[DOCS] Bootstrap new documentation website based on just-the-docs (#659)

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@ -14,7 +14,7 @@ steps:
DOCKER_CLI_EXPERIMENTAL: "enabled" DOCKER_CLI_EXPERIMENTAL: "enabled"
- label: ":github: Deploy Artifacts" - label: ":github: Deploy Artifacts"
command: ".buildkite/steps/ghartifacts.sh" command: "ghartifacts.sh"
retry: retry:
automatic: true automatic: true
agents: agents:
@ -24,4 +24,10 @@ steps:
- label: ":linux: Deploy AUR" - label: ":linux: Deploy AUR"
command: ".buildkite/steps/aurpackages.sh | buildkite-agent pipeline upload" command: ".buildkite/steps/aurpackages.sh | buildkite-agent pipeline upload"
if: build.tag != null || build.branch == "master" if: build.tag != null || build.branch == "master"
- label: ":docs: Deploy documentation"
command: "syncdoc.sh"
agents:
upload: "fast"
if: build.branch == "master"

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.buildkite/steps/syncdoc.sh Executable file
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#!/bin/bash
set -e
rm -rf authelia
git clone git@github.com:authelia/authelia.git --branch gh-pages
pushd docs
bundle install
bundle exec jekyll build -d ../authelia
popd
COMMIT=$(git show -s --format=%h)
pushd authelia
git add -A
git commit -m "synchronize docs of commit ${COMMIT}"
git push
popd
rm -rf authelia

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_site
.sass-cache
.jekyll-metadata
.jekyll-cache

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# Duo Push Notification
Using mobile push notifications is becoming the new trendy way to validate
the second factor of a 2FA authentication process. [Duo](https://duo.com/)
is offering an API to integrate this kind validation and **Authelia** leverages
this mechanism so that you can simply push a button on your smartphone to be
securely granted access to your services.
<p align="center">
<img src="../../docs/images/2FA-PUSH.png" width="400">
</p>
In order to use this feature, you should first create a free account on Duo
(up to 10 users), create a user account and attach it a mobile device. The name
of the user must match the name of the user in your internal database (LDAP).
In Duo interface, click on *Applications* and *Protect an Application*. Then
select the option called *Partner Auth API*. This will generate an integration key,
a secret key and a hostname. You can set the name of the application to
**Authelia** and then you must add the generated information to your configuration
as:
duo_api:
hostname: api-123456789.example.com
integration_key: ABCDEF
secret_key: 1234567890abcdefghifjkl
This can be seen in [config.template.yml](../../config.template.yml) file.
When selecting *Push Notification* at the second factor stage, you will
automatically receive a push notification on your phone to grant or deny access.
<p align="center">
<img src="../../docs/images/duo-push-1.jpg" width="400">
<img src="../../docs/images/duo-push-2.png" width="400">
</p>
## Limitations
Users must be enrolled via the Duo Admin panel, they cannot enroll a device from
**Authelia** yet.
## FAQ
### Why don't I have access to the *Push Notification* option?
It's likely that you have not configured **Authelia** correctly. Please read this
documentation again and be sure you had a look at [config.template.yml](../../config.template.yml).

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@ -1,40 +0,0 @@
# Security Keys (U2F)
**Authelia** offers authentication using Security Keys like [Yubikey](Yubikey)
which are one of the most secure way to authenticate and get authorized.
It is already available for Google, Facebook, Github accounts and more.
The protocol requires your security key to enrolled before authenticating.
To do so, select the *Security Key* method at the second factor stage and
click on the link *Not registered yet?*. This will send a link to your
user email address. This e-mail will likely be sent to
https://mail.example.com:8080/ if you're testing Authelia and you've not
configured anything.
Confirm your identity by clicking on **Register** and you'll be asked to
touch the token of your security key to enroll.
<p align="center">
<img src="../../docs/images/REGISTER-U2F.png" width="400">
</p>
Upon successful registration, you can authenticate using your security key
by simply touching the token again when required:
<p align="center">
<img src="../../docs/images/2FA-U2F.png" width="400">
</p>
Easy, right?!
## FAQ
### Why don't I have access to the *Security Key* option?
U2F protocol is a new protocol that is only supported by recent browsers
and might even be enabled on some of them. Please be sure your browser
supports U2F and that the feature is enabled to make the option
available in **Authelia**.
[Yubikey]: https://www.yubico.com/products/yubikey-hardware/yubikey4/

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# One-Time Passwords
In **Authelia**, your users can use [Google Authenticator] for generating unique
tokens that they can use to pass the second factor.
<p align="center">
<img src="../../docs/images/2FA-TOTP.png" width="400">
</p>
Select the *One-Time Password method* and click on the *Not registered yet?* link.
Then, check the email sent by **Authelia** to your email address
to validate your identity. If you're testing **Authelia**, it's likely
that this e-mail has been sent to https://mail.example.com:8080/
Confirm your identity by clicking on **Register** and you'll get redirected
on a page where your secret will be displayed as QRCode that you can scan.
<p align="center">
<img src="../../docs/images/REGISTER-TOTP.png" width="400">
</p>
You can use [Google Authenticator] to store it.
From now on, you'll get tokens generated every 30 seconds on your phone that
you can use to validate the second factor in **Authelia**.
[Google Authenticator]: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.apps.authenticator2&hl=en

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source "https://rubygems.org"
# Hello! This is where you manage which Jekyll version is used to run.
# When you want to use a different version, change it below, save the
# file and run `bundle install`. Run Jekyll with `bundle exec`, like so:
#
# bundle exec jekyll serve
#
# This will help ensure the proper Jekyll version is running.
# Happy Jekylling!
# gem "jekyll", "~> 3.8.5"
# This is the default theme for new Jekyll sites. You may change this to anything you like.
#gem "minima", "~> 2.0"
gem "just-the-docs"
# If you want to use GitHub Pages, remove the "gem "jekyll"" above and
# uncomment the line below. To upgrade, run `bundle update github-pages`.
gem "github-pages", group: :jekyll_plugins
# If you have any plugins, put them here!
group :jekyll_plugins do
# gem "jekyll-feed", "~> 0.6"
end
# Windows does not include zoneinfo files, so bundle the tzinfo-data gem
gem "tzinfo-data", platforms: [:mingw, :mswin, :x64_mingw, :jruby]
# Performance-booster for watching directories on Windows
gem "wdm", "~> 0.1.0" if Gem.win_platform?

