frostfs-node/cmd/frostfs-cli/docs/sessions.md
Evgenii Stratonikov 73bfadd6ad
[#1483] cli/docs: Remove set-eacl mention
Signed-off-by: Evgenii Stratonikov <e.stratonikov@yadro.com>
2024-11-11 09:43:08 +03:00

2.7 KiB

How FrostFS CLI uses session mechanism of the FrostFS

Overview

FrostFS sessions implement a mechanism for issuing a power of attorney by one party to another. A trusted party can provide a so-called session token as proof of the right to act on behalf of another member of the network. The client of operations carried out with such a token will be the user who opened the session. The token contains information which limits power of attorney like action context or lifetime.

The client confirms trust in a third party by signing its public (session) key with his private key. Any operation signed using private session key with attached session token is treated as performed by the original client.

Types

FrostFS CLI supports two ways to execute operation within a session depending on whether the user of the command application is an original user (1) or a trusted one (2).

Dynamic

For case (1) CLI user can only open dynamic sessions. Protocol call SessionService.Create is used for this purpose. As a result of the call, a private session key will be generated on the server, thus making the remote server trusted. This type of session is useful when the client needs to transfer part of the responsibility for the formation of strict system elements to the trusted server. At the moment, the approach is applicable only to creating objects.

$ frostfs-cli session create --rpc-endpoint <server_ip> --out ./blank_token

After this example command remote node holds session private key while its public part is written into the session token encoded into the output file. Later this token can be attached to the operations which support dynamic sessions. Then the token will be finally formed and signed by CLI itself.

Static

For case (2) CLI user can act on behalf of the person who issued the session token to him. Unlike (1) the token must be fully prepared on the side of the original client, and the CLI uses it only for reading. Ready token MUST have:

  • correct context (object, container, etc.)
  • valid lifetime
  • public session key corresponding to the CLI key
  • valid client signature

To sign the session token, exec:

$ frostfs-cli --wallet <client_wallet> util sign session-token --from ./blank_token --to ./token

Once the token is signed, it MUST NOT be modified.

Commands

Object

Here are sub-commands of object command which support only dynamic sessions (1):

  • put
  • delete
  • lock

These commands accept blank token of the dynamically opened session or open session internally if it has not been opened yet.

All other object sub-commands support only static sessions (2).

Container

List of commands supporting sessions (static only):

  • create
  • delete