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Apache Mesos Cookbook

You're reading from   Apache Mesos Cookbook Efficiently handle and manage tasks in a distributed environment

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Product type Paperback
Published in Aug 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785884627
Length 146 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Tools
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Authors (3):
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David Blomquist David Blomquist
Author Profile Icon David Blomquist
David Blomquist
Tomasz Janiszewski Tomasz Janiszewski
Author Profile Icon Tomasz Janiszewski
Tomasz Janiszewski
Marco Massenzio Marco Massenzio
Author Profile Icon Marco Massenzio
Marco Massenzio
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Toc

Table of Contents (9) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Getting Started with Apache Mesos FREE CHAPTER 2. Implementing High Availability with Apache ZooKeeper 3. Running and Maintaining Mesos 4. Understanding the Scheduler API 5. Managing Containers 6. Deploying PaaS with Marathon 7. Job Scheduling with Metronome 8. Continuous Integration with Jenkins

Enabling basic access authentication


In this recipe, you will learn how to enable HTTP basic authentication to limit a user who can access the Marathon API.

Getting ready

Before you start, ensure Marathon is up and running. Before applying any authentication, ensure you enabled SSL to protect secrets from eavesdropping.

How to do it...

Update the configuration with credentials:

echo MARATHON_HTTP_CREDENTIALS=username:password >> /etc/default/marathon

Check the API requires authentication:

curl -k https://localhost:8443/ping

The preceding command should return a 401 Unauthorized code, while the following command should work. From now, all interactions with Marathon require passing credentials:

curl -k -u username:password https://localhost:8443/ping

How it works...

When HTTP credentials are passed to Marathon, it checks HTTP request headers for credentials and compares them with those configured. When no credentials are provided or the provided credentials don't match, it returns a 401 error code...

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