First of all @Lance, thanks for taking the time to write and summarize this for 
us. It's much appreciated.

While I'm not aware of all the nuances, based on my own testing, I feel that we 
are really close with option 1.

That being said, as you already stated, option 2 is clearly more inline with 
the idea of having a "global" Cloud Admin role. So long term, #2 is more 
desirable.

Given the two sentences above, I certainly would prefer option 3 so that we can 
have a usable solution quickly. I certainly will continue to test and provide 
feedback for the option 1 part.

-m




On Thu, 2017-05-25 at 10:42 +1200, Adrian Turjak wrote:


On 25/05/17 07:47, Lance Bragstad wrote:
<snip>
Option 2

Implement global role assignments in keystone.

How it works:

Role assignments in keystone can be scoped to global context. Users can then 
ask for a globally scoped token

Pros:
- This approach represents a more accurate long term vision for role 
assignments (at least how we understand it today)
- Operators can create global roles and assign them as needed after the upgrade 
to give proper global scope to their users
- It's easier to explain global scope using global role assignments instead of 
a special project
- token.is_global = True and token.role = 'reader' is easier to understand than 
token.is_admin_project = True and token.role = 'reader'
- A global token can't be associated to a project, making it harder for 
operations that require a project to consume a global token (i.e. I shouldn't 
be able to launch an instance with a globally scoped token)

Cons:
- We need to start from scratch implementing global scope in keystone, steps 
for this are detailed in the spec

<snip>

On Wed, May 24, 2017 at 10:35 AM, Lance Bragstad 
<lbrags...@gmail.com<mailto:lbrags...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Hey all,

To date we have two proposed solutions for tackling the admin-ness issue we 
have across the services. One builds on the existing scope concepts by scoping 
to an admin project [0]. The other introduces global role assignments [1] as a 
way to denote elevated privileges.

I'd like to get some feedback from operators, as well as developers from other 
projects, on each approach. Since work is required in keystone, it would be 
good to get consensus before spec freeze (June 9th). If you have specific 
questions on either approach, feel free to ping me or drop by the weekly policy 
meeting [2].

Thanks!


Please option 2. The concept of being an "admin" while you are only scoped to a 
project is stupid when that admin role gives you super user power yet you only 
have it when scoped to just that project. That concept never really made sense. 
Global scope makes so much more sense when that is the power the role gives.

At same time, it kind of would be nice to make scope actually matter. As admin 
you have a role on Project X, yet you can now (while scoped to this project) 
pretty much do anything anywhere! I think global roles is a great step in the 
right direction, but beyond and after that we need to seriously start looking 
at making scope itself matter, so that giving someone 'admin' or some such on a 
project actually only gives them something akin to project_admin or some sort 
of admin-lite powers scoped to that project and sub-projects. That though falls 
into the policy work being done, but should be noted, as it is related.

Still, at least global scope for roles make the superuser case make some actual 
sense, because (and I can't speak for other deployers), we have one project 
pretty much dedicated as an "admin_project" and it's just odd to actually need 
to give our service users roles in a project when that project is empty and a 
pointless construct for their purpose.

Also thanks for pushing this! I've been watching your global roles spec review 
in hopes we'd go down that path. :)

-Adrian

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