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GEM
remote: https://rubygems.org/
specs:
activesupport (6.0.2.1)
concurrent-ruby (~> 1.0, >= 1.0.2)
i18n (>= 0.7, < 2)
minitest (~> 5.1)
tzinfo (~> 1.1)
zeitwerk (~> 2.2)
addressable (2.7.0)
public_suffix (>= 2.0.2, < 5.0)
coffee-script (2.4.1)
coffee-script-source
execjs
coffee-script-source (1.11.1)
colorator (1.1.0)
commonmarker (0.17.13)
ruby-enum (~> 0.5)
concurrent-ruby (1.1.6)
dnsruby (1.61.3)
addressable (~> 2.5)
em-websocket (0.5.1)
eventmachine (>= 0.12.9)
http_parser.rb (~> 0.6.0)
ethon (0.12.0)
ffi (>= 1.3.0)
eventmachine (1.2.7)
execjs (2.7.0)
faraday (1.0.0)
multipart-post (>= 1.2, < 3)
ffi (1.12.2)
forwardable-extended (2.6.0)
gemoji (3.0.1)
github-pages (204)
github-pages-health-check (= 1.16.1)
jekyll (= 3.8.5)
jekyll-avatar (= 0.7.0)
jekyll-coffeescript (= 1.1.1)
jekyll-commonmark-ghpages (= 0.1.6)
jekyll-default-layout (= 0.1.4)
jekyll-feed (= 0.13.0)
jekyll-gist (= 1.5.0)
jekyll-github-metadata (= 2.13.0)
jekyll-mentions (= 1.5.1)
jekyll-optional-front-matter (= 0.3.2)
jekyll-paginate (= 1.1.0)
jekyll-readme-index (= 0.3.0)
jekyll-redirect-from (= 0.15.0)
jekyll-relative-links (= 0.6.1)
jekyll-remote-theme (= 0.4.1)
jekyll-sass-converter (= 1.5.2)
jekyll-seo-tag (= 2.6.1)
jekyll-sitemap (= 1.4.0)
jekyll-swiss (= 1.0.0)
jekyll-theme-architect (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-cayman (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-dinky (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-hacker (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-leap-day (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-merlot (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-midnight (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-minimal (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-modernist (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-primer (= 0.5.4)
jekyll-theme-slate (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-tactile (= 0.1.1)
jekyll-theme-time-machine (= 0.1.1)
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jemoji (= 0.11.1)
kramdown (= 1.17.0)
liquid (= 4.0.3)
mercenary (~> 0.3)
minima (= 2.5.1)
nokogiri (>= 1.10.4, < 2.0)
rouge (= 3.13.0)
terminal-table (~> 1.4)
github-pages-health-check (1.16.1)
addressable (~> 2.3)
dnsruby (~> 1.60)
octokit (~> 4.0)
public_suffix (~> 3.0)
typhoeus (~> 1.3)
html-pipeline (2.12.3)
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jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
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jekyll (> 3.5, < 5.0)
jekyll-github-metadata (~> 2.9)
jekyll-seo-tag (~> 2.0)
jekyll-theme-slate (0.1.1)
jekyll (~> 3.5)
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jekyll (~> 3.8.5)
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rb-inotify (~> 0.9, >= 0.9.10)
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minima (2.5.1)
jekyll (>= 3.5, < 5.0)
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minitest (5.14.0)
multipart-post (2.1.1)
nokogiri (1.10.8)
mini_portile2 (~> 2.4.0)
octokit (4.16.0)
faraday (>= 0.9)
sawyer (~> 0.8.0, >= 0.5.3)
pathutil (0.16.2)
forwardable-extended (~> 2.6)
public_suffix (3.1.1)
rake (12.3.3)
rb-fsevent (0.10.3)
rb-inotify (0.10.1)
ffi (~> 1.0)
rouge (3.13.0)
ruby-enum (0.7.2)
i18n
rubyzip (2.2.0)
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rb-inotify (~> 0.9, >= 0.9.7)
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tzinfo (1.2.6)
thread_safe (~> 0.1)
unicode-display_width (1.6.1)
zeitwerk (2.2.2)
PLATFORMS
ruby
DEPENDENCIES
github-pages
just-the-docs
tzinfo-data
BUNDLED WITH
2.1.4

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docs/_config.yml Normal file
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title: Authelia
email: clement.michaud34@gmail.com
description: Authelia is an open source multi-factor single sign-on portal for web applications
baseurl: "/authelia"
url: "https://authelia.github.io"
logo: ./images/authelia-title.png
footer_content: "Copyright &copy; 2020 Authelia. Distributed by an <a href=\"https://github.com/authelia/authelia/blob/master/LICENSE\">Apache 2.0 license.</a>"
markdown: kramdown
theme: just-the-docs

10
docs/_sass/overrides.scss Normal file
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img {
border: 1px solid #e6e6e6;
border-radius: 5px;
padding: 10px;
}
.no-border {
border: 0px;
}

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# Configuration
Authelia is highly configurable thanks to a configuration file.
There is a documented template configuration, called
[config.template.yml](../config.template.yml), at the root of the
repository. All the details are documented there.
When running **Authelia**, you can specify your configuration file by passing
the file path as the first argument of **Authelia**.
$ authelia --config config.custom.yml
## Secrets
Configuration of Authelia requires some secrets or passwords. Please
note that the recommended way to set secrets in Authelia is to use
environment variables.
A secret in Authelia configuration could be set by providing the
environment variable prefixed by AUTHELIA_ and with name equals to
the capitalized path of the configuration key and with dots replaced
by underscores.
For instance the LDAP password is identified by the path
**authentication_backend.ldap.password**, so this password could
alternatively be set using the environment variable called
**AUTHELIA_AUTHENTICATION_BACKEND_LDAP_PASSWORD**.
If for some reason you prefer keeping the secrets in the configuration
file, be sure to apply the right permissions to the file in order to
prevent secret leaks if an another application gets compromised on your
server. The UNIX permissions should probably be something like 600.

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---
layout: default
title: Access Control
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 2
---
# Access Control
{: .no_toc }
## Access Control List
With **Authelia** you can define a list of rules that are going to be evaluated in
order when authorization is delegated to Authelia.
The first matching rule of the list defines the policy applied to the resource and, if
no rule matches the resource, a customizable default policy is applied.
## Access Control Rule
A rule defines two things:
* the matching criterion of the request presented to the reverse proxy
* the policy applied when all criterion match.
The criterion are:
* domain: domain targeted by the request.
* resources: list of patterns that the path should match (one is sufficient).
* subject: the user or group of users to define the policy for.
* networks: the network range from where should comes the request.
A rule is matched when all criterion of the rule match
## Policies
A policy represents the level of authentication the user needs to pass before
being authorized to request the resource.
There exist 4 policies:
* bypass: the resource is public as the user does not need any authentication to
get access to it.
* one_factor: the user needs to pass at least the first factor to get access to
the resource.
* two_factor: the user needs to pass two factors to get access to the resource.
* deny: the user does not have access to the resource.
## Domains
The domains defined in rules must obviously be either a subdomain of the domain
protected by Authelia or the protected domain itself. In order to match multiple
subdomains, the wildcard matcher character `*.` can be used as prefix of the domain.
For instance, to define a rule for all subdomains of *example.com*, one would use
`*.example.com` in the rule.
## Resources
A rule can define multiple regular expressions for matching the path of the resource. If
any one of them matches, the resource criteria of the rule matches.
## Subjects
A subject is a representation of a user or a group of user for who the rule should apply.
For a user with unique identifier `john`, the subject should be `user:john` and for a group
uniquely identified by `developers`, the subject should be `group:developers`. Unlike resources
there can be only one subject per rule. However, if multiple users or group must be matched by
a rule, one can just duplicate the rule as many times as there are subjects.
*Note: Any PR to make it a list instead of a single item is welcome.*
## Networks
A list of network ranges can be specified in a rule in order to apply different policies when
requests come from different networks.
The main use case is when, let say a resource should be exposed both on the Internet and from an
authenticated VPN for instance. Passing a second factor a first time to get access to the VPN and
a second time to get access to the application can sometimes be cumbersome if the endpoint is not
that much sensitive.
Even if Authelia provides that flexbility, you might prefer higher level of security and avoid
this option entirely. You and only you can define your security policy and it's up to you to
configure Authelia accordingly.
## Complete example
Here is a complete example of complex access control list that can be defined in Authelia.
access_control:
default_policy: deny
rules:
- domain: public.example.com
policy: bypass
- domain: secure.example.com
policy: one_factor
networks:
- 192.168.1.0/24
- domain: secure.example.com
policy: two_factor
- domain: singlefactor.example.com
policy: one_factor
- domain: "mx2.mail.example.com"
subject: "group:admins"
policy: deny
- domain: "*.example.com"
subject: "group:admins"
policy: two_factor
- domain: dev.example.com
resources:
- "^/groups/dev/.*$"
subject: "group:dev"
policy: two_factor
- domain: dev.example.com
resources:
- "^/users/john/.*$"
subject: "user:john"
policy: two_factor

