Setup RBAC
This page shows you how to setup role-based access control (RBAC) in your cluster to control the types of users that can view and create Kueue objects.
The page is intended for a batch administrator.
Before you begin
Make sure the following conditions are met:
- A Kubernetes cluster is running.
- The kubectl command-line tool has communication with your cluster.
- Kueue is installed.
This page assumes you are already familiar with RBAC in kubernetes.
ClusterRoles included in the installation
When you install Kueue, the following set of ClusterRoles are created for the two main personas that we assume will interact with Kueue:
kueue-batch-admin-roleincludes the permissions to manage ClusterQueues, Queues, Workloads, and ResourceFlavors.kueue-batch-user-roleincludes the permissions to manage Jobs and to view Queues and Workloads.
In addition, Kueue creates a set of per-resource editor and viewer ClusterRoles
(for example, kueue-clusterqueue-viewer-role, kueue-workload-editor-role).
Each of these ClusterRoles is tagged with the rbac.kueue.x-k8s.io/role label
whose value is the short role identifier (e.g. clusterqueue-viewer,
workload-editor). You can use this label to discover or select the Kueue
ClusterRole for a specific resource and access level:
# List all editor/viewer ClusterRoles managed by Kueue.
kubectl get clusterroles -l rbac.kueue.x-k8s.io/role
# Find the viewer ClusterRole for ClusterQueues.
kubectl get clusterroles -l rbac.kueue.x-k8s.io/role=clusterqueue-viewer
Building custom roles with ClusterRole aggregation
The rbac.kueue.x-k8s.io/role label is intended as a selector for use
with Kubernetes ClusterRole aggregation.
By writing an aggregation rule that matches on this label, you can compose
custom ClusterRoles from any subset of the Kueue editor/viewer roles without
having to copy or maintain the underlying rules.
For example, the following ClusterRole grants read-only access to queueing state across ClusterQueues, LocalQueues, and Workloads:
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
name: kueue-queue-readonly
aggregationRule:
clusterRoleSelectors:
- matchExpressions:
- key: rbac.kueue.x-k8s.io/role
operator: In
values:
- clusterqueue-viewer
- localqueue-viewer
- workload-viewer
rules: [] # The control plane fills this in.
You can mix and match values from any of the editor/viewer ClusterRoles
listed by kubectl get clusterroles -l rbac.kueue.x-k8s.io/role to build
roles tailored to a specific persona (for example, a team lead who can
edit LocalQueues and Workloads but only view ClusterQueues and Cohorts).
Giving permissions to a batch administrator
A batch administrator typically requires the kueue-batch-admin-role ClusterRole
for all the namespaces.
To bind the kueue-batch-admin-role role to a batch administrator, represented
by the user admin@example.com, create a ClusterRoleBinding with a manifest
similar to the following:
# batch-admin-role-binding.yaml
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
metadata:
name: read-pods
subjects:
- kind: User
name: admin@example.com
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
roleRef:
kind: ClusterRole
name: kueue-batch-admin-role
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
To create the ClusterRoleBinding, save the preceding manifest and run the following command:
kubectl apply -f batch-admin-role-binding.yaml
Giving permissions to a batch user
A batch user typically requires permissions to:
- Create and view Jobs in their namespace.
- View the queues available in their namespace.
- View the status of their Workloads in their namespace.
To give these permissions to a group of users team-a@example.com for the
namespace team-a, create a RoleBinding with a manifest similar to the
following:
# team-a-batch-user-role-binding.yaml
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: RoleBinding
metadata:
name: read-pods
namespace: team-a
subjects:
- kind: Group
name: team-a@example.com
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
roleRef:
kind: ClusterRole
name: kueue-batch-user-role
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
To create the RoleBinding, save the preceding manifest and run the following command:
kubectl apply -f team-a-batch-user-role-binding.yaml
Feedback
Was this page helpful?
Glad to hear it! Please tell us how we can improve.
Sorry to hear that. Please tell us how we can improve.