constellation/docs/versioned_docs/version-2.12/getting-started/install.md
2023-10-10 18:31:02 +02:00

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Installation and setup

Constellation runs entirely in your cloud environment and can be controlled via a dedicated command-line interface (CLI).

The following guides you through the steps of installing the CLI on your machine, verifying it, and connecting it to your cloud service provider (CSP).

Prerequisites

Make sure the following requirements are met:

  • Your machine is running Linux or macOS
  • You have admin rights on your machine
  • kubectl is installed
  • Your CSP is Microsoft Azure, Google Cloud Platform (GCP), or Amazon Web Services (AWS)

Install the Constellation CLI

The CLI executable is available at GitHub. Install it with the following commands:

  1. Download the CLI:
curl -LO https://github.com/edgelesssys/constellation/releases/latest/download/constellation-linux-amd64
  1. Verify the signature (optional)

  2. Install the CLI to your PATH:

sudo install constellation-linux-amd64 /usr/local/bin/constellation
  1. Download the CLI:
curl -LO https://github.com/edgelesssys/constellation/releases/latest/download/constellation-linux-arm64
  1. Verify the signature (optional)

  2. Install the CLI to your PATH:

sudo install constellation-linux-arm64 /usr/local/bin/constellation
  1. Download the CLI:
curl -LO https://github.com/edgelesssys/constellation/releases/latest/download/constellation-darwin-arm64
  1. Verify the signature (optional)

  2. Install the CLI to your PATH:

sudo install constellation-darwin-arm64 /usr/local/bin/constellation
  1. Download the CLI:
curl -LO https://github.com/edgelesssys/constellation/releases/latest/download/constellation-darwin-amd64
  1. Verify the signature (optional)

  2. Install the CLI to your PATH:

sudo install constellation-darwin-amd64 /usr/local/bin/constellation

:::tip The CLI supports autocompletion for various shells. To set it up, run constellation completion and follow the given steps. :::

Set up cloud credentials

The CLI makes authenticated calls to the CSP API. Therefore, you need to set up Constellation with the credentials for your CSP.

:::tip If you don't have a cloud subscription, you can also set up a local Constellation cluster using virtualization for testing. :::

Required permissions

The following resource providers need to be registered in your subscription:

  • Microsoft.Attestation [2]
  • Microsoft.Compute
  • Microsoft.Insights
  • Microsoft.ManagedIdentity
  • Microsoft.Network

By default, Constellation tries to register these automatically if they haven't been registered before.

To create the IAM configuration for Constellation, you need the following permissions:

  • */register/action [1]
  • Microsoft.Authorization/roleAssignments/*
  • Microsoft.Authorization/roleDefinitions/*
  • Microsoft.ManagedIdentity/userAssignedIdentities/*
  • Microsoft.Resources/subscriptions/resourcegroups/*

The built-in Owner role is a superset of these permissions.

To create a Constellation cluster, you need the following permissions:

  • Microsoft.Attestation/attestationProviders/* [2]
  • Microsoft.Compute/virtualMachineScaleSets/*
  • Microsoft.Insights/components/*
  • Microsoft.ManagedIdentity/userAssignedIdentities/*
  • Microsoft.Network/loadBalancers/*
  • Microsoft.Network/loadBalancers/backendAddressPools/*
  • Microsoft.Network/networkSecurityGroups/*
  • Microsoft.Network/publicIPAddresses/*
  • Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/*
  • Microsoft.Network/virtualNetworks/subnets/*
  • Microsoft.Network/natGateways/*

The built-in Contributor role is a superset of these permissions.

Follow Microsoft's guide on understanding and assigning roles.

1: You can omit */register/Action if the resource providers mentioned above are already registered and the ARM_SKIP_PROVIDER_REGISTRATION environment variable is set to true when creating the IAM configuration.

2: You can omit Microsoft.Attestation/attestationProviders/* and the registration of Microsoft.Attestation if EnforceIDKeyDigest isn't set to MAAFallback in the config file.

Create a new project for Constellation or use an existing one. Enable the Compute Engine API on it.

To create the IAM configuration for Constellation, you need the following permissions:

  • iam.serviceAccountKeys.create
  • iam.serviceAccountKeys.delete
  • iam.serviceAccountKeys.get
  • iam.serviceAccounts.create
  • iam.serviceAccounts.delete
  • iam.serviceAccounts.get
  • resourcemanager.projects.getIamPolicy
  • resourcemanager.projects.setIamPolicy

Together, the built-in roles roles/editor and roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin form a superset of these permissions.