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---
layout: default
title: File
parent: Authentication backends
grand_parent: Configuration
nav_order: 1
---
# File
**Authelia** supports a file as a users database.
## Configuration
Configuring Authelia to use a file is done by specifying the path to the
file in the configuration file.
authentication_backend:
file:
path: /var/lib/authelia/users.yml
## Format
The format of the file is as follows.
users:
john:
password: "$6$rounds=500000$jgiCMRyGXzoqpxS3$w2pJeZnnH8bwW3zzvoMWtTRfQYsHbWbD/hquuQ5vUeIyl9gdwBIt6RWk2S6afBA0DPakbeWgD/4SZPiS0hYtU/"
email: john.doe@authelia.com
groups:
- admins
- dev
harry:
password: "$6$rounds=500000$jgiCMRyGXzoqpxS3$w2pJeZnnH8bwW3zzvoMWtTRfQYsHbWbD/hquuQ5vUeIyl9gdwBIt6RWk2S6afBA0DPakbeWgD/4SZPiS0hYtU/"
email: harry.potter@authelia.com
groups: []
bob:
password: "$6$rounds=500000$jgiCMRyGXzoqpxS3$w2pJeZnnH8bwW3zzvoMWtTRfQYsHbWbD/hquuQ5vUeIyl9gdwBIt6RWk2S6afBA0DPakbeWgD/4SZPiS0hYtU/"
email: bob.dylan@authelia.com
groups:
- dev
james:
password: "$6$rounds=500000$jgiCMRyGXzoqpxS3$w2pJeZnnH8bwW3zzvoMWtTRfQYsHbWbD/hquuQ5vUeIyl9gdwBIt6RWk2S6afBA0DPakbeWgD/4SZPiS0hYtU/"
email: james.dean@authelia.com
This file should be set with read/write permissions as it could be updated by users
resetting their passwords.
## Passwords
The file contains hash of passwords instead of plain text passwords for security reasons.
You can use authelia binary or docker image to generate the hash of any password.
For instance, with the docker image, just run
$ docker run authelia/authelia:latest authelia hash-password yourpassword
$6$rounds=50000$BpLnfgDsc2WD8F2q$be7OyobnQ8K09dyDiGjY.cULh4yDePMh6CUMpLwF4WHTJmLcPE2ijM2ZsqZL.hVAANojEfDu3sU9u9uD7AeBJ/
## Password Hash Function
The only supported hash function is salted sha512 determined by the prefix `$6$` as described
in this [wiki](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crypt_(C)) page.
Although not the best hash function, Salted SHA512 is a decent algorithm given the number of rounds is big
enough. It's not the best because the difficulty to crack the hash does not on the performance of the machine.
The best algorithm, [Argon2](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Argon2) does though. It won the
[Password Hashing Competition](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Password_Hashing_Competition) in 2015 and is now
considered the best hashing function. There is an open [issue](https://github.com/authelia/authelia/issues/577)
to add support for this hashing function.

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@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
---
layout: default
title: Authentication backends
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 1
has_children: true
---
# Authentication Backends
There are two ways to store the users along with their password:
* LDAP: users are stored in remote servers like OpenLDAP, OpenAM or Microsoft Active Directory.
* File: users are stored in YAML file with a hashed version of their password.

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@ -0,0 +1,62 @@
---
layout: default
title: LDAP
parent: Authentication backends
grand_parent: Configuration
nav_order: 2
---
# LDAP
**Authelia** supports using a LDAP server as the users database.
## Configuration
Configuration of the LDAP backend is done as follows
```yaml
authentication_backend:
ldap:
# The url to the ldap server. Scheme can be ldap:// or ldaps://
url: ldap://127.0.0.1
# Skip verifying the server certificate (to allow self-signed certificate).
skip_verify: false
# The base dn for every entries
base_dn: dc=example,dc=com
# An additional dn to define the scope to all users
additional_users_dn: ou=users
# The users filter used to find the user DN
# {0} is a matcher replaced by username.
# 'cn={0}' by default.
users_filter: (cn={0})
# An additional dn to define the scope of groups
additional_groups_dn: ou=groups
# The groups filter used for retrieving groups of a given user.
# {0} is a matcher replaced by username.
# {dn} is a matcher replaced by user DN.
# {uid} is a matcher replaced by user uid.
# 'member={dn}' by default.
groups_filter: (&(member={dn})(objectclass=groupOfNames))
# The attribute holding the name of the group
group_name_attribute: cn
# The attribute holding the mail address of the user
mail_attribute: mail
# The username and password of the admin user.
user: cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com
# This secret can also be set using the env variables AUTHELIA_AUTHENTICATION_BACKEND_LDAP_PASSWORD
password: password
```
The user must have an email address in order for Authelia to perform
identity verification when password reset request is initiated or
when a second factor device is registered.

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@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
---
layout: default
title: Duo Push Notifications
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 3
---
# Duo Push Notifications
Authelia supports mobile push notifications relying on [Duo].
Follow the instructions in the dedicated [documentation](../features/2fa/push-notifications.md)
to know how to set up push notifications in Authelia.
## Configuration
The configuration is as follows:
duo_api:
hostname: api-123456789.example.com
integration_key: ABCDEF
secret_key: 1234567890abcdefghifjkl
The secret key is shown as an example but you'd better set it using an environment
variable as described [here](./secrets.md).
[Duo]: https://duo.com/

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@ -0,0 +1,13 @@
---
layout: default
title: Google Analytics
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 4
---
# Google Analytics
It is possible to provide a Google Analytics ID to Authelia in order
to monitor the usage of the Sign-In portal.
google_analytics: UA-00000-01

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@ -0,0 +1,16 @@
---
layout: default
title: Configuration
nav_order: 4
has_children: true
---
# Configuration
Authelia uses a YAML file as configuration file. A template with all possible
options can be found [here](../config.template.yml), at the root of the repository.
When running **Authelia**, you can specify your configuration by passing
the file path as shown below.
$ authelia --config config.custom.yml

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@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
---
layout: default
title: Miscellaneous
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 5
---
# Miscellaneous
Here are the main customizable options in Authelia.
## Host & Port
`optional: true`
Defines the address to listen on.
host: 0.0.0.0
port: 9091
## Logs level
`optional: true`
Defines the level of logs used by Authelia. This level can be set to
`trace`, `debug`, `info`.
logs_level: debug
## JWT Secret
`optional: false`
Defines the secret used to craft JWT tokens leveraged by the identity
verification process
jwt_secret: v3ry_important_s3cr3t
## Default redirection URL
`optional: true`
The default redirection URL is the URL where users are redirected when Authelia
cannot detect the target URL where the user was heading.
In a normal authentication workflow, a user tries to access a website and she
gets redirected to the sign-in portal in order to authenticate. Since the user
initially targeted a website, the portal knows where the user was heading and
can redirect her after the authentication process.
However, when a user visits the sign in portal directly, the portal considers
the targeted website is the portal. In that case and if the default redirection URL
is configured, the user is redirected to that URL. If not defined, the user is not
redirected after authentication.

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@ -0,0 +1,18 @@
---
layout: default
title: Filesystem
parent: Notifier
grand_parent: Configuration
nav_order: 1
---
# Filesystem
With this configuration, the message will be sent to a file. This option
should be used only for testing purpose.
```yaml
notifier:
filesystem:
filename: /tmp/authelia/notification.txt
```

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@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
---
layout: default
title: Notifier
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 6
has_children: true
---
# Notifier
**Authelia** sometimes needs to send messages to users in order to
verify their identity.

