[#183] Unlink API.md to README file
This is useful for auto-generated document tools which parse docs dir. Signed-off-by: Alex Vanin <a.vanin@yadro.com>
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4 changed files with 148 additions and 139 deletions
139
README.md
139
README.md
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@ -217,41 +217,8 @@ Also, in case of downloading, you need to have a file inside a container.
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### NNS
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In all download/upload routes you can use container name instead of its id (`$CID`).
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Read more about it in [docs/nns.md](./docs/nns.md).
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Steps to start using name resolving:
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1. Enable NNS resolving in config (`rpc_endpoint` must be a valid neo rpc node, see [configs](./config) for other examples):
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```yaml
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rpc_endpoint: http://morph-chain.frostfs.devenv:30333
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resolve_order:
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- nns
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```
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2. Make sure your container is registered in NNS contract. If you use [frostfs-dev-env](https://git.frostfs.info/TrueCloudLab/frostfs-dev-env)
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you can check if your container (e.g. with `container-name` name) is registered in NNS:
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```shell
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$ curl -s --data '{"id":1,"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"getcontractstate","params":[1]}' \
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http://morph-chain.frostfs.devenv:30333 | jq -r '.result.hash'
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0x8e6c3cd4b976b28e84a3788f6ea9e2676c15d667
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$ docker exec -it morph_chain neo-go \
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contract testinvokefunction \
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-r http://morph-chain.frostfs.devenv:30333 0x8e6c3cd4b976b28e84a3788f6ea9e2676c15d667 \
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resolve string:container-name.container int:16 \
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| jq -r '.stack[0].value | if type=="array" then .[0].value else . end' \
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| base64 -d && echo
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7f3vvkw4iTiS5ZZbu5BQXEmJtETWbi3uUjLNaSs29xrL
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```
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3. Use container name instead of its `$CID`. For example:
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```shell
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$ curl http://localhost:8082/get_by_attribute/container-name/FileName/object-name
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```
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#### Create a container
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@ -462,109 +429,7 @@ object ID, like this:
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#### Authentication
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You can always upload files to public containers (open for anyone to put
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objects into), but for restricted containers you need to explicitly allow PUT
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operations for a request signed with your HTTP Gateway keys.
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If you don't want to manage gateway's secret keys and adjust policies when
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gateway configuration changes (new gate, key rotation, etc) or you plan to use
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public services, there is an option to let your application backend (or you) to
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issue Bearer Tokens and pass them from the client via gate down to FrostFS level
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to grant access.
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FrostFS Bearer Token basically is a container owner-signed policy (refer to FrostFS
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documentation for more details). There are two options to pass them to gateway:
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* "Authorization" header with "Bearer" type and base64-encoded token in
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credentials field
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* "Bearer" cookie with base64-encoded token contents
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For example, you have a mobile application frontend with a backend part storing
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data in FrostFS. When a user authorizes in the mobile app, the backend issues a FrostFS
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Bearer token and provides it to the frontend. Then, the mobile app may generate
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some data and upload it via any available FrostFS HTTP Gateway by adding
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the corresponding header to the upload request. Accessing policy protected data
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works the same way.
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##### Example
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In order to generate a bearer token, you need to have wallet (which will be used to sign the token)
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1. Suppose you have a container with private policy for wallet key
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```
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$ frostfs-cli container create -r <endpoint> --wallet <wallet> -policy <policy> --basic-acl 0 --await
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CID: 9dfzyvq82JnFqp5svxcREf2iy6XNuifYcJPusEDnGK9Z
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$ frostfs-cli ape-manager add -r <endpoint> --wallet <wallet> \
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--target-type container --target-name 9dfzyvq82JnFqp5svxcREf2iy6XNuifYcJPusEDnGK9Z \
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--rule "allow Object.* RequestCondition:"\$Actor:publicKey"=03b09baabff3f6107c7e9acb8721a6fc5618d45b50247a314d82e548702cce8cd5 *" \
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--chain-id <chainID>
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```
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2. Form a Bearer token (10000 is lifetime expiration in epoch) to impersonate
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HTTP Gateway request as wallet signed request and save it to **bearer.json**:
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```
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{
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"body": {
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"allowImpersonate": true,
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"lifetime": {
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"exp": "10000",
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"nbf": "0",
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"iat": "0"
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}
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},
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"signature": null
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}
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```
