Important: This documentation is about an older version. It's relevant only to the release noted, many of the features and functions have been updated or replaced. Please view the current version.
Role-based access control (RBAC)
Note
Available in Grafana Enterprise and Grafana Cloud.
RBAC provides a standardized way of granting, changing, and revoking access when it comes to viewing and modifying Grafana resources, such as dashboards, reports, and administrative settings.
- Plan your Grafana RBAC rollout strategy
- Configure RBAC in Grafana
- Assign Grafana RBAC roles
- Manage Grafana RBAC roles
- Provisioning RBAC with Grafana
- Provisioning RBAC with Terraform
- Grafana RBAC role definitions
- Grafana RBAC permissions, actions, and scopes
- Troubleshooting RBAC
About RBAC
Role-based access control (RBAC) provides a standardized way of granting, changing, and revoking access so that users can view and modify Grafana resources, such as users and reports. RBAC extends Grafana basic roles that are included in Grafana OSS, and enables you more granular control of users’ actions.
By using RBAC you can provide users with permissions that extend the permissions available with basic roles. For example, you can use RBAC to:
- Modify existing basic roles: for example, enable an editor to create reports
- Assign fixed roles to users and teams: for example, grant an engineering team the ability to create data sources
- Create custom roles: for example, a role that allows users to create and edit dashboards, but not delete them
RBAC roles contain multiple permissions, each of which has an action and a scope:
- Role:
fixed:datasources:reader
- Permission:
- Action:
datasources:read
- Scope:
datasources:*
- Action:
- Permission:
Basic roles
Basic roles are the standard roles that are available in Grafana OSS. If you have purchased a Grafana Enterprise license, you can still use basic roles.
Grafana includes the following basic roles:
- Grafana administrator
- Organization administrator
- Editor
- Viewer
- None
Each basic role is comprised of a number of permissions. For example, the viewer basic role contains the following permissions among others:
Action: datasources.id:read, Scope: datasources:*
: Enables the viewer to see the ID of a data source.Action: orgs:read
: Enables the viewer to see their organization detailsAction: annotations:read, Scope: annotations:*
: Enables the viewer to see annotations that other users have added to a dashboard.Action: annotations:create, Scope: annotations:type:dashboard
: Enables the viewer to add annotations to a dashboard.Action: annotations:write, Scope: annotations:type:dashboard
: Enables the viewer to modify annotations of a dashboard.Action: annotations:delete, Scope: annotations:type:dashboard
: Enables the viewer to remove annotations from a dashboard.
Note
You can’t have a Grafana user without a basic role assigned. TheNone
role contains no permissions.
Basic role modification
You can use RBAC to modify the permissions associated with any basic role, which changes what viewers, editors, or admins can do. You can’t delete basic roles.
Note that any modification to any of these basic role is not propagated to the other basic roles. For example, if you modify Viewer basic role and grant additional permission, Editors or Admins won’t have that additional grant.
For more information about the permissions associated with each basic role, refer to Basic role definitions. To interact with the API and view or modify basic roles permissions, refer to the table that maps basic role names to the associated UID.
Fixed roles
Grafana Enterprise includes the ability for you to assign discrete fixed roles to users, teams, and service accounts. This gives you fine-grained control over user permissions than you would have with basic roles alone. These roles are called “fixed” because you cannot change or delete fixed roles. You can also create custom roles of your own; see more information in the custom roles section below.
Assign fixed roles when the basic roles do not meet your permission requirements. For example, you might want a user with the basic viewer role to also edit dashboards. Or, you might want anyone with the editor role to also add and manage users. Fixed roles provide users more granular access to create, view, and update the following Grafana resources:
- Alerting
- Annotations
- API keys
- Dashboards and folders
- Data sources
- Explore
- Feature Toggles
- Folders
- LDAP
- Licenses
- Organizations
- Provisioning
- Reports
- Roles
- Settings
- Service accounts
- Teams
- Users
To learn more about the permissions you can grant for each resource, refer to RBAC role definitions.
Custom roles
If you are a Grafana Enterprise customer, you can create custom roles to manage user permissions in a way that meets your security requirements.
Custom roles contain unique combinations of permissions actions and scopes. An action defines the action a use can perform on a Grafana resource. For example, the teams.roles:read
action allows a user to see a list of roles associated with each team.
A scope describes where an action can be performed. For example, the teams:id:1
scope restricts the user’s action to the team with ID 1
. When paired with the teams.roles:read
action, this permission prohibits the user from viewing the roles for teams other than team 1
.
Consider creating a custom role when fixed roles do not meet your permissions requirements.
Custom role creation
You can use either of the following methods to create, assign, and manage custom roles:
- Grafana provisioning: You can use a YAML file to configure roles. For more information about using provisioning to create custom roles, refer to Manage RBAC roles. For more information about using provisioning to assign RBAC roles to users or teams, refer to Assign RBAC roles.
- RBAC API: As an alternative, you can use the Grafana HTTP API to create and manage roles. For more information about the HTTP API, refer to RBAC API.
Limitation
If you have created a folder with the name General
or general
, you cannot manage its permissions with RBAC.
If you set folder permissions for a folder named General
or general
, the system disregards the folder when RBAC is enabled.