Removes the footnote from beta2.
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layout | title | parent | grand_parent | nav_order |
---|---|---|---|---|
default | OpenID Connect | Identity Providers | Configuration | 2 |
OpenID Connect
Authelia currently supports the OpenID Connect OP role as a beta feature. The OP role is the OpenID Connect Provider role, not the Relaying Party or RP role. This means other applications that implement the OpenID Connect RP role can use Authelia as an authentication and authorization backend similar to how you may use social media or development platforms for login.
The Relaying Party role is the role which allows an application to use GitHub, Google, or other OpenID Connect providers for authentication and authorization. We do not intend to support this functionality at this moment in time.
Roadmap
We have decided to implement OpenID Connect as a beta feature, it's suggested you only utilize it for testing and providing feedback, and should take caution in relying on it in production as of now. OpenID Connect and it's related endpoints are not enabled by default unless you specifically configure the OpenID Connect section.
The beta will be broken up into stages. Each stage will bring additional features. The following table is a rough plan for which stage will have each feature, and may evolve over time:
Stage | Feature Description |
---|---|
beta1 (4.29.0) | User Consent |
Authorization Code Flow | |
OpenID Connect Discovery | |
RS256 Signature Strategy | |
Per Client Scope/Grant Type/Response Type Restriction | |
Per Client Authorization Policy (1FA/2FA) | |
Per Client List of Valid Redirection URI's | |
Confidential Client Type | |
beta2 (4.30.0) | Userinfo Endpoint (missed in beta1) |
Parameter Entropy Configuration | |
Token/Code Lifespan Configuration | |
Client Debug Messages | |
Client Audience | |
Public Client Type | |
beta3 1 | Token Storage |
Audit Storage | |
beta4 1 | Back-Channel Logout |
Deny Refresh on Session Expiration | |
Signing Key Rotation Policy | |
Client Secrets Hashed in Configuration | |
GA 1 | General Availability after previous stages are vetted for bug fixes |
misc | List of other features that may be implemented |
Front-Channel Logout 2 | |
OAuth 2.0 Authorization Server Metadata 2 | |
OpenID Connect Session Management 2 |
¹ This stage has not been implemented as of yet.
² This individual feature has not been implemented as of yet.
Configuration
The following snippet provides a sample-configuration for the OIDC identity provider explaining each field in detail.
identity_providers:
oidc:
hmac_secret: this_is_a_secret_abc123abc123abc
issuer_private_key: |
--- KEY START
--- KEY END
access_token_lifespan: 1h
authorize_code_lifespan: 1m
id_token_lifespan: 1h
refresh_token_lifespan: 90m
enable_client_debug_messages: false
clients:
- id: myapp
description: My Application
secret: this_is_a_secret
public: false
authorization_policy: two_factor
audience: []
scopes:
- openid
- groups
- email
- profile
redirect_uris:
- https://oidc.example.com:8080/oauth2/callback
grant_types:
- refresh_token
- authorization_code
response_types:
- code
response_modes:
- form_post
- query
- fragment
userinfo_signing_algorithm: none
Options
hmac_secret
The HMAC secret used to sign the OpenID Connect JWT's. The provided string is hashed to a SHA256 byte string for the purpose of meeting the required format. You must generate this option yourself.
Should be defined using a secret which is the recommended for containerized deployments.
issuer_private_key
The private key in DER base64 encoded PEM format used to encrypt the OpenID Connect JWT's.¹
You must generate this option yourself. To create this option, use
docker run -u "$(id -u):$(id -g)" -v "$(pwd)":/keys authelia/authelia:latest authelia rsa generate --dir /keys
to generate both the private and public key in the current directory. You can then paste the
private key into your configuration.
Should be defined using a secret which is the recommended for containerized deployments.
access_token_lifespan
The maximum lifetime of an access token. It's generally recommended keeping this short similar to the default. For more information read these docs about token lifespan.
authorize_code_lifespan
The maximum lifetime of an authorize code. This can be rather short, as the authorize code should only be needed to obtain the other token types. For more information read these docs about token lifespan.
id_token_lifespan
The maximum lifetime of an ID token. For more information read these docs about token lifespan.
refresh_token_lifespan
The maximum lifetime of a refresh token. The refresh token can be used to obtain new refresh tokens as well as access tokens or id tokens with an up-to-date expiration. For more information read these docs about token lifespan.
A good starting point is 50% more or 30 minutes more (which ever is less) time than the highest lifespan out of the access token lifespan, the authorize code lifespan, and the id token lifespan. For instance the default for all of these is 60 minutes, so the default refresh token lifespan is 90 minutes.
enable_client_debug_messages
Allows additional debug messages to be sent to the clients.
minimum_parameter_entropy
This controls the minimum length of the nonce
and state
parameters.