To create a Constellation cluster, you need the following permissions:

  • compute.addresses.createInternal
  • compute.addresses.deleteInternal
  • compute.addresses.get
  • compute.addresses.useInternal
  • compute.backendServices.create
  • compute.backendServices.delete
  • compute.backendServices.get
  • compute.backendServices.use
  • compute.disks.create
  • compute.firewalls.create
  • compute.firewalls.delete
  • compute.firewalls.get
  • compute.firewalls.update
  • compute.globalAddresses.create
  • compute.globalAddresses.delete
  • compute.globalAddresses.get
  • compute.globalAddresses.use
  • compute.globalForwardingRules.create
  • compute.globalForwardingRules.delete
  • compute.globalForwardingRules.get
  • compute.globalForwardingRules.setLabels
  • compute.globalOperations.get
  • compute.healthChecks.create
  • compute.healthChecks.delete
  • compute.healthChecks.get
  • compute.healthChecks.useReadOnly
  • compute.instanceGroupManagers.create
  • compute.instanceGroupManagers.delete
  • compute.instanceGroupManagers.get
  • compute.instanceGroupManagers.update
  • compute.instanceGroups.create
  • compute.instanceGroups.delete
  • compute.instanceGroups.get
  • compute.instanceGroups.update
  • compute.instanceGroups.use
  • compute.instances.create
  • compute.instances.setLabels
  • compute.instances.setMetadata
  • compute.instances.setTags
  • compute.instanceTemplates.create
  • compute.instanceTemplates.delete
  • compute.instanceTemplates.get
  • compute.instanceTemplates.useReadOnly
  • compute.networks.create
  • compute.networks.delete
  • compute.networks.get
  • compute.networks.updatePolicy
  • compute.routers.create
  • compute.routers.delete
  • compute.routers.get
  • compute.routers.update
  • compute.subnetworks.create
  • compute.subnetworks.delete
  • compute.subnetworks.get
  • compute.subnetworks.use
  • compute.targetTcpProxies.create
  • compute.targetTcpProxies.delete
  • compute.targetTcpProxies.get
  • compute.targetTcpProxies.use
  • iam.serviceAccounts.actAs

Together, the built-in roles roles/editor, roles/compute.instanceAdmin and roles/resourcemanager.projectIamAdmin form a superset of these permissions.

Follow Google's guide on understanding and assigning roles.

To set up a Constellation cluster, you need to perform two tasks that require permissions: create the infrastructure and create roles for cluster nodes. Both of these actions can be performed by different users, e.g., an administrator to create roles and a DevOps engineer to create the infrastructure.

To create the IAM configuration for Constellation, you need the following permissions:

{
    "Version": "2012-10-17",
    "Statement": [
        {
            "Effect": "Allow",
            "Action": [
                "ec2:DescribeAccountAttributes",
                "iam:AddRoleToInstanceProfile",
                "iam:AttachRolePolicy",
                "iam:CreateInstanceProfile",
                "iam:CreatePolicy",
                "iam:CreateRole",
                "iam:DeleteInstanceProfile",
                "iam:DeletePolicy",
                "iam:DeletePolicyVersion",
                "iam:DeleteRole",
                "iam:DetachRolePolicy",
                "iam:GetInstanceProfile",
                "iam:GetPolicy",
                "iam:GetPolicyVersion",
                "iam:GetRole",
                "iam:ListAttachedRolePolicies",
                "iam:ListInstanceProfilesForRole",
                "iam:ListPolicyVersions",
                "iam:ListRolePolicies",
                "iam:PassRole",
                "iam:RemoveRoleFromInstanceProfile",
                "sts:GetCallerIdentity"
            ],
            "Resource": "*"
        }
    ]
}

The built-in AdministratorAccess policy is a superset of these permissions.

To create a Constellation cluster, see the permissions of main.tf.

The built-in PowerUserAccess policy is a superset of these permissions.

Follow Amazon's guide on understanding and managing policies.

Authentication

You need to authenticate with your CSP. The following lists the required steps for testing and production environments.

:::note The steps for a testing environment are simpler. However, they may expose secrets to the CSP. If in doubt, follow the production steps. :::

Testing

Simply open the Azure Cloud Shell.

Production

Use the latest version of the Azure CLI on a trusted machine:

az login

Other options are described in Azure's authentication guide.

Testing

You can use the Google Cloud Shell. Make sure your session is authorized. For example, execute gsutil and accept the authorization prompt.

Production

Use one of the following options on a trusted machine:

  • Use the gcloud CLI

    gcloud auth application-default login
    

    This will ask you to log-in to your Google account and create your credentials. The Constellation CLI will automatically load these credentials when needed.

  • Set up a service account and pass the credentials manually

    Follow Google's guide for setting up your credentials.

Testing

You can use the AWS CloudShell. Make sure you are authorized to use it.

Production

Use the latest version of the AWS CLI on a trusted machine:

aws configure

Options and first steps are described in the AWS CLI documentation.

Next steps

You are now ready to deploy your first confidential Kubernetes cluster and application.