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@ -0,0 +1,53 @@
---
layout: default
title: SMTP
parent: Notifier
grand_parent: Configuration
nav_order: 2
---
# SMTP
**Authelia** can send emails to users through an SMTP server.
It can be configured as described below.
```yaml
notifier:
# Use a SMTP server for sending notifications. Authelia uses PLAIN or LOGIN method to authenticate.
# [Security] By default Authelia will:
# - force all SMTP connections over TLS including unauthenticated connections
# - use the disable_require_tls boolean value to disable this requirement (only works for unauthenticated connections)
# - validate the SMTP server x509 certificate during the TLS handshake against the hosts trusted certificates
# - trusted_cert option:
# - this is a string value, that may specify the path of a PEM format cert, it is completely optional
# - if it is not set, a blank string, or an invalid path; will still trust the host machine/containers cert store
# - defaults to the host machine (or docker container's) trusted certificate chain for validation
# - use the trusted_cert string value to specify the path of a PEM format public cert to trust in addition to the hosts trusted certificates
# - use the disable_verify_cert boolean value to disable the validation (prefer the trusted_cert option as it's more secure)
smtp:
username: test
# This secret can also be set using the env variables AUTHELIA_NOTIFIER_SMTP_PASSWORD
password: password
host: 127.0.0.1
port: 1025
sender: admin@example.com
## disable_require_tls: false
## disable_verify_cert: false
## trusted_cert: ""
```
## Using Gmail
You need to generate an app password in order to use Gmail SMTP servers. The process is
described [here](https://support.google.com/accounts/answer/185833?hl=en)
```yaml
notifier:
smtp:
username: myaccount@gmail.com
# This secret can also be set using the env variables AUTHELIA_NOTIFIER_SMTP_PASSWORD
password: yourapppassword
sender: admin@example.com
host: smtp.gmail.com
port: 587
```

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@ -0,0 +1,17 @@
---
layout: default
title: One-Time Password
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 6
---
# One-Time Password
Applications generating one-time passwords usually displays an issuer to
differentiate the various applications registered by the user.
Authelia allows to customize the issuer to differentiate the entry created
by Authelia from others.
totp:
issuer: authelia.com

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@ -0,0 +1,27 @@
---
layout: default
title: Regulation
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 7
---
# Regulation
**Authelia** can temporarily ban accounts when there was too many
authentication attempts. This helps prevent brute force attacks.
## Configuration
```yaml
regulation:
# The number of failed login attempts before user is banned.
# Set it to 0 to disable regulation.
max_retries: 3
# The time range during which the user can attempt login before being banned.
# The user is banned if the authentication failed `max_retries` times in a `find_time` seconds window.
find_time: 120
# The length of time before a banned user can sign in again.
ban_time: 300
```

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@ -0,0 +1,44 @@
---
layout: default
title: Secrets
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 8
---
# Secrets
Configuration of Authelia requires some secrets and passwords.
Even if they can be set in the configuration file, the recommended
way to set secrets is to use environment variables as described
below.
## Environment variables
A secret can be configured using an environment variable with name
starting with AUTHELIA_ and followed by the path of the option capitalized
and with dots replaced by underscores.
For instance the LDAP password is identified by the path
**authentication_backend.ldap.password**, so this password could
alternatively be set using the environment variable called
**AUTHELIA_AUTHENTICATION_BACKEND_LDAP_PASSWORD**.
Here is the list of the environment variables which are considered
secrets and can be defined. Any other option defined using an
environment variable will not be replaced.
* AUTHELIA_JWT_SECRET
* AUTHELIA_DUO_API_SECRET_KEY
* AUTHELIA_SESSION_SECRET
* AUTHELIA_AUTHENTICATION_BACKEND_LDAP_PASSWORD
* AUTHELIA_NOTIFIER_SMTP_PASSWORD
* AUTHELIA_SESSION_REDIS_PASSWORD
* AUTHELIA_STORAGE_MYSQL_PASSWORD
* AUTHELIA_STORAGE_POSTGRES_PASSWORD
## Secrets in configuration file
If for some reason you prefer keeping the secrets in the configuration
file, be sure to apply the right permissions to the file in order to
prevent secret leaks if an another application gets compromised on your
server. The UNIX permissions should probably be something like 600.

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@ -0,0 +1,46 @@
---
layout: default
title: Session
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 9
---
# Session
**Authelia** relies on session cookies to authenticate users. When the user visits
a website of the protected domain `example.com` for the first time, Authelia detects
that there is no cookie for that user. Consequently, Authelia redirects the user
to the login portal through which the user should authenticate to get a cookie which
is valid for `*.example.com`, meaning all websites of the domain.
At the next request, Authelia receives the cookie associated to the authenticated user
and can then order the reverse proxy to let the request pass through to the application.
## Configuration
```yaml
session:
# The name of the session cookie. (default: authelia_session).
name: authelia_session
# The secret to encrypt the session cookie.
# This secret can also be set using the env variables AUTHELIA_SESSION_SECRET
secret: unsecure_session_secret
# The time in seconds before the cookie expires and session is reset.
expiration: 3600 # 1 hour
# The inactivity time in seconds before the session is reset.
inactivity: 300 # 5 minutes
# The domain to protect.
# Note: the login portal must also be a subdomain of that domain.
domain: example.com
# The redis connection details (optional)
# If not provided, sessions will be stored in memory
redis:
host: 127.0.0.1
port: 6379
# This secret can also be set using the env variables AUTHELIA_SESSION_REDIS_PASSWORD
password: authelia
```

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@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
---
layout: default
title: Storage backends
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 10
has_children: true
---
# Storage backends
**Authelia** supports multiple storage backends. This backend is used
to store user preferences, 2FA device handles and secrets, authentication
logs, etc...
The available options are:
* [SQLite](./sqlite.html)
* [MariaDB](./mariadb.html)
* ~~MySQL~~ ([#512](https://github.com/authelia/authelia/issues/512))
* [Postgres]((./postgres.html))

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@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
---
layout: default
title: MariaDB
parent: Storage backends
grand_parent: Configuration
nav_order: 1
---
# MariaDB
```yaml
storage:
mysql:
host: 127.0.0.1
port: 3306
database: authelia
username: authelia
# This secret can also be set using the env variables AUTHELIA_STORAGE_MYSQL_PASSWORD
password: mypassword
```

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@ -0,0 +1,20 @@
---
layout: default
title: PostgreSQL
parent: Storage backends
grand_parent: Configuration
nav_order: 2
---
# PostgreSQL
```yaml
storage:
postgres:
host: 127.0.0.1
port: 3306
database: authelia
username: authelia
# This secret can also be set using the env variables AUTHELIA_STORAGE_POSTGRES_PASSWORD
password: mypassword
```

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@ -0,0 +1,23 @@
---
layout: default
title: SQLite
parent: Storage backends
grand_parent: Configuration
nav_order: 3
---
# SQLite
If you don't have a SQL server, you can use [SQLite](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SQLite).
However please note that this setup will prevent you from running multiple
instances of Authelia since the database will be a local file.
## Configuration
Just give the path to the sqlite database. It will be created if the file does not exist.
```yaml
storage:
local:
path: /var/lib/authelia/db.sqlite3
```

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@ -1,3 +1,9 @@
---
layout: default
title: Authelia Scripts
parent: Contributing
---
# Authelia Scripts # Authelia Scripts
Authelia comes with a set of dedicated scripts doing a broad range of operations such as Authelia comes with a set of dedicated scripts doing a broad range of operations such as

