This is the multi-page printable view of this section. Click here to print.

Return to the regular view of this page.

Accounts and Users

System Initialization

When the system first initializes it creates a system service account (invisible to users) and a administrator account (admin) with a single administrator user (admin). The password for this user is set at bootstrap using a default value or an override available in the config.yaml on the catalog service (which is what initializes the db). There are two top-level keys in the config.yaml that control this bootstrap:

  • default_admin_password - To set the initial password (can be updated by using the API once the system is bootstrapped). Defaults to foobar if omitted or unset.

  • default_admin_email - To set the initial admin account email on bootstrap. Defaults to admin@myanchore if unset

Managing Accounts Using AnchoreCTL

These operations must be executed by a user in the admin account. These examples are executed from within the enterprise-api container if using the quickstart guide:

First, exec into the enterprise-api container, if using the quickstart docker-compose. For other deployment types (eg. helm chart into kubernetes), execute these commands anywhere you have AnchoreCTL installed that can reach the external API endpoint for you deployment.

docker-compose exec enterprise-api /bin/bash

Getting Account and User Information

To list all the currently present accounts in the system, perform the following command:

# anchorectl account list
 ✔ Fetched accounts
┌──────────┬────────────────────┬──────────┐
│ NAME     │ EMAIL              │ STATE    │
├──────────┼────────────────────┼──────────┤
│ admin    │ admin@myanchore    │ enabled  │
│ devteam1 │ [email protected] │ enabled  │
│ devteam2 │ [email protected] │ enabled  │
└──────────┴────────────────────┴──────────┘

To review the list of users for a specific account, issue the following:

# anchorectl user list --account devteam1
 ✔ Fetched users
┌───────────────┬──────────────────────┬──────────────────────┬────────┬────────┐
│ USERNAME      │ CREATED AT           │ LAST UPDATED         │ SOURCE │ TYPE   │
├───────────────┼──────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼────────┼────────┤
│ devteam1admin │ 2022-08-25T17:43:43Z │ 2022-08-25T17:43:43Z │        │ native │
└───────────────┴──────────────────────┴──────────────────────┴────────┴────────┘

Adding a New Account

To add a new account which, by default, will have no active credentials, issue the following command:


# anchorectl account add devteam1 --email [email protected]
 ✔ Added account
Name: devteam1
Email: [email protected]
State: enabled# 

Note that the email address is optional and can be omitted.

At this point the account exists but contains no users. To create a user with a password, see below in the Managing Users section.

Disabling Account

Disabling an account prevents any of that account’s users from being able to perform any actions in the system. It also disabled all asynchronous updates on resources in that account, effectively freezing the state of the account and all of its resources. Disabling an account is idempotent, if it is already disabled the operation has no effect. Accounts may be re-enabled after being disabled.


# anchorectl account disable devteam1
 ✔ Disabled account
State: disabled

Enabling an Account

To restore a disabled account to allow user operations and resource updates, simply enable it. This is idempotent, enabling an already enabled account has no effect.


# anchorectl account enable devteam1
 ✔ Enabled account
State: enabled

Deleting an Account

Note: Deleting an account is irreversible and will delete all of its resources (images, policies, evaluations, etc).

Deleting an account will synchronously delete all users and credentials for the account and transition the account to the deleting state. At this point the system will begin reaping all resources for the account. Once that reaping process is complete, the account record itself is deleted. An account must be in a disabled state prior to deletion. Failure to be in this state results in an error:


# anchorectl account delete devteam1
error: 1 error occurred:
	* unable to delete account:
{
  "detail": {
    "error_codes": []
  },
  "httpcode": 400,
  "message": "Invalid account state change requested. Cannot go from state enabled to state deleting"
}

So, first you must disable the account, as shown above. Once disabled:


# anchorectl account disable devteam1
 ✔ Disabled account
State: disabled

# anchorectl account delete devteam1
 ✔ Deleted account
No results

# anchorectl account get devteam1
 ✔ Fetched account
Name: devteam1
Email: [email protected]
State: deleting

Managing Users Using AnchoreCTL

Users exist within accounts, but usernames themselves are globally unique since they are used for authenticating api requests. User management can be performed by any user in the admin account in the default Anchore Enterprise configuration using the native authorizer. For more information on configuring other authorization plugins see: Authorization Plugins and Configuration.

