2018-05-25 13:27:54 -050020 :maxdepth: 1
Instrumentalbbe71542018-05-25 12:29:38 -050021 :glob:
22
Instrumental91a983a2018-05-25 13:27:54 -050023 sections/architecture/index
24 sections/installation/index
25 sections/configuration/index
Instrumental647c1c32018-07-23 16:35:19 -050026 sections/development/index
Instrumental91a983a2018-05-25 13:27:54 -050027 sections/logging
28 sections/release-notes
Youssef-Chawki5c121c42018-08-20 12:18:37 +020029
sg481nfaf7f2d2017-09-22 17:17:23 +000030Introduction
31------------
Youssef-Chawki5c121c42018-08-20 12:18:37 +020032AAF acronym stands for Application Authorization Framework and initially it was focused on “Authorization”, but now supports implementations for both Authentication and Authorization. AAF is a set of Client Libraries (CADI Framework) and RESTful Services that support multiple Authentication Protocols and Fine-Grained Authorization.
33The goal of AAF project is to provide consistent authentication, authorization and security to various ONAP components. AAF organizes software authorizations so that applications, tools and services can match the access needed to perform job functions. AAF is designed to cover Fine-Grained Authorization, meaning that the Authorizations provided are able to use an Application's detailed authorizations, such as whether a user may be on a particular page, or has access to a particular Pub-Sub topic controlled within the App. This is a critical function for Cloud environments, as Services need to be able to be installed and running in a very short time, and should not be encumbered with local configurations of Users, Permissions and Passwords. The sister framework CADI (Code Access Data Identity) allows Java Applications to utilize Identity Authentication methods as plugins. Certificate Manager delivers X509 certificates in support of 2 way x509 TLS.
34
35AAF contains some elements of Role Based Authorization, but includes Attribute Based Authorization elements as well.
36
37Entities within AAF
38-------------------
39
40AAF is an IAM that organizes software authorizations so that applications, tools and services can match the access needed to perform job functions. AAF is more than a typical RBAC. There are Roles, to be sure, but the important Architectural Pattern includes separation of Roles and Permissions.
sg481nfaf7f2d2017-09-22 17:17:23 +000041
sg481n2bc35382017-09-23 15:50:15 +000042|image0|
43
Youssef-Chawki5c121c42018-08-20 12:18:37 +020044.. |image0| image:: sections/architecture/images/aaf-permission-mapping.png
45 :height: 200px
46 :width: 500px
47
48A permission is composed of the following attributes:
49
50* Type: core name of the permission
51* Instance: the object that is being interacted
52* Action: What is happening with this object
53
54All roles, permissions identities of a given module in ONAP is covered by a Namespace (e.g. roles, permission and identities for the APP-C modules of ONAP)
55
56The permissions, having a 3 part definition, make AAF also like an ABAC (A=Attribute).
57Roles, Permissions are stored centrally, but segregated by Application (the proverbial Namespace). The Application Creates Permissions that match their code (for the question "Does User have Permission"). Permissions are granted to Roles, to which the User belongs. AAF is not a Policy Engine, where dynamically based Policies are validated against differing kinds of Data Stores. AAF (Application Authorization Framework) is focused on RealTime Authentication and Authorization
58
59Namespace
60^^^^^^^^^
61A Namespace, in AAF, is the ensemble of Roles, Permissions and Identities. Namespaces are known by domain, example com.onap.dcae or com.onap.appc and they are hierarchically managed. A Namespace is assigned to an application and contains one or more roles and one or more permissions. By default, every namespace has an admin role
62
63**People in Namespaces**
64
65Tasks Owner (Responsible) must do:
66
67* Owners receive by email a notification to Approve
68* Owners also receive notifications of time based activities
69
70 * Periodic Revalidation of Users in Roles in Namespace
71 * Periodic Revalidation of Permission in Namespace to Roles
72
73Admins may:
74
75* Create/Delete/Modify Roles in Namespace
76* Add/Remove Users from Roles in Namespace
77* Create/Delete/Modify Permissions in Namespace
78* Grant/Ungrant Permissions in Namespace to any Role in the company (Cross Company Role Grants are possible, but require approvals from both sides).