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@ -1,4 +1,11 @@
# Build and dev ---
layout: default
title: Build & Dev
parent: Contributing
nav_order: 1
---
# Build & Dev
**Authelia** is written in Go and comes with a dedicated CLI called **Authelia** is written in Go and comes with a dedicated CLI called
[authelia-scripts](./authelia-scripts.md) which is available after [authelia-scripts](./authelia-scripts.md) which is available after

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@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
---
layout: default
title: Contributing
nav_order: 7
has_children: true
---
# Contributing

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@ -1,3 +1,10 @@
---
layout: default
title: Suites
parent: Contributing
nav_order: 3
---
# Suites # Suites
Authelia is a single component in interaction with many others in a complete Authelia is a single component in interaction with many others in a complete

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@ -1,165 +0,0 @@
# Deployment for Dev
1. [Deploy With npm](#deploy-with-npm)
2. [Deploy With Docker](#deploy-with-docker)
3. [Deploy nginx](#deploy-nginx)
4. [Discard components](#discard-components)
1. [Discard SQL Server](#discard-sql-server)
2. [Discard Redis](#discard-redis)
3. [Discard LDAP](#discard-ldap)
5. [FAQ](#faq)
**WARNING:** *the instructions given in this documentation are not meant
to be used for production environments since it will make **Authelia**
non resilient to failures.*
**NOTE:** If not done already, we highly recommend you first follow the
[Getting Started] documentation.
In some cases, like protecting personal projects/websites, it can be fine
to use **Authelia** in a non highly-available setup. This reduces the number
of components to only two: a reverse proxy such as nginx or Traefik and
Authelia as a companion of the proxy.
As for a regular deployment in production, you need to install **Authelia**
either by pulling the Docker image or building distributable version.
## Build and deploy the distributable version
$ authelia-scripts build
$ PUBLIC_DIR=./dist/public_html ./dist/authelia --config /path/to/your/configuration.yml
## Deploy with Docker
$ docker pull authelia/authelia
$ docker run -v /path/to/your/configuration.yml:/etc/authelia/configuration.yml authelia/authelia
## Deploy Nginx
You also need to install nginx and take
[example/compose/nginx/minimal/nginx.conf](./example/compose/nginx/minimal/nginx.conf)
as an example for your configuration.
## Deploy Traefik
TODO
## Discard components
### Discard SQL server
There is an option in the configuration file to avoid using an external
SQL server and use a local sqlite3 database instead. This option will
therefore prevent you from running multiple instances of **Authelia**
in parallel.
Consequently, this option is not meant to be used in production or at
least not one that should scale out.
Here is the configuration you should use:
storage:
# The file path of the sqlite3 file where data will be persisted
local:
path: /var/lib/authelia/db.sqlite3
### Discard Redis
There is an option in the configuration file to discard Redis and use the
memory of the server to store the KV data. This option will therefore
prevent you from running multiple instances of **Authelia** in parallel and
will make you lose user sessions if the application restarts. This
concretely means that all your users will need to authenticate again after
a restart of Authelia. Hence, this option is not meant to be used in production.
To use memory instead of a Redis backend, just comment out the Redis
connection details in the following block:
session:
...
# # The redis connection details
# redis:
# host: redis
# port: 6379
# password: authelia
### Discard LDAP
**Authelia** can use a file backend in order to store users instead of a
LDAP server or an Active Directory. This mode will therefore prevent you
from running multiple instances of **Authelia** in parallel and is therefore
discouraged for production environments.
To use a file backend instead of a LDAP server, you should first duplicate
the file [users_database.yml](../test/suites/basic/users_database.yml) and
edit it to add the users you want.
The content of this file is as follows:
users:
...
john:
password: "$6$rounds=500000$jgiCMRyGXzoqpxS3$w2pJeZnnH8bwW3zzvoMWtTRfQYsHbWbD/hquuQ5vUeIyl9gdwBIt6RWk2S6afBA0DPakbeWgD/4SZPiS0hYtU/"
email: john.doe@authelia.com
groups:
- admins
- dev
The password is hashed and salted as it is in LDAP servers with salted SHA-512
(more hash algorithms such as Argon2 will be provided in the future).
Here is a one-liner to generate such hashed password:
$ docker run authelia/authelia authelia hash-password yourpassword
$6$rounds=50000$BpLnfgDsc2WD8F2q$PumMwig8O0uIe9SgneL8Cm1FvUniOzpqBrH.uQE3aZR4K1dHsQldu5gEjJZsXcO./v3itfz6CXTDTJgeh5e8t.
Copy this newly hashed password into your `users_database.yml` file.
Once the file is created, edit the configuration file with the following
block (as used in [configuration.yml](../test/suites/basic/configuration.yml)):
authentication_backend:
file:
path: /path/to/the/users_database.yml
instead of (used in [config.template.yml](../config.template.yml)):
authentication_backend:
ldap:
url: ldap://openldap
base_dn: dc=example,dc=com
additional_users_dn: ou=users
users_filter: cn={0}
additional_groups_dn: ou=groups
groups_filter: (&(member={dn})(objectclass=groupOfNames))
group_name_attribute: cn
mail_attribute: mail
user: cn=admin,dc=example,dc=com
password: password
## FAQ
### Can you give more details on why this is not suitable for production environments?
This documentation gives instructions that will make **Authelia** non
highly-available and non scalable by preventing you from running multiple
instances of the application.
This means that **Authelia** won't be able to distribute the
load across multiple servers and it will prevent failover in case of a
crash or an hardware issue. Moreover, it will also prevent from reliably
persisting data and consequently fail access to your platform as the devices
registered by your users will be lost.
### Why aren't all those steps automated?
Well, as stated before those instructions are not meant to be applied for
a production environment. That being said, in some cases it is just fine and
writing an Ansible playbook to automate all this process is ok.
We would really be more than happy to review such a PR.
In the meantime, you can check the *Standalone* [suite](./suites.md) to see all this
in a real example.
[Getting Started]: ./getting-started.md

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@ -1,4 +1,11 @@
# Deployment for Production ---
layout: default
title: Deployment - Highly-Available
parent: Deployment
nav_order: 2
---
# Highly-Available Deployment
**Authelia** can be deployed on bare metal or on Kubernetes with two **Authelia** can be deployed on bare metal or on Kubernetes with two
different kind of artifacts: the distributable version (binary and public_html) different kind of artifacts: the distributable version (binary and public_html)
@ -42,16 +49,6 @@ pay attention to the permissions of the configuration file. See
$ docker run -v /path/to/your/configuration.yml:/etc/authelia/configuration.yml -e TZ=Europe/Paris authelia/authelia $ docker run -v /path/to/your/configuration.yml:/etc/authelia/configuration.yml -e TZ=Europe/Paris authelia/authelia
## On top of Kubernetes
<img src="../docs/images/logos/kubernetes.logo.png" width="50" style="padding-right: 10px" align="left">
**Authelia** can also be installed on top of [Kubernetes] using
[nginx ingress controller](https://github.com/kubernetes/ingress-nginx).
Please refer to the following [documentation](../internal/suites/example/kube/README.md)
for more information.
## FAQ ## FAQ
### Why is this not automated? ### Why is this not automated?
@ -59,9 +56,6 @@ for more information.
Ansible would be a very good candidate to automate the installation of such Ansible would be a very good candidate to automate the installation of such
an infrastructure on bare metal. We would be more than happy to review any PR on that matter. an infrastructure on bare metal. We would be more than happy to review any PR on that matter.
Regarding Kubernetes, the right way to go would be to write a Helm recipe.
Again, we would be glad to review any PR implementing this.
[config.template.yml]: ../config.template.yml [config.template.yml]: ../config.template.yml