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3. Sign it with the wallet:
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```
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$ frostfs-cli util sign bearer-token --from bearer.json --to signed.json -w <wallet>
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```
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4. Encode to base64 to use in header:
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```
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$ base64 -w 0 signed.json
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# output: Ck4KKgoECAIQBhIiCiCZGdlbN7DPGPMg9rsWqV+p2XdMzUqknRiexewSFp8kmBIbChk17MUri6OJ0X5ftsHzy7NERDNFB4C92PcaGgMIkE4SZgohAxpsb7vfAso1F0X6hrm6WpRS14WsT3/Ct1SMoqRsT89KEkEEGxKi8GjKSf52YqhppgaOTQHbUsL3jn7SHLqS3ndAQ7NtAATnmRHleZw2V2xRRSRBQdjDC05KK83LhdSax72Fsw==
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```
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After that, the Bearer token can be used:
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```
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$ curl -F 'file=@cat.jpeg;filename=cat.jpeg' -H "Authorization: Bearer Ck4KKgoECAIQBhIiCiCZGdlbN7DPGPMg9rsWqV+p2XdMzUqknRiexewSFp8kmBIbChk17MUri6OJ0X5ftsHzy7NERDNFB4C92PcaGgMIkE4SZgohAxpsb7vfAso1F0X6hrm6WpRS14WsT3/Ct1SMoqRsT89KEkEEGxKi8GjKSf52YqhppgaOTQHbUsL3jn7SHLqS3ndAQ7NtAATnmRHleZw2V2xRRSRBQdjDC05KK83LhdSax72Fsw==" \
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http://localhost:8082/upload/BJeErH9MWmf52VsR1mLWKkgF3pRm3FkubYxM7TZkBP4K
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# output:
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# {
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# "object_id": "DhfES9nVrFksxGDD2jQLunGADfrXExxNwqXbDafyBn9X",
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# "container_id": "BJeErH9MWmf52VsR1mLWKkgF3pRm3FkubYxM7TZkBP4K"
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# }
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```
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##### Note: Bearer Token owner
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You can specify exact key who can use Bearer Token (gateway wallet address).
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To do this, encode wallet address in base64 format
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```
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$ echo 'NhVtreTTCoqsMQV5Wp55fqnriiUCpEaKm3' | base58 --decode | base64
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# output: NezFK4ujidF+X7bB88uzREQzRQeAvdj3Gg==
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```
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Then specify this value in Bearer Token Json
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```
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{
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"body": {
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"ownerID": {
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"value": "NezFK4ujidF+X7bB88uzREQzRQeAvdj3Gg=="
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},
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...
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```
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##### Note: Policy override
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Instead of impersonation, you can define the set of policies that will be applied
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to the request sender. This allows to restrict access to specific operation and
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specific objects without giving full impersonation control to the token user.
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Read more about request authentication in [docs/authentication.md](./docs/authemtnication.md)
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### Metrics and Pprof
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@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
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| `/zip/{cid}/{prefix}` | [Download objects in archive](#download-zip) |
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**Note:** `cid` parameter can be base58 encoded container ID or container name
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(the name must be registered in NNS, see appropriate section in [README](../README.md#nns)).
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(the name must be registered in NNS, see appropriate section in [nns.md](./nns.md)).
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Route parameters can be:
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@ -18,7 +18,7 @@ Route parameters can be:
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### Bearer token
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All routes can accept [bearer token](../README.md#authentication) from:
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All routes can accept [bearer token](./authentication.md) from:
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* `Authorization` header with `Bearer` type and base64-encoded token in
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credentials field
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108
docs/authentication.md
Normal file
108
docs/authentication.md
Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,108 @@
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# Request authentication
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HTTP Gateway does not authorize requests. Gateway converts HTTP request to a
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FrostFS request and signs it with its own private key.
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You can always upload files to public containers (open for anyone to put
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objects into), but for restricted containers you need to explicitly allow PUT
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operations for a request signed with your HTTP Gateway keys.
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If you don't want to manage gateway's secret keys and adjust policies when
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gateway configuration changes (new gate, key rotation, etc) or you plan to use
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public services, there is an option to let your application backend (or you) to
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issue Bearer Tokens and pass them from the client via gate down to FrostFS level
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to grant access.
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FrostFS Bearer Token basically is a container owner-signed policy (refer to FrostFS
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documentation for more details). There are two options to pass them to gateway:
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* "Authorization" header with "Bearer" type and base64-encoded token in
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credentials field
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* "Bearer" cookie with base64-encoded token contents
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For example, you have a mobile application frontend with a backend part storing
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data in FrostFS. When a user authorizes in the mobile app, the backend issues a FrostFS
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Bearer token and provides it to the frontend. Then, the mobile app may generate
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some data and upload it via any available FrostFS HTTP Gateway by adding
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the corresponding header to the upload request. Accessing policy protected data
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works the same way.
