Set up administrative authentication
To manage administrative access to your InfluxDB cluster, integrate your cluster with an OAuth 2.0 identity provider. Use your identity provider to create OAuth2 accounts for all users who need administrative access to your InfluxDB cluster. Administrative access lets users perform actions like creating databases and database tokens (which provide read and write access to databases).
- Identity provider requirements
- Identity provider credentials
- Set up your identity provider
- Configure your cluster to connect to your identity provider
- Apply your configuration changes
- Configure influxctl
- Test your authorization flow
InfluxData has tested with the following identity providers, but any provider that meets the requirements should work:
Identity providers can be deployed with your InfluxDB cluster or run externally. If you choose to deploy your provider with your InfluxDB cluster, the process outlined below should be done after your initial InfluxDB cluster deployment.
Identity provider requirements
To integrate an identity provider with your InfluxDB Cluster, it must meet the following requirements:
- Supports OAuth 2.0
- Supports Device Authorization Flow
Identity provider credentials
To access the OAuth2 server, InfluxDB requires the following OAuth2 connection credentials:
- Client ID
- JWKS endpoint
- Device authorization endpoint
- Token endpoint
Set up your identity provider
Setup instructions are provided for the following:
Keycloak
To use Keycloak as your identity provider:
- Create a Keycloak realm
- Create a Keycloak client with device flow enabled
- Create users that need administrative access to your InfluxDB cluster
- Configure InfluxDB Clustered to use Keycloak
Create a Keycloak realm
See Creating a realm in the Keycloak documentation.
Create a Keycloak client with device flow enabled
-
In the Keycloak Admin Console, navigate to Clients and then click Create Client.
-
In the General Settings configuration step:
- Set the Client type to OpenID Connect.
- Enter a Client ID, Save your client ID to be used later.
- Optional: Enter a Name and Description for the client.
- Click Next.
-
In the Capability configuration step, enable the OAuth 2.0 Device Authorization Grant authentication flow, and then click Next.
-
In the Login settings step, you don’t need to change anything. Click Save.
Create users
See Creating users in the Keycloak documentation.
Find user IDs with Keycloak
To find the user IDs with Keycloak, use the Keycloak Admin Console or the Keycloak REST API.
Keycloak Admin Console
- In the Keycloak Admin Console, navigate to your realm
- Select Users in the left navigation.
- Select the user you want to find the ID for.
- Select the Details tab. The user ID is listed here.
Keycloak REST API
Send a GET request to the Keycloak REST API /users
endpoint to fetch
the ID of a specific user. Provide the following:
- Query parameters
- username: Username to retrieve information about
curl https://KEYCLOAK_HOST/auth/admin/realms/KEYCLOAK_REALM/users?username=KEYCLOAK_USERNAME
Replace the following:
KEYCLOAK_HOST
: the Keycloak host and port (host:port
)KEYCLOAK_REALM
: the Keycloak realmKEYCLOAK_USERNAME
: the Keycloak username to retrieve
Configure InfluxDB Clustered to use Keycloak
Run the following command to retrieve a JSON object that contains the OpenID configuration of your Keycloak realm:
curl https://KEYCLOAK_HOST/realms/KEYCLOAK_REALM/.well-known/openid-configuration
The following are important fields in the JSON object that are necessary to connect your InfluxDB cluster and administrative tools to Keycloak:
- jwks_uri: Used in your InfluxDB cluster configuration file. See Configure your cluster to connect to your identity provider.
- device_authorization_endpoint: Used in your
influxctl
configuration file (profile.auth.oauth2.device_url
) - token_endpoint: Used in your
influxctl
configuration file (profile.auth.oauth2.token_url
)
Microsoft Entra ID
To use Microsoft Entra ID as your identity provider:
- Create a new tenant in Microsoft Entra ID
- Add users that need administrative access to your InfluxDB cluster
- Register a new application with device code flow enabled
- Configure InfluxDB Clustered to use Microsoft Entra ID
Create a new tenant in Microsoft Entra ID
See Create a new tenant in Microsoft Entra ID in the Microsoft Azure documentation. Copy and store your Microsoft Entra Tenant ID.
Add users that need administrative access to your InfluxDB cluster
See Add or delete users in the Microsoft Azure documentation.
Find user IDs with Microsoft Entra ID
For Microsoft Entra ID, the unique user ID is the Microsoft ObjectId (OID). To download a list of user OIDs:
- In the Microsoft Azure Portal, select Users in the left navigation.
- Select users you want OIDs for and click Download Users.
In the downloaded CSV file, user OIDs are provided in the id
column.
Register a new application with device code flow enabled
- In the Microsoft Azure Portal, select App Registrations in the left navigation.
- Click New Registration and enter a name for a new application to handle authentication requests.
- Click Register Application. Copy and store your Application (Client) ID.
- In your registered application, click Authentication in the left navigation.