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@ -0,0 +1,14 @@
---
layout: default
title: Deployment - Kubernetes
parent: Deployment
nav_order: 3
---
# Deployment on Kubernetes
<p>
<img src="../images/logos/kubernetes.logo.png" width="100" style="padding-right: 10px">
</p>
UNDER CONSTRUCTION

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@ -0,0 +1,61 @@
---
layout: default
title: Deployment - Lite
parent: Deployment
---
# Lite Deployment
**Authelia** can be deployed as a lite setup not requiring any SQL server,
Redis cluster or LDAP server. In some cases, like protecting personal projects/websites,
it can be fine to use that setup but beware that this setup is non-resilient to failures
so it should be used at your own risk.
The setup is called lite since it reduces the number of components in the architecture to
only two: a reverse proxy such as Nginx, Traefik or HAProxy and Authelia.
## Reverse Proxy
Documentation for deploying a reverse proxy collaborating with Authelia is available
[here](./supported-proxies/index).
## Discard components
### Discard SQL server
It's possible to use a SQLite file instead of a SQL server as documented
[here](../configuration/storage/sqlite).
### Discard Redis
Connection details to Redis are optional. If not provided, sessions will
be stored in memory instead. This has the inconvenient of logging out users
every time Authelia restarts.
The documentation about session management is available
[here](../configuration/session).
### Discard LDAP
**Authelia** can use a file backend in order to store users instead of a
LDAP server or an Active Directory.
To use a file backend instead of a LDAP server, please follow the related
documentation [here](../configuration/authentication/file).
## FAQ
### Can you give more details on why this is not suitable for production environments?
This documentation gives instructions that will make **Authelia** non
resilient to failures and non scalable by preventing you from running multiple
instances of the application. This means that **Authelia** won't be able to distribute
the load across multiple servers and it will prevent failover in case of a
crash or an hardware issue. Moreover, users will be logged out every time
Authelia restarts.
### Why aren't all those steps automated?
We would really be more than happy to review any contribution with an Ansible playbook,
a Chef cookbook or whatever else to automate the process.

8
docs/deployment/index.md Normal file
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@ -0,0 +1,8 @@
---
layout: default
title: Deployment
nav_order: 5
has_children: true
---
# Deployment

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@ -0,0 +1,15 @@
---
layout: default
title: HAProxy
parent: Supported Proxies
grand_parent: Deployment
nav_order: 1
---
# HAProxy
[HAProxy] is a reverse proxy supported by **Authelia**.
UNDER CONSTRUCTION
[HAproxy]: https://www.haproxy.org/

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@ -0,0 +1,12 @@
---
layout: default
title: Supported Proxies
parent: Deployment
nav_order: 4
has_children: true
---
# Supported Proxies
**Authelia** works in collaboration with reverse proxies. Here you can find
the documentation of the configuration required for every supported proxies.

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@ -1,3 +1,11 @@
---
layout: default
title: Nginx
parent: Supported Proxies
grand_parent: Deployment
nav_order: 2
---
# Nginx # Nginx
[nginx] is a reverse proxy supported by **Authelia**. [nginx] is a reverse proxy supported by **Authelia**.

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@ -1,3 +1,11 @@
---
layout: default
title: Traefik 1.x
parent: Supported Proxies
grand_parent: Deployment
nav_order: 3
---
# Traefik # Traefik
[Traefik 1.x] is a reverse proxy supported by **Authelia**. [Traefik 1.x] is a reverse proxy supported by **Authelia**.

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@ -1,3 +1,11 @@
---
layout: default
title: Traefik 2.x
parent: Supported Proxies
grand_parent: Deployment
nav_order: 3
---
# Traefik2 # Traefik2
[Traefik 2.x] is a reverse proxy supported by **Authelia**. [Traefik 2.x] is a reverse proxy supported by **Authelia**.

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# Features in details
## 1-Factor (1FA) using a LDAP server
**Authelia** uses an LDAP server as the backend for storing credentials.
When authentication is needed, the user is redirected to the login page which
corresponds to the first factor. **Authelia** tries to bind the username and
password against the configured LDAP backend.
You can find an example of the configuration of the LDAP backend in
[config.template.yml].
<p align="center">
<img src="../docs/images/1FA.png" width="400">
</p>
## 2-Factor (2FA)
**Authelia** comes with three kind of second factor.
* Security keys like [Yubikey]. More info [here](./2factor/security-key.md).
* One-Time Passwords generated by [Google Authenticator]. More info [here](./2factor/time-based-one-time-password.md).
* Duo Push Notifications to use with [Duo mobile application](https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.duosecurity.duomobile&hl=en) available on Android, iOS and Windows. More info [here](./2factor/duo-push-notifications.md).
<p align="center">
<img src="../docs/images/2FA-METHODS.png" width="400">
</p>
## Password reset
With **Authelia**, you can also reset your password in no time. Click on the
**Forgot password?** link in the login page, provide the username of the user
requiring a password reset and **Authelia** will send an email a confirmation
email to the user email address.
Proceed with the password reset form and validate to reset your password.
<p align="center">
<img src="../docs/images/RESET-PASSWORD-STEP1.png" width="400">
</p>
## Access Control
With **Authelia**, you can define your own access control rules for finely
restricting user access to some resources and subdomains. Those rules are
defined and fully documented in the configuration file. They can apply to
users, groups or everyone.
Check out [config.template.yml] to see how they are defined.
## Single factor authentication
**Authelia** allows you to customize the authentication method to use for each
subdomain. The supported methods are either "single_factor" or "two_factor".
Please check [config.template.yml] to see an example of configuration.
It is also possible to use [basic authentication] to access a resource
protected by a single factor.
Please note that Authelia uses the *Proxy-Authorization* header and not
*Authorization* since one might be willing to authenticate against both
Authelia and the proxy. For instance you can use the following command to
access your service:
$ curl -H "Proxy-Authorization: Basic am9objpwYXNzd29yZA==" https://myservice.example.com"
## Session management with Redis
When your users authenticate against Authelia, sessions are stored in a
Redis key/value store. You can specify your own Redis instance in
[config.template.yml].
[basic authentication]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Basic_access_authentication
[config.template.yml]: https://github.com/authelia/authelia/blob/master/config.template.yml
[Yubikey]: https://www.yubico.com/products/yubikey-hardware/yubikey4/
[Google Authenticator]: https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.google.android.apps.authenticator2&hl=en

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---
layout: default
title: Second Factor
parent: Features
nav_order: 1
has_children: true
---
# Second Factor
There are multiple supported options for the second factor.
* Time-based One-Time passwords with [Google Authenticator]
* Security Keys with tokens like [Yubikey].
* Push notifications on your mobile using [Duo].
<p align="center">
<img src="../../images/2FA-METHODS.png" width="400">
</p>
[Duo]: https://duo.com/
[Yubikey]: https://www.yubico.com/products/yubikey-hardware/yubikey4/
[Google Authenticator]: https://google-authenticator.com/