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##### Example
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In order to generate a bearer token, you need to have wallet (which will be used to sign the token)
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1. Suppose you have a container with private policy for wallet key
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```
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$ frostfs-cli container create -r <endpoint> --wallet <wallet> -policy <policy> --basic-acl 0 --await
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CID: 9dfzyvq82JnFqp5svxcREf2iy6XNuifYcJPusEDnGK9Z
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$ frostfs-cli ape-manager add -r <endpoint> --wallet <wallet> \
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--target-type container --target-name 9dfzyvq82JnFqp5svxcREf2iy6XNuifYcJPusEDnGK9Z \
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--rule "allow Object.* RequestCondition:"\$Actor:publicKey"=03b09baabff3f6107c7e9acb8721a6fc5618d45b50247a314d82e548702cce8cd5 *" \
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--chain-id <chainID>
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```
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2. Form a Bearer token (10000 is lifetime expiration in epoch) to impersonate
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HTTP Gateway request as wallet signed request and save it to **bearer.json**:
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```
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{
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"body": {
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"allowImpersonate": true,
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"lifetime": {
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"exp": "10000",
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"nbf": "0",
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"iat": "0"
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}
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},
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"signature": null
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}
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```
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3. Sign it with the wallet:
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```
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$ frostfs-cli util sign bearer-token --from bearer.json --to signed.json -w <wallet>
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```
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4. Encode to base64 to use in header:
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```
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$ base64 -w 0 signed.json
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# output: Ck4KKgoECAIQBhIiCiCZGdlbN7DPGPMg9rsWqV+p2XdMzUqknRiexewSFp8kmBIbChk17MUri6OJ0X5ftsHzy7NERDNFB4C92PcaGgMIkE4SZgohAxpsb7vfAso1F0X6hrm6WpRS14WsT3/Ct1SMoqRsT89KEkEEGxKi8GjKSf52YqhppgaOTQHbUsL3jn7SHLqS3ndAQ7NtAATnmRHleZw2V2xRRSRBQdjDC05KK83LhdSax72Fsw==
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```
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After that, the Bearer token can be used:
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```
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$ curl -F 'file=@cat.jpeg;filename=cat.jpeg' -H "Authorization: Bearer Ck4KKgoECAIQBhIiCiCZGdlbN7DPGPMg9rsWqV+p2XdMzUqknRiexewSFp8kmBIbChk17MUri6OJ0X5ftsHzy7NERDNFB4C92PcaGgMIkE4SZgohAxpsb7vfAso1F0X6hrm6WpRS14WsT3/Ct1SMoqRsT89KEkEEGxKi8GjKSf52YqhppgaOTQHbUsL3jn7SHLqS3ndAQ7NtAATnmRHleZw2V2xRRSRBQdjDC05KK83LhdSax72Fsw==" \
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http://localhost:8082/upload/BJeErH9MWmf52VsR1mLWKkgF3pRm3FkubYxM7TZkBP4K
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# output:
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# {
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# "object_id": "DhfES9nVrFksxGDD2jQLunGADfrXExxNwqXbDafyBn9X",
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# "container_id": "BJeErH9MWmf52VsR1mLWKkgF3pRm3FkubYxM7TZkBP4K"
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# }
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```
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##### Note: Bearer Token owner
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You can specify exact key who can use Bearer Token (gateway wallet address).
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To do this, encode wallet address in base64 format
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```
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$ echo 'NhVtreTTCoqsMQV5Wp55fqnriiUCpEaKm3' | base58 --decode | base64
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# output: NezFK4ujidF+X7bB88uzREQzRQeAvdj3Gg==
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```
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Then specify this value in Bearer Token Json
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```
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{
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"body": {
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"ownerID": {
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"value": "NezFK4ujidF+X7bB88uzREQzRQeAvdj3Gg=="
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},
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...
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```
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##### Note: Policy override
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Instead of impersonation, you can define the set of policies that will be applied
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to the request sender. This allows to restrict access to specific operation and
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specific objects without giving full impersonation control to the token user.
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36
docs/nns.md
Normal file
36
docs/nns.md
Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,36 @@
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# Nicename Resolving with NNS
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Steps to start using name resolving:
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1. Enable NNS resolving in config (`rpc_endpoint` must be a valid neo rpc node, see [configs](./config) for other examples):
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```yaml
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rpc_endpoint: http://morph-chain.frostfs.devenv:30333
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resolve_order:
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- nns
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```
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2. Make sure your container is registered in NNS contract. If you use [frostfs-dev-env](https://git.frostfs.info/TrueCloudLab/frostfs-dev-env)
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you can check if your container (e.g. with `container-name` name) is registered in NNS:
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```shell
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$ curl -s --data '{"id":1,"jsonrpc":"2.0","method":"getcontractstate","params":[1]}' \
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http://morph-chain.frostfs.devenv:30333 | jq -r '.result.hash'
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0x8e6c3cd4b976b28e84a3788f6ea9e2676c15d667
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$ docker exec -it morph_chain neo-go \
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contract testinvokefunction \
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-r http://morph-chain.frostfs.devenv:30333 0x8e6c3cd4b976b28e84a3788f6ea9e2676c15d667 \
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resolve string:container-name.container int:16 \
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| jq -r '.stack[0].value | if type=="array" then .[0].value else . end' \
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| base64 -d && echo
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7f3vvkw4iTiS5ZZbu5BQXEmJtETWbi3uUjLNaSs29xrL
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```
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3. Use container name instead of its `$CID`. For example:
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```shell
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$ curl http://localhost:8082/get_by_attribute/container-name/FileName/object-name
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```
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