SSO and RBAC are only officially supported on Kubecost Enterprise plans.
This guide will show you how to configure Kubecost integrations for SAML and RBAC with Microsoft Entra ID.
In the Azure Portal, go to the Microsoft Entra ID Overview page and select Enterprise applications in the left navigation underneath Manage.
On the Enterprise applications page, select New application.
On the Browse Microsoft Entra ID Gallery page, select Create your own application and select Create. The 'Create your own application window' opens.
Provide a custom name for your app. Then, select Integrate any other application you don't find in the gallery. Select Create.
Return to the Enterprise applications page from Step 1.2. Find and select your Enterprise application from the table.
Select Properties in the left navigation under Manage to begin editing the application. Start by updating the logo, then select Save. Feel free to use an official Kubecost logo.
Select Users and groups in the left navigation. Assign any users or groups you want to have access to Kubecost, then select Assign.
Select Single sign-on from the left navigation. In the 'Basic SAML Configuration' box, select Edit. Populate both the Identifier and Reply URL with the URL of your Kubecost environment without a trailing slash (ex: http://localhost:9090), then select Save. If your application is using OpenId Connect and OAuth, most of the SSO configuration will have already been completed.
(Optional) If you intend to use RBAC, you also need to add a group claim. Without leaving the SAML-based Sign-on page, select Edit next to Attributes & Claims. Select Add a group claim. Configure your group association, then select Save. The claim name will be used as the assertionName
value in the values-saml.yaml file.
On the SAML-based Sign-on page, in the SAML Certificates box, copy the login of 'App Federation Metadata Url' and add it to your values-saml.yaml as the value of idpMetadataURL
.
In the SAML Certificates box, select the Download link next to Certificate (Base64) to download the X.509 cert. Name the file myservice.cert.
Create a secret using the cert with the following command:
With your existing Helm install command, append -f values-saml.yaml
to the end.
At this point, test your SSO configuration to make sure it works before moving on to the next section. There is a Troubleshooting section at the end of this doc for help if you are experiencing problems.
The simplest form of RBAC in Kubecost is to have two groups: admin and read only. If your goal is to simply have these two groups, you do not need to configure filters. If you do not configure filters, this message in the logs is expected: file corruption: '%!s(MISSING)'
The values-saml.yaml file contains the admin
and readonly
groups in the RBAC section:
Remember the value of assertionName
needs to match the claim name given in Step 2.5 above.
Filters are used to give visibility to a subset of objects in Kubecost. RBAC filtering is capable can filter for any types as the Allocation API. Examples of the various filters available are these files:
These filters can be configured using groups or user attributes in your Entra ID directory. It is also possible to assign filters to specific users. The example below is using groups.
You can combine filtering with admin/read only rights, and it can be configured the same way. The same assertionName
and values will be used, as is the case in this example.
The values-saml.yaml file contains this customGroups
section for filtering:
The array of groups obtained during the authentication request will be matched to the subject key in the filters.yaml. See this example filters.json (linked above) to understand how your created groups will be formatted:
As an example, we will configure the following:
Admins will have full access to the Kubecost UI and have visibility to all resources
Kubecost users, by default, will not have visibility to any namespace and will be read only. If a group doesn't have access to any resources, the Kubecost UI may appear to be broken.
The dev-namespaces group will have read only access to the Kubecost UI and only have visibility to namespaces that are prefixed with dev-
or are exactly nginx-ingress
In the Entra ID left navigation, select Groups. Select New group to create a new group.
For Group type, select Security. Enter a name your group. For this demonstration, create groups for kubecost_users
, kubecost_admin
and kubecost_dev-namespaces
. By selecting No members selected, Azure will pull up a list of all users in your organization for you to add (you can add or remove members after creating the group also). Add all users to the kubecost_users
group, and the appropriate users to each of the other groups for testing. Kubecost admins will be part of both the read only kubecost_users
and kubecost_admin
groups. Kubecost will assign the most rights/least restrictions when there are conflicts.
When you are done, select Create at the bottom of the page. Repeat Steps 1-2 as needed for all groups.
Return to your created Enterprise application and select Users and groups from the left navigation. Select Add user/group. Select and add all relevant groups you created. Then select Assign at the bottom of the page to confirm.
Modify filters.json as depicted above.
Replace {group-object-id-a}
with the Object Id for kubecost_admin
Replace {group-object-id-b}
with the Object Id for kubecost_users
Replace {group-object-id-c}
with the Object Id for kubecost_dev-namespaces
Create the ConfigMap:
You can modify the ConfigMap without restarting any pods.
You can look at the logs on the cost-model container. This script is currently a work in progress.
When the group has been matched, you will see:
This is what a normal output looks like: