Step 7: Enable Synchronizer access

Get an authorization token

To make the Apigee API calls described later in this topic, you need to get an authorization token that has the Apigee Organization Admin role.

  1. If you are not the owner of the Google Cloud project that is associated with your Apigee hybrid organization, be sure that your Google Cloud user account has the roles/apigee.admin (Apigee Organization Admin) role. You can check the roles assigned to you with this command:
    gcloud projects get-iam-policy ${PROJECT_ID}  \
      --flatten="bindings[].members" \
      --format='table(bindings.role)' \
      --filter="bindings.members:your_account_email"
    

    For example:

    gcloud projects get-iam-policy my-project  \
      --flatten="bindings[].members" \
      --format='table(bindings.role)' \
      --filter="bindings.members:myusername@example.com"

    The output should include roles/apigee.admin.

  2. If you do not have roles/apigee.admin, add the Apigee Organization Admin role to your user account. Use the following command to add the role to your user account:
    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding ${PROJECT_ID} \
      --member user:your_account_email \
      --role roles/apigee.admin

    For example:

    gcloud projects add-iam-policy-binding my-project \
      --member user:myusername@example.com \
      --role roles/apigee.admin
  3. On the command line, get your gcloud authentication credentials using the following command:

    Linux / MacOS

    export TOKEN=$(gcloud auth print-access-token)

    To check that your token was populated, use echo, as the following example shows:

    echo $TOKEN

    This should display your token as an encoded string.

    Windows

    for /f "tokens=*" %a in ('gcloud auth print-access-token') do set TOKEN=%a

    To check that your token was populated, use echo, as the following example shows:

    echo %TOKEN%

    This should display your token as an encoded string.

Enable synchronizer access

To enable synchronizer access:

  1. Get the email address for the service account to which you are granting synchronizer access. For non-production environments (as suggested in this tutorial) it should be apigee-non-prod. For production environments, it should be apigee-synchronizer. Use the following command:
    gcloud iam service-accounts list --project ${PROJECT_ID} --filter "apigee-synchronizer"
  2. Call the setSyncAuthorization API to enable the required permissions for Synchronizer using the following command:
    curl -X POST -H "Authorization: Bearer ${TOKEN}" \
      -H "Content-Type:application/json" \
      "https://apigee.googleapis.com/v1/organizations/${ORG_NAME}:setSyncAuthorization" \
       -d '{"identities":["'"serviceAccount:apigee-synchronizer@${ORG_NAME}.iam.gserviceaccount.com"'"]}'
    

    Where:

    • ${ORG_NAME}: The name of your hybrid organization.
    • apigee-synchronizer${ORG_NAME}.iam.gserviceaccount.com: The email address of the service account.
  3. To verify that the service account was set, use the following command to call the API to get a list of service accounts:
    curl -X GET -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" \
      -H "Content-Type:application/json" \
      "https://apigee.googleapis.com/v1/organizations/${ORG_NAME}:getSyncAuthorization"
        

    The output looks similar to the following:

    {
       "identities":[
          "serviceAccount:apigee-synchronizer@my_project_id.iam.gserviceaccount.com"
       ],
       "etag":"BwWJgyS8I4w="
    }

You have now enabled your Apigee hybrid runtime and management planes to communicate. Next, install cert-manager to enable Apigee hybrid to interpret and manage certificates.

1 2 3 4 5 6 7 (NEXT) Step 8: Install cert-manager 9 10 11 12