Create User in a User-Type Account

To create a new user credential within a specified account, you can issue the following command. Note that the ‘role’ assigned will dictate the API/operation level permissions granted to this new user. See help output for a list of available roles, or for more information you can review roles and associated permissions via the Anchore Enterprise UI. In the following example, we’re granting the new user the ‘full-control’ role, which gives the credential full access to operations within the ‘devteam1’ account namespace.


# ANCHORECTL_USER_PASSWORD=devteam1adminp4ssw0rd anchorectl user add --account devteam1 devteam1admin --role full-control
 ✔ Added user                                                                                                                                                                                                                                                devteam1admin
Username: devteam1admin
Created At: 2022-08-25T17:50:18Z
Last Updated: 2022-08-25T17:50:18Z
Source:
Type: native

# anchorectl user list --account devteam1
 ✔ Fetched users
┌───────────────┬──────────────────────┬──────────────────────┬────────┬────────┐
│ USERNAME      │ CREATED AT           │ LAST UPDATED         │ SOURCE │ TYPE   │
├───────────────┼──────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼────────┼────────┤
│ devteam1admin │ 2022-08-25T17:50:18Z │ 2022-08-25T17:50:18Z │        │ native │
└───────────────┴──────────────────────┴──────────────────────┴────────┴────────┘

That user may now use the API:


# ANCHORECTL_USERNAME=devteam1admin ANCHORECTL_PASSWORD=devteam1adminp4ssw0rd ANCHORECTL_ACCOUNT=devteam1 anchorectl user list
 ✔ Fetched users
┌───────────────┬──────────────────────┬──────────────────────┬────────┬────────┐
│ USERNAME      │ CREATED AT           │ LAST UPDATED         │ SOURCE │ TYPE   │
├───────────────┼──────────────────────┼──────────────────────┼────────┼────────┤
│ devteam1admin │ 2022-08-25T17:50:18Z │ 2022-08-25T17:50:18Z │        │ native │
└───────────────┴──────────────────────┴──────────────────────┴────────┴────────┘

Deleting a User

Using the admin credential, or a credential that has a user management role assigned for an account, you can delete a user with the following command. In this example, we’re using the admin credential to delete a user in the ‘devteam1’ account:


ANCHORECTL_USERNAME=admin ANCHORECTL_ACCOUNT=admin ANCHORECTL_PASSWORD=foobar anchorectl user delete devteam1admin --account devteam1
 ✔ Deleted user
No results

Updating a User Password

Note that only system admins can execute this for a different user/account.

As an admin, to reset another users credentials:


# ANCHORECTL_USER_PASSWORD=n3wp4ssw0rd anchorectl user set-password devteam1admin --account devteam1
 ✔ User password set
Type: password
Value: ***********
Created At: 2022-08-25T17:58:32Z

To update your own password:


# ANCHORECTL_USERNAME=devteam1admin ANCHORECTL_PASSWORD=existingp4ssw0rd ANCHORECTL_ACCOUNT=devteam1 anchorectl user set-password devteam1admin
 ❖ Enter new user password  : ●●●●●●●●●●●
 ❖ Retype new user password : ●●●●●●●●●●●
 ✔ User password set
Type: password
Value: ***********
Created At: 2022-08-25T18:00:35Z

Or, to perform the operation fully-scripted, you can set the new password as an environment variable:

ANCHORECTL_USERNAME=devteam1admin ANCHORECTL_PASSWORD=existingp4ssw0rd ANCHORECTL_ACCOUNT=devteam1 ANCHORECTL_USER_PASSWORD=n3wp4ssw0rd anchorectl user set-password devteam1admin
 ✔ User password set
Type: password
Value: ***********
Created At: 2022-08-25T18:01:19Z