79
80Only Namespace Admins may manage Roles/Permissions within a Namespace. The Granting process is One-Way. The Namespace Admins must Grant given Permissions to Roles on request.
81
82
83
84
85Object Model
86^^^^^^^^^^^^
87
88|image1|
89
90.. |image1| image:: sections/architecture/images/aaf-hl-object-model.png
sg481n2bc35382017-09-23 15:50:15 +000091 :height: 600px
92 :width: 800px
sg481nfaf7f2d2017-09-22 17:17:23 +000093
Youssef-Chawki5c121c42018-08-20 12:18:37 +020094Resource Owner in ONAP defines permissions:
95
96* He defines and grants permission to roles
97* Get notified by a mail when an Identity with a Role asks to be granted a permission
98
99
sg481nfaf7f2d2017-09-22 17:17:23 +0000100
101Essential Components
102--------------------
103The core component to deliver this Enterprise Access is a RESTful service, with runtime instances registered in a Cloud Directory (DME2) and backed by a resilient Datastore (Cassandra as of release 1.3)
104
105The Data is managed by RESTful API, with Admin functions supplemented by Character Based User interface and certain GUI elements.
106
Youssef-Chawki5c121c42018-08-20 12:18:37 +0200107CADI Framework
108^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
sg481nfaf7f2d2017-09-22 17:17:23 +0000109
Youssef-Chawki5c121c42018-08-20 12:18:37 +0200110CADI is a framework for providing Enterprise Class Authentication and Authorization with minimal configuration to Containers and Standalone Services
111It is in fact a library used by services to:
sg481nfaf7f2d2017-09-22 17:17:23 +0000112
Youssef-Chawki5c121c42018-08-20 12:18:37 +0200113* Authenticate with one or more Authentication Protocols
114* Authorize in a FINE-GRAINED manner using AAF Components
115
116AAF Components RESTful Services
117^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
118
119Service (primary) All the Authorization information, it is accessible by provided Caching Clients and by specialized plugins:
120
121* Locate how to find ANY OR ALL AAF instances across any geographic distribution
122* OAuth 2.0 new component providing Tokens and Introspection
123* GUI Tool to view and manage Authorization Information, and create Credentials
124* Certman Certificate Manger, create and renew X509 with Fine-Grained Identity
125* FS File Server to provide access to distributable elements (like well known certs)
126* Hello - Test your client access (certs, OAuth 2.0, etc.)
127
128Cassandra as global replicating Data Store
129^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
130
131
132How AAF works
133---------------------
134To understand how AAF works, let's describe its workflow through a high level "three tiered web app" use case:
135
136|image2|
137
138.. |image2| image:: sections/architecture/images/aaf-use-case.png
139 :height: 400px
140 :width: 800px
141
142
1431. Browser client goes to GUI using for instance SSO plugin (or Basic Auth)
1442. App goes directly to a Service using x509 or Basic Auth (or other)
1453. CADI Filter coverts credential to “Principal”. If not in cache, AAF is contacted for Permissions protecting GUI with Service ID/Credential (MechID of App/Pass or X.509 Client Cert (preferred)).
1464. AAF does provide User/Password features, or can be delegated to other credential service via Plugin
1475. If information is not in Service Cache, AAF’s DB is contacted using AAF Service ID/Credential.
1486. Client App uses Permission Attributes delivered by AAF/AAF Cache for protecting sensitive data/functions (using J2EE method).
1497. If not in Cache, Client contacts App Service, using App ID/Credential.
1508. CADI Filter converts App ID/Credential to Principal. If not in cache, contacts with AAF (with App ID/Credential) for Permissions of Client.
1519. App protects data based on Client Permissions.
15210. Component contacts next layer using Service ID/Credential.
15311. If ID or Permissions of AppServer are not in Cache, contact AAF using AAF Security Plugin for Cassandra, which uses AAF Java Client.
15412. Cassandra protects Cluster/Keyspace/ColumnFamily w/Permissions.
155
156