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---
layout: default
title: One-Time Password
nav_order: 1
parent: Second Factor
grand_parent: Features
---
# Time-based One-Time Password
**Authelia** supports Time-base one-time password generated by apps like [Google Authenticator].
<p align="center">
<img src="../../images/2FA-TOTP.png" width="300">
<img src="../../images/google-authenticator.png" width="150" class="no-border" style="margin-left: 50px">
</p>
After having successfully completed the first factor, select **One-Time Password method**
option and click on **Not registered yet?** link. This will send you an e-mail to confirm
your identity.
*NOTE: If you're testing **Authelia**, this e-mail has likely been sent to the mailbox available at https://mail.example.com:8080/*
Once this validation step is completed, a QRCode gets displayed.
<p align="center">
<img src="../../images/REGISTER-TOTP.png" width="400">
</p>
You can then use [Google Authenticator] to scan the code in order to register your device.
From now on, you get tokens generated every 30 seconds that
you can use to validate the second factor in **Authelia**.
[Google Authenticator]: https://google-authenticator.com/

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---
layout: default
title: Push Notification
parent: Second Factor
nav_order: 3
grand_parent: Features
---
# Mobile Push Notification
Mobile push notifications is the new trendy second factor method. When second factor is requested
by Authelia, a notification is sent on your phone that you can either accept or deny.
<p align="center">
<img src="../../images/duo-push-1.jpg" width="200">
<img src="../../images/duo-push-2.png" width="200">
</p>
Authelia leverages [Duo] third party to provide this feature.
First, sign up on their website, log in, create a user account and attach it a mobile device.
Beware that the name of the user must match the name of the user in Authelia.
Then, in Duo interface, click on *Applications* and *Protect an Application*. Select the option
*Partner Auth API*. This will generate an integration key, a secret key and a hostname. You can
set the name of the application to **Authelia** and then you must add the generated information
to Authelia [configuration](../deployment/configuration.md) as shown below:
duo_api:
hostname: api-123456789.example.com
integration_key: ABCDEF
secret_key: 1234567890abcdefghifjkl
Now that Authelia is configured, pass the first factor and select the Push notification
option.
<p align="center">
<img src="../../images/2FA-PUSH.png" width="400">
</p>
You should now receive a notification on your mobile phone with all the details
about the authentication request.
## Limitation
Users must be enrolled via the Duo Admin panel, they cannot enroll a device from
**Authelia** yet.
## FAQ
### Why don't I have access to the *Push Notification* option?
It's likely that you have not configured **Authelia** correctly. Please read this
documentation again and be sure you had a look at [config.template.yml](../../config.template.yml).
[Duo]: https://duo.com/

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---
layout: default
title: Security Keys
nav_order: 2
parent: Second Factor
grand_parent: Features
---
# Security Keys
**Authelia** supports hardware-based second factors leveraging security keys like
[Yubikeys](Yubikey).
Security keys are among the most secure second factor. This method is already
supported by many major applications and platforms like Google, Facebook, Github,
some banks, and much more...
<p align="center">
<img src="../../images/yubikey.jpg" width="150">
</p>
Normally, the protocol requires your security key to be enrolled on each site before
being able to authenticate with it. Since Authelia provides Single Sign-On, your users
will need to enroll their device only once to get access to all your applications.
<p align="center">
<img src="../../images/REGISTER-U2F.png" width="400">
</p>
After having successfully passed the first factor, select *Security Key* method and
click on *Not registered yet?* link. This will send you an email to verify your identity.
*NOTE: This e-mail has likely been sent to the mailbox at https://mail.example.com:8080/ if you're testing Authelia.*
Confirm your identity by clicking on **Register** and you'll be asked to
touch the token of your security key to complete the enrollment.
Upon successful enrollment, you can authenticate using your security key
by simply touching the token again when requested:
<p align="center">
<img src="../../images/2FA-U2F.png" width="400">
</p>
Easy, right?!
## FAQ
### Why don't I have access to the *Security Key* option?
U2F protocol is a new protocol that is only supported by recent browsers
and might even be enabled on some of them. Please be sure your browser
supports U2F and that the feature is enabled to make the option
available in **Authelia**.
[Yubikey]: https://www.yubico.com/products/yubikey-hardware/yubikey4/

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---
layout: default
title: Access Control
parent: Features
nav_order: 5
---
# Access Control
**Authelia** allows to define a fine-grained rule-based access control policy in
configuration. This list of rules is tested against any requests protected by
Authelia and defines the level of authentication the user must pass to get access
to the resource.
For instance a rule can look like this:
- domain: dev.example.com
resources:
- "^/groups/dev/.*$"
subject: "group:dev"
policy: two_factor
This rule matches when the request targets the domain `dev.example.com` and the path
matches the regular expression `^/groups/dev/.*$`. In that case, a two-factor policy
is applied requiring the user to authenticate with two factors.
## Configuration
Please check the dedicated [documentation](./deployment/configuration/access-control.md)

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---
layout: default
title: First Factor
parent: Features
nav_order: 1
---
# First Factor
2-Factor authentication is a method in which a user is granted access by presenting
two pieces of evidence that she is who she claims to be.
**Authelia** requires usual username and password as a first factor.
<p align="center">
<img src="../images/1FA.png" width="400">
</p>
*IMPORTANT: This is the only method available as first factor.*
Authelia supports several kind of users databases:
* An LDAP server like OpenLDAP or OpenAM.
* An Active Directory.
* A YAML file

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---
layout: default
title: Features
nav_order: 3
has_children: true
---
# Features
**Authelia** is a 2FA & SSO authentication server which is dedicated
to the security of applications and users. It can be considered
as an extension of reverse proxies by providing features specific
to authentication. You will find among other features:
* Multiple two-factor methods.
* Identity verification when registering second factor devices.
* Reset password.
* Ban account after too many attempts (known as regulation).

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---
layout: default
title: Password Reset
parent: Features
nav_order: 4
---
# Password Reset
**Authelia** provides workflow to let users reset their password when they lose it.
A simple click on `Forgot password?` for starting the process. Note that resetting a
password requires a new identity verification using the e-mail of the user.
<p align="center">
<img src="../images/1FA.png" width="400">
</p>
Give your username and receive an e-mail to verify your identity.
<p align="center">
<img src="../images/RESET-PASSWORD-STEP1.png" width="400">
</p>
Once your identity is verified, fill in the form to reset your password.
<p align="center">
<img src="../images/RESET-PASSWORD-STEP2.png" width="400">
</p>
Now you can authenticate with your new credentials.

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---
layout: default
title: Regulation
parent: Features
nav_order: 6
---
# Regulation
**Authelia** takes the security of users very seriously and comes with
a way to avoid brute forcing the first factor by regulating the
authentication attempts and temporarily ban an account when too many
attempts have been made.
## Configuration
Please check the dedicated [documentation](./deployement/configuration/regulation.md).

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---
layout: default
title: Single Factor
parent: Features
nav_order: 3
---
# Single Factor
**Authelia** supports single factor authentication to let applications
send authenticated requests to other applications.
Single or two-factor authentication can be configured per resource of an
application for flexibility.
For instance, you can configure Authelia to grant access to all resources
matching `app1.example.com/api/(.*)` with only a single factor and all
resources matching `app1.example.com/admin` with two factors.
To know more about the configuration of the feature, please visit the
documentation about the [configuration](../deployment/configuration.md).
## Proxy-Authorization header
Authelia reads credentials from the header `Proxy-Authorization` instead of
the usual `Authorization` header. This is because in some circumstances both Authelia
and the application could require authentication in order to provide specific
authorizations at the level of the application.

