title | keywords | description | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
authz-keycloak |
|
This document contains information about the Apache APISIX authz-keycloak Plugin. |
The authz-keycloak
Plugin can be used to add authentication with Keycloak Identity Server.
:::tip
Although this Plugin was developed to work with Keycloak, it should work with any OAuth/OIDC and UMA compliant identity providers as well.
:::
Refer to Authorization Services Guide for more information on Keycloak.
Name | Type | Required | Default | Valid values | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
discovery | string | False | https://host.domain/auth/realms/foo/.well-known/uma2-configuration | URL to discovery document of Keycloak Authorization Services. | |
token_endpoint | string | False | https://host.domain/auth/realms/foo/protocol/openid-connect/token | An OAuth2-compliant token endpoint that supports the urn:ietf:params:oauth:grant-type:uma-ticket grant type. If provided, overrides the value from discovery. |
|
resource_registration_endpoint | string | False | https://host.domain/auth/realms/foo/authz/protection/resource_set | A UMA-compliant resource registration endpoint. If provided, overrides the value from discovery. | |
client_id | string | True | The identifier of the resource server to which the client is seeking access. | ||
client_secret | string | False | The client secret, if required. | ||
grant_type | string | False | "urn:ietf:params:oauth:grant-type:uma-ticket" | ["urn:ietf:params:oauth:grant-type:uma-ticket"] | |
policy_enforcement_mode | string | False | "ENFORCING" | ["ENFORCING", "PERMISSIVE"] | |
permissions | array[string] | False | An array of strings, each representing a set of one or more resources and scopes the client is seeking access. | ||
lazy_load_paths | boolean | False | false | When set to true, dynamically resolves the request URI to resource(s) using the resource registration endpoint instead of the static permission. | |
http_method_as_scope | boolean | False | false | When set to true, maps the HTTP request type to scope of the same name and adds to all requested permissions. | |
timeout | integer | False | 3000 | [1000, ...] | Timeout in ms for the HTTP connection with the Identity Server. |
access_token_expires_in | integer | False | 300 | [1, ...] | Expiration time(s) of the access token. |
access_token_expires_leeway | integer | False | 0 | [0, ...] | Expiration leeway(s) for access_token renewal. When set, the token will be renewed access_token_expires_leeway seconds before expiration. This avoids errors in cases where the access_token just expires when reaching the OAuth Resource Server. |
refresh_token_expires_in | integer | False | 3600 | [1, ...] | The expiration time(s) of the refresh token. |
refresh_token_expires_leeway | integer | False | 0 | [0, ...] | Expiration leeway(s) for refresh_token renewal. When set, the token will be renewed refresh_token_expires_leeway seconds before expiration. This avoids errors in cases where the refresh_token just expires when reaching the OAuth Resource Server. |
ssl_verify | boolean | False | true | When set to true, verifies if TLS certificate matches hostname. | |
cache_ttl_seconds | integer | False | 86400 (equivalent to 24h) | positive integer >= 1 | Maximum time in seconds up to which the Plugin caches discovery documents and tokens used by the Plugin to authenticate to Keycloak. |
keepalive | boolean | False | true | When set to true, enables HTTP keep-alive to keep connections open after use. Set to true if you are expecting a lot of requests to Keycloak. |
|
keepalive_timeout | integer | False | 60000 | positive integer >= 1000 | Idle time after which the established HTTP connections will be closed. |
keepalive_pool | integer | False | 5 | positive integer >= 1 | Maximum number of connections in the connection pool. |
access_denied_redirect_uri | string | False | [1, 2048] | URI to redirect the user to instead of returning an error message like "error_description":"not_authorized" . |
|
password_grant_token_generation_incoming_uri | string | False | /api/token | Set this to generate token using the password grant type. The Plugin will compare incoming request URI to this value. |
It is recommended to use the discovery
attribute as the authz-keycloak
Plugin can discover the Keycloak API endpoints from it.
If set, the token_endpoint
and resource_registration_endpoint
will override the values obtained from the discovery document.
The Plugin needs the client_id
attribute for identification and to specify the context in which to evaluate permissions when interacting with Keycloak.
If the lazy_load_paths
attribute is set to true, then the Plugin additionally needs to obtain an access token for itself from Keycloak. In such cases, if the client access to Keycloak is confidential, you need to configure the client_secret
attribute.
The policy_enforcement_mode
attribute specifies how policies are enforced when processing authorization requests sent to the server.
Requests are denied by default even when there is no policy associated with a resource.
The policy_enforcement_mode
is set to ENFORCING
by default.