- Under Advanced Settings, set Allow public client flows to Yes. This enables the use of the device code flow for logging in to your InfluxDB cluster.
Configure InfluxDB Clustered to use Microsoft Entra ID
Use the following command to retrieve a JSON object that contains the OpenID configuration of your Microsoft Entra tenant:
curl https://login.microsoftonline.com/AZURE_TENANT_ID/v2.0/.well-known/openid-configuration
Replace AZURE_TENANT_ID
with your Microsoft Entra tenant ID.
The following are important fields in the JSON object that are necessary to connect your InfluxDB cluster and administrative tools to Keycloak:
- jwks_uri: Used in your InfluxDB cluster configuration file. See Configure your cluster to connect to your identity provider.
- device_authorization_endpoint: Used in your
influxctl
configuration file (profile.auth.oauth2.device_url
) - token_endpoint: Used in your
influxctl
configuration file (profile.auth.oauth2.token_url
)
Configure your cluster to connect to your identity provider
To connect your InfluxDB cluster to your OAuth2 provider, update your
AppInstance
resource with the required credentials. Modify your AppInstance
resource directly or, if using the
InfluxDB Clustered Helm chart,
update your values.yaml
.
Provide values for the following fields in your AppInstance
resource:
spec.package.spec.admin
identityProvider
: Identity provider name. If using Microsoft Entra ID (formerly Azure Active Directory), set the name toazure
.jwksEndpoint
: JWKS endpoint provide by your identity provider.users
: List of OAuth2 users to grant administrative access to your InfluxDB cluster. IDs are provided by your identity provider.
Below are examples for Keycloak, Auth0, and Microsoft Entra ID, but other OAuth2 providers should work as well:
apiVersion: kubecfg.dev/v1alpha1
kind: AppInstance
# ...
spec:
package:
spec:
admin:
identityProvider: keycloak
jwksEndpoint: |-
https://KEYCLOAK_HOST/auth/realms/KEYCLOAK_REALM/protocol/openid-connect/certs
users:
# All fields are required but `firstName`, `lastName`, and `email` can be
# arbitrary values. However, `id` must match the user ID provided by Keycloak.
- id: KEYCLOAK_USER_ID
firstName: Marty
lastName: McFly
email: mcfly@influxdata.com
Replace the following:
KEYCLOAK_HOST
: Host and port of your Keycloak serverKEYCLOAK_REALM
: Keycloak realmKEYCLOAK_USER_ID
: Keycloak user ID to grant InfluxDB administrative access to
apiVersion: kubecfg.dev/v1alpha1
kind: AppInstance
# ...
spec:
package:
spec:
admin:
identityProvider: auth0
jwksEndpoint: |-
https://AUTH0_HOST/.well-known/openid-configuration
users:
# All fields are required but `firstName`, `lastName`, and `email` can be
# arbitrary values. However, `id` must match the user ID provided by Auth0.
- id: AUTH0_USER_ID
firstName: Marty
lastName: McFly
email: mcfly@influxdata.com
Replace the following:
AUTH0_HOST
: Host and port of your Auth0 serverAUTH0_USER_ID
: Auth0 user ID to grant InfluxDB administrative access to
apiVersion: kubecfg.dev/v1alpha1
kind: AppInstance
# ...
spec:
package:
spec:
admin:
identityProvider: azure
jwksEndpoint: |-
https://login.microsoftonline.com/AZURE_TENANT_ID/discovery/v2.0/keys
users:
# All fields are required but `firstName`, `lastName`, and `email` can be
# arbitrary values. However, `id` must match the user ID provided by Auth0.
- id: AZURE_USER_ID
firstName: Marty
lastName: McFly
email: mcfly@influxdata.com
Replace the following:
AZURE_TENANT_ID
: Microsoft Entra tenant IDAZURE_USER_ID
: Microsoft Entra user ID to grant InfluxDB administrative access to (See Find user IDs with Microsoft Entra ID)
Provide values for the following fields in your values.yaml
:
admin
identityProvider
: Identity provider name. If using Microsoft Entra ID (formerly Azure Active Directory), set the name toazure
.jwksEndpoint
: JWKS endpoint provide by your identity provider.users
: List of OAuth2 users to grant administrative access to your InfluxDB cluster. IDs are provided by your identity provider.