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---
layout: default
title: Getting Started
nav_order: 2
---
# Getting Started # Getting Started
**Authelia** can be tested in a matter of seconds with Docker and docker-compose. **Authelia** can be tested in a matter of seconds with Docker and docker-compose.
@ -59,15 +65,25 @@ Here are the versions used for testing in Buildkite:
$ docker-compose --version $ docker-compose --version
docker-compose version 1.24.1, build unknown docker-compose version 1.24.1, build unknown
### How am I supposed to access the subdomains of example.com? ### How can I serve my application under example.com?
In order to test Authelia, Authelia fakes your browser by adding entries Don't worry, you don't need to own the domain *example.com* to test Authelia.
in /etc/hosts when you first source the bootstrap.sh script. Copy the following lines in your /etc/hosts.
192.168.240.100 home.example.com
192.168.240.100 login.example.com
192.168.240.100 singlefactor.example.com
192.168.240.100 public.example.com
192.168.240.100 secure.example.com
192.168.240.100 mail.example.com
192.168.240.100 mx1.mail.example.com
`192.168.240.100` is the IP attributed by Docker to the reverse proxy. Once done
you can access the listed sub-domains from your browser and they will target
the reverse proxy.
### What should I do if I want to contribute? ### What should I do if I want to contribute?
You can refer to the dedicated documentation [here](./build-and-dev.md). You can refer to the dedicated documentation [here](./contributing/index.md).
[config.template.yml]: ../config.template.yml [suite]: ./contributing/suites.md
[DockerHub]: https://hub.docker.com/r/authelia/authelia/
[suite]: ./suites.md

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---
layout: default
title: Architecture
parent: Home
nav_order: 1
---
# Architecture
**Authelia** is a companion of reverse proxies like Nginx, Traefik and HAProxy.
It can be seen as an extension of those proxies providing authentication functions
and a login portal.
As shown in the following architecture diagram, Authelia is directly connected to
the reverse proxy but never directly connected to application backends.
<p align="center" style="margin:50px">
<img src="../images/archi.png"/>
</p>
## Workflow
Reverse proxies are configured so that every incoming requests generates an authentication
request sent to Authelia and to which Authelia responds to order the reverse
proxy to let the incoming request pass through or block it because user is not authenticated
or is not sufficiently authorized.
### Step by step
When the first request of an unauthenticated user hits the reverse proxy, Authelia
determines the user is not authenticated because no session cookie has been sent along with
the request. Consequently, Authelia redirects the user to the authentication portal provided
by Authelia itself. The user can then execute the authentication workflow using that portal
to obtain a session cookie valid for all subdomains of the domain protected by Authelia.
When the user visits the initial website again, the query is sent along with the
session cookie which is forwarded in the authentication request to Authelia. This time,
Authelia can verify the user is authenticated and order the reverse proxy to let the query
pass through.
### Sequence Diagram
Here is a description of the complete workflow:
<p align="center">
<img src="../images/sequence-diagram.png"/>
</p>

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---
layout: default
title: Home
nav_order: 1
has_children: true
---
# Home
*It has never been so easy to secure your applications with Single Sign-On
and Two-Factor.*
With **Authelia** you can login once and get access to all your web apps
safely from the Web thanks to two-factor authentication.
<p align="center">
<img src="./images/1FA.png" width="400" />
</p>
**Authelia** is an open source authentication and authorization server
protecting modern web applications by collaborating with reverse proxies
such as NGINX, Traefik and HAProxy. Consequently, no code is required to
protect your apps.
<p align="center" style="margin:50px">
<img src="./images/archi.png"/>
</p>
Multiple 2-factor methods are available for satisfying every users.
* Time-based One-Time passwords with [Google Authenticator].
* Security Keys with tokens like [Yubikey].
* Push notifications on your mobile using [Duo].
**Authelia** is available as Docker images, static binaries and AUR packages
so that you can test it in minutes. Let's begin with the
[Getting Started](./getting-started).
## Authelia...
* is not an OAuth or OpenID Connect provider yet.
* is not a SAML provider yet.
<<<<<<< HEAD
* does not support support authentication against an OAuth or OpenID Connect provider.
* does not support using hardware devices as single factor.
* does not allow provide a PAM module yet.
=======
* does not support authentication against an OAuth or OpenID Connect provider.
* does not support authentication against a SAML provider.
* does not support using hardware devices as single factor.
* does not provide a PAM module yet.
>>>>>>> [WIP] Use 'Just-the-docs' jekyll theme to organize documentation.
[Duo]: https://duo.com/
[Yubikey]: https://www.yubico.com/products/yubikey-hardware/yubikey4/
<<<<<<< HEAD
[Google Authenticator]: https://google-authenticator.com/
=======
[Google Authenticator]: https://google-authenticator.com/
>>>>>>> [WIP] Use 'Just-the-docs' jekyll theme to organize documentation.

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---
layout: default
title: Security
nav_order: 6
has_children: true
---
# Security

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# Security ---
layout: default
title: Security Measures
parent: Security
nav_order: 2
---
# Security Measures
## Protection against cookie theft ## Protection against cookie theft
@ -93,10 +100,4 @@ add_header X-Frame-Options "SAMEORIGIN";
add_header X-XSS-Protection "1; mode=block"; add_header X-XSS-Protection "1; mode=block";
``` ```
## Contributing
If you find possible vulnerabilities or threats, do not hesitate to contribute
either by writing a test case demonstrating the possible attack and if
possible some solutions to prevent it or submit a PR.
[HSTS]: https://www.nginx.com/blog/http-strict-transport-security-hsts-and-nginx/ [HSTS]: https://www.nginx.com/blog/http-strict-transport-security-hsts-and-nginx/

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---
layout: default
title: Report Vulnerabilities
parent: Security
nav_order: 1
---
# Report Vulnerabilities
Security is taken very seriously here, therefore we follow the rule of
responsible disclosure and we encourage you to do so.
Would you like to report any vulnerability discovered in Authelia, please
first contact **clems4ever** on [Matrix](https://riot.im/app/#/room/#authelia:matrix.org)
or by [email](mailto:clement.michaud34@gmail.com).

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@ -126,6 +126,7 @@ github.com/konsorten/go-windows-terminal-sequences v1.0.1 h1:mweAR1A6xJ3oS2pRaGi
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github.com/kr/logfmt v0.0.0-20140226030751-b84e30acd515/go.mod h1:+0opPa2QZZtGFBFZlji/RkVcI2GknAs/DXo4wKdlNEc= github.com/kr/logfmt v0.0.0-20140226030751-b84e30acd515/go.mod h1:+0opPa2QZZtGFBFZlji/RkVcI2GknAs/DXo4wKdlNEc=
github.com/kr/pretty v0.1.0/go.mod h1:dAy3ld7l9f0ibDNOQOHHMYYIIbhfbHSm3C4ZsoJORNo= github.com/kr/pretty v0.1.0/go.mod h1:dAy3ld7l9f0ibDNOQOHHMYYIIbhfbHSm3C4ZsoJORNo=
github.com/kr/pty v1.1.1 h1:VkoXIwSboBpnk99O/KFauAEILuNHv5DVFKZMBN/gUgw=
github.com/kr/pty v1.1.1/go.mod h1:pFQYn66WHrOpPYNljwOMqo10TkYh1fy3cYio2l3bCsQ= github.com/kr/pty v1.1.1/go.mod h1:pFQYn66WHrOpPYNljwOMqo10TkYh1fy3cYio2l3bCsQ=
github.com/kr/pty v1.1.8 h1:AkaSdXYQOWeaO3neb8EM634ahkXXe3jYbVh/F9lq+GI= github.com/kr/pty v1.1.8 h1:AkaSdXYQOWeaO3neb8EM634ahkXXe3jYbVh/F9lq+GI=
github.com/kr/pty v1.1.8/go.mod h1:O1sed60cT9XZ5uDucP5qwvh+TE3NnUj51EiZO/lmSfw= github.com/kr/pty v1.1.8/go.mod h1:O1sed60cT9XZ5uDucP5qwvh+TE3NnUj51EiZO/lmSfw=