Overview
Label-based access control can be used to create access policies that will only allow for data to be queried that meets specific label requirements. The feature allows multiple sets of Prometheus label selectors to be associated with a policy and queries will only return data from series that match at least one of the provided selectors. This correlates to disjunctive normal form which allows any required policy to be expressed.
Setting up a label policy
Label policies are set when creating an access policy on a per tenant basis. This means each tenant associated with an access policy can have a unique label policy.
Alertmanager and ruler
Label policies are not enforced by the alertmanager and ruler. This means that the requests that they serve contain everything for a particular tenant without applying label-based access control. For example, listing all rule groups in the ruler will return all rule groups for the tenant even if a label selector in the access policy excludes some of the labels on the rules.
In the case of the ruler this only applies to the HTTP endpoints. All metrics that the ruler generates for
alerting or recording rules (alerting rules generate the ALERTS
and ALERTS_FOR_STATE
metrics) are subject to
label-based access control when queried.
Writing metrics
GEM does not enforce label-based access control on the write requests. This means a metrics:write
scope in the access policy allows clients to push any metrics without restrictions regarding the labels on the metrics.
Examples
Exclude a label
One common use case for creating an LBAC policy is to exclude metrics with a specific label. For instance, a label policy that excludes all series with the label secret=true
would be created by just adding a select with secret!="true"
when creating an access policy. This can be seen in the image below:
Exclude a metric
Expanding upon the previous example, lets say we wanted to create an access policy that only excludes metrics with the label secret=true
on the metric named sensitive_requests_total
. Since the name of a metric is actually just a label with the key __name__
, we can leverage the existing LBAC label selector syntax to enforce this:
You may notice above that two different selectors where added to enforce the policy. Specifically:
{secret!="true", __name__="sensitive_requests_total"}
and
{__name__!="sensitive_requests_total"}
The first selector will match when returning a series from the metrics sensitive_requests_total
and will ensure all of the returned series do not have the secret: true
label. However, when requesting a metric besides sensitive_requests_total
, the second label selector will match and return any data even if it has the secret: true
label.