Requests are allowed when there is no policy associated with a given resource.
When handling incoming requests, the Plugin can determine the permissions to check with Keycloak statically or dynamically from the properties of the request.
If the lazy_load_paths
attribute is set to false
, the permissions are taken from the permissions
attribute. Each entry in permissions
needs to be formatted as expected by the token endpoint's permission
parameter. See Obtaining Permissions.
:::note
A valid permission can be a single resource or a resource paired with on or more scopes.
:::
If the lazy_load_paths
attribute is set to true
, the request URI is resolved to one or more resources configured in Keycloak using the resource registration endpoint. The resolved resources are used as the permissions to check.
:::note
This requires the Plugin to obtain a separate access token for itself from the token endpoint. So, make sure to set the Service Accounts Enabled
option in the client settings in Keycloak.
Also make sure that the issued access token contains the resource_access
claim with the uma_protection
role to ensure that the Plugin is able to query resources through the Protection API.
:::
The http_method_as_scope
is often used together with lazy_load_paths
but can also be used with a static permission list.
If the http_method_as_scope
attribute is set to true
, the Plugin maps the request's HTTP method to the scope with the same name. The scope is then added to every permission to check.
If the lazy_load_paths
attribute is set to false, the Plugin adds the mapped scope to any of the static permissions configured in the permissions
attribute—even if they contain on or more scopes already.
To generate a token using password
grant, you can set the value of the password_grant_token_generation_incoming_uri
attribute.
If the incoming URI matches the configured attribute and the request method is POST, a token is generated using the token_endpoint
.
You also need to add application/x-www-form-urlencoded
as Content-Type
header and username
and password
as parameters.
The example below shows a request if the password_grant_token_generation_incoming_uri
is /api/token
:
curl --location --request POST 'http://127.0.0.1:9080/api/token' \
--header 'Accept: application/json, text/plain, */*' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded' \
--data-urlencode 'username=<User_Name>' \
--data-urlencode 'password=<Password>'
The example below shows how you can enable the authz-keycloak
Plugin on a specific Route. ${realm}
represents the realm name in Keycloak.
curl http://127.0.0.1:9180/apisix/admin/routes/5 -H 'X-API-KEY: edd1c9f034335f136f87ad84b625c8f1' -X PUT -d '
{
"uri": "/get",
"plugins": {
"authz-keycloak": {
"token_endpoint": "http://127.0.0.1:8090/auth/realms/${realm}/protocol/openid-connect/token",
"permissions": ["resource name#scope name"],
"client_id": "Client ID"
}
},
"upstream": {
"type": "roundrobin",
"nodes": {
"127.0.0.1:8080": 1
}
}
}'
Once you have enabled the Plugin on a Route you can use it.
First, you have to get the JWT token from Keycloak:
curl \
-d "client_id=<YOUR_CLIENT_ID>" \
-d "username=<YOUR_USERNAMED>" \
-d "password=<YOUR_PASSWORD>" \
-d "grant_type=password" \
"http://<YOUR_KEYCLOAK_HOST>/auth/realms/${realm}/protocol/openid-connect/token"
Now you can make requests with the obtained JWT token:
curl http://127.0.0.1:9080/get -H 'Authorization: Bearer {JWT Token}'
To learn more about how you can integrate authorization policies into your API workflows you can checkout the unit test authz-keycloak.t.
Run the following Docker image and go to http://localhost:8090
to view the associated policies for the unit tests.
docker run -e KEYCLOAK_USER=admin -e KEYCLOAK_PASSWORD=123456 -p 8090:8080 sshniro/keycloak-apisix
The image below shows how the policies are configured in the Keycloak server:
To disable the authz-keycloak
Plugin, you can delete the corresponding JSON configuration from the Plugin configuration. APISIX will automatically reload and you do not have to restart for this to take effect.
curl http://127.0.0.1:9180/apisix/admin/routes/5 -H 'X-API-KEY: edd1c9f034335f136f87ad84b625c8f1' -X PUT -d '
{
"uri": "/get",
"plugins": {
},
"upstream": {
"type": "roundrobin",
"nodes": {
"127.0.0.1:8080": 1
}
}
}'
-
Currently, the
authz-keycloak
Plugin requires you to define the resource name and the required scopes to enforce policies for a Route. Keycloak's official adapted (Java, Javascript) provides path matching by querying Keycloak paths dynamically and lazy loading the paths to identity resources. Upcoming releases of the Plugin will support this function. -
To support reading scope and configurations from the Keycloak JSON file.