Below are examples for Keycloak, Auth0, and Microsoft Entra ID, but other OAuth2 providers should work as well:
admin:
# The identity provider to be used e.g. "keycloak", "auth0", "azure", etc
# Note for Azure Active Directory it must be exactly "azure"
identityProvider: keycloak
# The JWKS endpoint provided by the Identity Provider
jwksEndpoint: |-
https://KEYCLOAK_HOST/auth/realms/KEYCLOAK_REALM/protocol/openid-connect/certs
# The list of users to grant access to Clustered via influxctl
users:
# All fields are required but `firstName`, `lastName`, and `email` can be
# arbitrary values. However, `id` must match the user ID provided by Keycloak.
- id: KEYCLOAK_USER_ID
firstName: Marty
lastName: McFly
email: mcfly@influxdata.com
Replace the following:
KEYCLOAK_HOST
: Host and port of your Keycloak serverKEYCLOAK_REALM
: Keycloak realmKEYCLOAK_USER_ID
: Keycloak user ID to grant InfluxDB administrative access to
admin:
# The identity provider to be used e.g. "keycloak", "auth0", "azure", etc
# Note for Azure Active Directory it must be exactly "azure"
identityProvider: auth0
# The JWKS endpoint provided by the Identity Provider
jwksEndpoint: |-
https://AUTH0_HOST/.well-known/openid-configuration
# The list of users to grant access to Clustered via influxctl
users:
# All fields are required but `firstName`, `lastName`, and `email` can be
# arbitrary values. However, `id` must match the user ID provided by Auth0.
- id: AUTH0_USER_ID
firstName: Marty
lastName: McFly
email: mcfly@influxdata.com
Replace the following:
AUTH0_HOST
: Host and port of your Auth0 serverAUTH0_USER_ID
: Auth0 user ID to grant InfluxDB administrative access to
admin:
# The identity provider to be used e.g. "keycloak", "auth0", "azure", etc
# Note for Azure Active Directory it must be exactly "azure"
identityProvider: azure
# The JWKS endpoint provided by the Identity Provider
jwksEndpoint: |-
https://login.microsoftonline.com/AZURE_TENANT_ID/discovery/v2.0/keys
# The list of users to grant access to Clustered via influxctl
users:
# All fields are required but `firstName`, `lastName`, and `email` can be
# arbitrary values. However, `id` must match the user ID provided by Auth0.
- id: AZURE_USER_ID
firstName: Marty
lastName: McFly
email: mcfly@influxdata.com
Replace the following:
AZURE_TENANT_ID
: Microsoft Entra tenant IDAZURE_USER_ID
: Microsoft Entra user ID to grant InfluxDB administrative access to (See Find user IDs with Microsoft Entra ID)
For more information about managing users in your InfluxDB Cluster, see Manage users.
Apply your configuration changes
Use kubectl
or helm
to apply your configuration changes and connect your
InfluxDB cluster to your identity provider.
kubectl apply \
--filename myinfluxdb.yml \
--namespace influxdb
helm upgrade \
influxdata/influxdb3-clustered \
-f ./values.yml \
--namespace influxdb
Configure influxctl
The influxctl
CLI lets you
perform administrative actions such as creating databases or database tokens.
All influxctl
commands are first authorized using your identity provider.
Update your influxctl
configuration file
to connect to your identity provider.
The following examples show how to configure influxctl
for various identity providers:
[[profile]]
name = "default"
product = "clustered"
host = "cluster-host.com" # InfluxDB cluster host
port = "8086" # InfluxDB cluster port
[profile.auth.oauth2]
client_id = "KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_ID"
device_url = "https://KEYCLOAK_HOST/realms/KEYCLOAK_REALM/protocol/openid-connect/auth/device"
token_url = "https://KEYCLOAK_HOST/realms/KEYCLOAK_REALM/protocol/openid-connect/token"
[[profile]]
name = "default"
product = "clustered"
host = "cluster-host.com" # InfluxDB cluster host
port = "8086" # InfluxDB cluster port
[profile.auth.oauth2]
client_id = "AUTH0_CLIENT_ID"
client_secret = "AUTH0_CLIENT_SECRET"
device_url = "https://AUTH0_HOST/oauth/device/code"
token_url = "https://AUTH0_HOST/oauth/token"
[[profile]]
name = "default"
product = "clustered"
host = "cluster-host.com" # InfluxDB cluster host
port = "8086" # InfluxDB cluster port
[profile.auth.oauth2]
client_id = "AZURE_CLIENT_ID"
scopes = ["AZURE_CLIENT_ID/.default"]
device_url = "https://login.microsoftonline.com/AZURE_TENANT_ID/oauth2/v2.0/devicecode"
token_url = "https://login.microsoftonline.com/AZURE_TENANT_ID/oauth2/v2.0/token"
Refresh your admin token
In preparation for moving into production, we strongly recommend revoking your cluster’s admin token used to authorize with your cluster in the earlier phases of the InfluxDB Clustered installation process and generate a new admin token.
For detailed instructions, see Revoke an admin token.
Test your authorization flow
To test your identity provider integration and ensure administrative access is
correctly authorized, run any influxctl
command that
requires administrative authentication–for example:
influxctl token list
Before executing, the command directs you to authorize with your identity provider. After you authorize successfully, the command runs and returns results. successfully.
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Thank you for being part of our community! We welcome and encourage your feedback and bug reports for InfluxDB and this documentation. To find support, use the following resources:
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