docs: add docs for outposts

master
Jens Langhammer 2020-09-09 19:34:19 +02:00
parent 37dcf264e5
commit 1356a8108b
7 changed files with 55 additions and 1 deletions

26
docs/outposts/outposts.md Normal file
View File

@ -0,0 +1,26 @@
# Outposts
An outpost is a single deployment of a passbook component, which can be deployed in a completely separate environment. Currently, only the Proxy Provider is supported as outpost.
![](outposts.png)
Upon creation, a service account and a token is generated. The service account only has permissions to read the outpost and provider configuration. This token is used by the Outpost to connect to passbook.
To deploy an outpost, you can for example use this docker-compose snippet:
```yaml
version: 3.5
services:
passbook_proxy:
image: beryju/passbook-proxy:0.10.0-stable
ports:
- 4180:4180
- 4443:4443
environment:
PASSBOOK_HOST: https://your-passbook.tld
PASSBOOK_INSECURE: 'true'
PASSBOOK_TOKEN: token-generated-by-passbook
```
In future versions, this snippet will be automatically generated. You will also be able to deploy an outpost directly into a kubernetes cluster.w

BIN
docs/outposts/outposts.png Normal file

Binary file not shown.

After

Width:  |  Height:  |  Size: 122 KiB

View File

@ -1,5 +1,8 @@
# Proxy Provider
!!! info
This provider is to be used in conjunction with [Outposts](../outposts/outposts.md)
This provider protects applications, which have no built-in support for OAuth2 or SAML. This is done by running a lightweight Reverse Proxy in front of the application, which authenticates the requests.
passbook Proxy is based on [oauth2_proxy](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy), but has been integrated more tightly with passbook.

View File

@ -16,6 +16,8 @@ This update brings a lot of big features, such as:
This is a new Object type, used currently only by the Proxy Provider. It manages the creation and permissions of service accounts, which are used by the outposts to communicate with passbook.
See [Outposts](../outposts/outposts.md)
- Flow Import/Export
Flows can now be imported and exported. This feature can be used as a backup system, or to share complex flows with other people. Example flows have also been added to the documentation to help you get going with passbook.

View File

@ -30,6 +30,7 @@ nav:
- OAuth2: providers/oauth2.md
- SAML: providers/saml.md
- Proxy: providers/proxy.md
- Outposts: outposts/outposts.md
- Expressions:
- Overview: expressions/index.md
- Reference:

View File

@ -0,0 +1,22 @@
# Generated by Django 3.1.1 on 2020-09-09 17:33
from django.db import migrations, models
class Migration(migrations.Migration):
dependencies = [
("passbook_outposts", "0004_auto_20200830_1056"),
]
operations = [
migrations.AlterField(
model_name="outpost",
name="deployment_type",
field=models.TextField(
choices=[("custom", "Custom")],
default="custom",
help_text="Select between passbook-managed deployment types or a custom deployment.",
),
),
]

View File

@ -47,7 +47,7 @@ class OutpostType(models.TextChoices):
class OutpostDeploymentType(models.TextChoices):
"""Deployment types that are managed through passbook"""
KUBERNETES = "kubernetes"
# KUBERNETES = "kubernetes"
CUSTOM = "custom"