Gin-Keycloak is specially made for Gin Framework users who also want to use Keycoak. This Project was inspired by zalando's gin-oauth
When it comes to choosing a Go framework, there's a lot of confusion about what to use. The scene is very fragmented, and detailed comparisons of different frameworks are still somewhat rare. Meantime, how to handle dependencies and structure projects are big topics in the Go community. We've liked using Gin for its speed, accessibility, and usefulness in developing microservice architectures. In creating Gin-OAuth2, we wanted to take fuller advantage of Gin's capabilities and help other devs do likewise.
Gin-Keycloak is expressive, flexible, and very easy to use. It allows you to:
- do OAuth2 authorization based on the JWT Token
- create router groups to place Keycloak authorization on top, using HTTP verbs and passing them
- more easily decouple services by promoting a "say what to do, not how to do it" approach
- configure your REST API directly in the code (see the "Usage" example below)
- write your own authorization functions
- Gin
- An Keycloak Token provider
Gin-Keycloak uses the following Go packages as dependencies:
Assuming you've installed Go and Gin, run this:
go get github.com/tbaehler/gin-keycloak
With this function you just check if user is authenticated. Therefore there is no need for AccessTuple unlike next two access types.
Gin middlewares you use:
router := gin.New()
router.Use(ginglog.Logger(3 * time.Second))
router.Use(ginkeycloak.RequestLogger([]string{"uid"}, "data"))
router.Use(gin.Recovery())
A Keycloakconfig
var sbbEndpoint = ginkeycloak.KeycloakConfig{
Url: "https://keycloack.domain.ch/",
Realm: "Your Realm",
}
Lastly, define which type of access you grant to the defined team. We'll use a router group again:
privateGroup := router.Group("/api/privateGroup")
privateGroup.Use(ginkeycloak.Auth(ginkeycloak.AuthCheck(), keycloakconfig))
privateGroup.GET("/", func(c *gin.Context) {
....
})
Once again, you can use curl to test:
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" http://localhost:8081/api/privateGroup/
{"message":"Hello from private to sszuecs member of teapot"}
Restrict all access but for a few users
config := ginkeycloak.BuilderConfig{
service: <yourServicename>,
url: "<your token url>",
realm: "<your realm to get the public keys>",
}
router := gin.New()
privateUser := router.Group("/api/privateUser")
privateUser.Use(ginkeycloak.NewAcessBuilder(config).
RestrictButForUid("domain\user1").
RestrictButForUid("domain\user2").
Build())
privateUser.GET("/", func(c *gin.Context) {
....
})
To test, you can use curl:
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" http://localhost:8081/api/privateUser/
{"message":"Hello from private for users to Sandor Szücs"}
Restrict all access but for the given roles
config := ginkeycloak.BuilderConfig{
service: <yourServicename>,
url: "<your token url>",
realm: "<your realm to get the public keys>",
}
router := gin.New()
privateUser := router.Group("/api/privateUser")
privateUser.Use(ginkeycloak.NewAcessBuilder(config).
RestrictButForRole("role1").
RestrictButForRole("role2").
Build())
privateUser.GET("/", func(c *gin.Context) {
....
})
Once again, you can use curl to test:
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" http://localhost:8081/api/privateGroup/
{"message":"Hello from private to sszuecs member of teapot"}
Realm Based Access is also possible and straightforward:
config := ginkeycloak.BuilderConfig{
service: <yourServicename>,
url: "<your token url>",
realm: "<your realm to get the public keys>",
}
router := gin.New()
privateUser := router.Group("/api/privateUser")
privateUser.Use(ginkeycloak.NewAcessBuilder(config).
RestrictButForRealm("realmRole").
Build())
privateUser.GET("/", func(c *gin.Context) {
....
})
Thanks to:
- Zalando Team for their initial work
See MIT-License LICENSE file.