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Azure AD Workload Identity Click here for latest
Azure AD Workload Identity is the newer version of Azure AD Pod Identity. It lets your Kubernetes workloads access Azure resources using an Azure AD Application without having to specify secrets, using federated identity credentials - Don’t manage secrets, let Azure AD do the hard work.
You can tell KEDA to use Azure AD Workload Identity via podIdentity.provider
.
podIdentity:
provider: azure-workload # Optional. Default: none
identityId: <identity-id> # Optional. Default: ClientId From annotation on service-account.
Azure AD Workload Identity will give access to pods with service accounts having appropriate labels and annotations. Refer to these docs for more information. You can set these labels and annotations on the KEDA Operator service account. This can be done for you during deployment with Helm with the following flags -
--set podIdentity.azureWorkload.enabled=true
--set podIdentity.azureWorkload.clientId={azure-ad-client-id}
--set podIdentity.azureWorkload.tenantId={azure-ad-tenant-id}
You can override the identity that was assigned to KEDA during installation, by specifying an identityId
parameter under the podIdentity
field. This allows end-users to use different identities to access various resources which is more secure than using a single identity that has access to multiple resources.
The concept of “overrides” can be somewhat confusing in certain scenarios, as it may not always be clear which service account needs to be federated with a specific Azure identity to ensure proper functionality.
Let’s clarify this with two examples:
Imagine you have an identity for KEDA that has access to ServiceBus A, ServiceBus B, and ServiceBus C. Additionally, you have separate identities for various workloads, resulting in the following setup:
In this case, KEDA’s Managed Service Identity should only be federated with KEDA’s service account.
To avoid granting too many permissions to KEDA’s identity, you have a KEDA identity without access to any Service Bus (perhaps unrelated, such as Key Vault). Similar to the previous scenario, you also have separate identities for your workloads:
In this case, you are overriding the default identity set during installation through the “TriggerAuthentication” option (.spec.podIdentity.identityId
). Each “ScaledObject” now uses its own “TriggerAuthentication,” with each specifying an override (Workload A’s TriggerAuthentication sets the identityId for Workload A, Workload B’s for Workload B, and so on). Consequently, you don’t need to stack excessive permissions on KEDA’s identity. However, in this scenario, KEDA’s service account must be federated with all the identities it may attempt to assume:
Note, that you must “federate” the Azure AD Managed Identity (that the TriggerAuthentication
podIdentity.identityId
points to) with the ‘subject’ of the KEDA Operator service account. This will be similar tosystem:serviceaccount:keda:keda-operator
. 📝 The service account for the target deployment is not used here.