Keycloak Proxy
Keycloak-proxy is a proxy service which at the risk of stating the obvious integrates with the Keycloak authentication service. The configuration and feature set is based on the actual java version of the proxy. The
[jest@starfury keycloak-proxy]$ bin/keycloak-proxy help
NAME:
keycloak-proxy - is a proxy using the keycloak service for auth and authorization
USAGE:
keycloak-proxy [global options] command [command options] [arguments...]
VERSION:
v0.0.2
AUTHOR(S):
Rohith <gambol99@gmail.com>
COMMANDS:
help, h Shows a list of commands or help for one command
GLOBAL OPTIONS:
--config the path to the configuration file for the keycloak proxy
--listen "127.0.0.1:80" the interface the service should be listening on
--secret the client secret used to authenticate to the oauth server
--client-id the client id used to authenticate to the oauth serves
--discovery-url the discovery url to retrieve the openid configuration
--upstream-url "http://127.0.0.1:8080" the url for the upstream endpoint you wish to proxy to
--encryption-key the encryption key used to encrpytion the session state
--redirection-url the redirection url, namely the site url, note: /oauth will be added to it
--tls-cert the path to a certificate file used for enabled TLS for the service
--tls-private-key the path to the private key for TLS support
--scope [--scope option --scope option] a variable list of scopes requested when authenticating the user
--resource [--resource option --resource option] a list of resources 'uri=/admin|methods=GET|roles=role1,role2'
--signin-page a custom template under ./templates displayed for signin
--forbidden-page a custom template under ./templates used for access forbidden
--max-session "1h0m0s" if refresh sessions are enabled we can limit their duration via this
--proxy-protocol switches on proxy protocol support on the listen (not supported yet)
--refresh-sessions enables the refreshing of tokens via offline access
--json-logging switch on json logging rather than text (defaults true)
--log-requests switch on logging of all incoming requests (defaults true)
--verbose switch on debug / verbose logging
--help, -h show help
--version, -v print the version
Configuration
The configuration can come from a yaml/json file and or the command line options (note, command options have a higher priority and will override any options referenced in a config file)
# is the url for retrieve the openid configuration - normally the <server>/auth/realm/<realm_name>
discovery_url: https://keycloak.example.com/auth/realms/<REALM_NAME>
# the client id for the 'client' application
clientid: <CLIENT_ID>
# the secret associated to the 'client' application
secret: <CLIENT_SECRET>
# the interface definition you wish the proxy to listen, all interfaces is specified as ':<port>'
listen: 127.0.0.1:3000
# whether to request offline access and use a refresh token
refresh_session: true
# assuming you are using refresh tokens, specify the maximum amount of time the refresh token can last
max_session: 1h
# the location of a certificate you wish the proxy to use for TLS support
tls_cert:
# the location of a private key for TLS
tls_private_key:
# the redirection url, essentially the site url, note: /oauth/callback is added at the end
redirection_url: http://127.0.0.3000
# the encryption key used to encode the session state
encryption_key: <ENCRYPTION_KEY>
# the upstream endpoint which we should proxy request
upstream: http://127.0.0.1:80
# additional scopes to add to add to the default (openid+email+profile)
scopes:
- vpn-user
# a collection of resource i.e. urls that you wish to protect
resources:
- url: /admin/test
# the methods on this url that should be protected, if missing, we assuming all
methods:
- GET
# a list of roles the user must have in order to accces urls under the above
roles_allowed:
- openvpn:vpn-user
- openvpn:prod-vpn
- test
- url: /admin
methods:
- GET
roles_allowed:
- openvpn:vpn-user
- openvpn:commons-prod-vpn
Example Usage
Assuming you have some web service you wish protected by Keycloak;
a) Create the client under the Keycloak GUI or CLI; the client protocol is 'openid-connect', access-type: confidential. b) Add a Valid Redirect URIs of http://127.0.0.1:3000/oauth/callback. c) Grab the client id and client secret. d) Create the various roles under the client or existing clients for authorization purposes.
The default config
discovery_url: https://keycloak.example.com/auth/realms/<REALM_NAME>
clientid: <CLIENT_ID>
secret: <CLIENT_SECRET>
listen: 127.0.0.1:3000
redirection_url: http://127.0.0.3000
refresh_session: false
encryption_key: AgXa7xRcoClDEU0ZDSH4X0XhL5Qy2Z2j
upstream: http://127.0.0.1:80
resources:
- url: /admin
methods:
- GET
roles_allowed:
- <CLIENT_APP_NAME>:<ROLE_NAME>
- <CLIENT_APP_NAME>:<ROLE_NAME>
Upstream Headers
On protected resources the upstream endpoint will receive a number of headers added by the proxy;
cx.Request.Header.Add("KEYCLOAK_ID", id.id)
cx.Request.Header.Add("KEYCLOAK_SUBJECT", id.preferredName)
cx.Request.Header.Add("KEYCLOAK_USERNAME", id.name)
cx.Request.Header.Add("KEYCLOAK_EMAIL", id.email)
cx.Request.Header.Add("KEYCLOAK_EXPIRES_IN", id.expiresAt.String())
cx.Request.Header.Add("KEYCLOAK_ACCESS_TOKEN", id.token.Encode())
cx.Request.Header.Add("KEYCLOAK_ROLES", strings.Join(id.roles, ","))
# plus the default
cx.Request.Header.Add("X-Forwarded-For", <CLIENT_IP>)
cx.Request.Header.Add("X-Forwarded-Proto", <CLIENT_PROTO>)
Encryption Key
In order to remain stateless and not have to rely on a central cache to persist the 'refresh_tokens', the refresh token is encrypted and added as a cookie using crypto/aes. Naturally the key must be the same if your running behind a load balancer etc.