Security Notice: Changing this value is generally discouraged, reducing it from the default can theoretically make certain scenarios less secure. It is highly encouraged that if your OpenID Connect RP does not send these parameters or sends parameters with a lower length than the default that they implement a change rather than changing this value.
clients
A list of clients to configure. The options for each client are described below.
id
The Client ID for this client. It must exactly match the Client ID configured in the application consuming this client.
description
A friendly description for this client shown in the UI. This defaults to the same as the ID.
secret
The shared secret between Authelia and the application consuming this client. This secret must match the secret configured in the application. Currently this is stored in plain text. You must generate this option yourself.
This must be provided when the client is a confidential client type, and must be blank when using the public client type. To set the client type to public see the public configuration option.
public
This enables the public client type for this client. This is for clients that are not capable of maintaining confidentiality of credentials, you can read more about client types in RFC6749. This is particularly useful for SPA's and CLI tools. This option requires setting the client secret to a blank string.
In addition to the standard rules for redirect URIs, public clients can use the urn:ietf:wg:oauth:2.0:oob
redirect URI.
authorization_policy
The authorization policy for this client: either one_factor
or two_factor
.
audience
A list of audiences this client is allowed to request.
scopes
A list of scopes to allow this client to consume. See scope definitions for more information. The documentation for the application you want to use with Authelia will most-likely provide you with the scopes to allow.
redirect_uris
A list of valid callback URIs this client will redirect to. All other callbacks will be considered unsafe. The URIs are case-sensitive and they differ from application to application - the community has provided a list of URL´s for common applications.
Some restrictions that have been placed on clients and their redirect URIs are as follows:
- If a client attempts to authorize with Authelia and its redirect URI is not listed in the client configuration the attempt to authorize wil fail and an error will be generated.
- The redirect URIs are case-sensitive.
- The URI must include a scheme and that scheme must be one of
http
orhttps
. - The client can ignore rule 3 and use
urn:ietf:wg:oauth:2.0:oob
if it is a public client type.
grant_types
A list of grant types this client can return. It is recommended that this isn't configured at this time unless you
know what you're doing. Valid options are: implicit
, refresh_token
, authorization_code
, password
,
client_credentials
.
response_types
A list of response types this client can return. It is recommended that this isn't configured at this time unless you
know what you're doing. Valid options are: code
, code id_token
, id_token
, token id_token
, token
,
token id_token code
.
response_modes
A list of response modes this client can return. It is recommended that this isn't configured at this time unless you
know what you're doing. Potential values are form_post
, query
, and fragment
.
userinfo_signing_algorithm
The algorithm used to sign the userinfo endpoint responses. This can either be none
or RS256
.
Generating a random secret
If you must provide a random secret in configuration, you can generate a random string of sufficient length. The command
LENGTH=64
tr -cd '[:alnum:]' < /dev/urandom | fold -w "${LENGTH}" | head -n 1 | tr -d '\n' ; echo
prints such a string with a length in characters of ${LENGTH}
on stdout
. The string will only contain alphanumeric
characters. For Kubernetes, see this section too.
Scope Definitions
openid
This is the default scope for openid. This field is forced on every client by the configuration validation that Authelia does.
JWT Field | JWT Type | Authelia Attribute | Description |
---|---|---|---|
sub | string | Username | The username the user used to login with |
scope | string | scopes | Granted scopes (space delimited) |
scp | array[string] | scopes | Granted scopes |
iss | string | hostname | The issuer name, determined by URL |
at_hash | string | N/A | Access Token Hash |
aud | array[string] | N/A | Audience |
exp | number | N/A | Expires |
auth_time | number | N/A | The time the user authenticated with Authelia |
rat | number | N/A | The time when the token was requested |
iat | number | N/A | The time when the token was issued |
jti | string(uuid) | N/A | JWT Identifier |
groups
This scope includes the groups the authentication backend reports the user is a member of in the token.
JWT Field | JWT Type | Authelia Attribute | Description |
---|---|---|---|
groups | array[string] | Groups | The users display name |
This scope includes the email information the authentication backend reports about the user in the token.
JWT Field | JWT Type | Authelia Attribute | Description |
---|---|---|---|
string | email[0] | The first email address in the list of emails | |
email_verified | bool | N/A | If the email is verified, assumed true for the time being |
alt_emails | array[string] | email[1:] | All email addresses that are not in the email JWT field |
profile
This scope includes the profile information the authentication backend reports about the user in the token.
JWT Field | JWT Type | Authelia Attribute | Description |
---|---|---|---|
name | string | display_name | The users display name |
Endpoint Implementations
This is a table of the endpoints we currently support and their paths. This can be requrired information for some RP's, particularly those that don't use discovery. The paths are appended to the end of the primary URL used to access Authelia. For example in the Discovery example provided you access Authelia via https://auth.example.com, the discovery URL is https://auth.example.com/.well-known/openid-configuration.
Endpoint | Path |
---|---|
Discovery | .well-known/openid-configuration |
JWKS | api/oidc/jwks |
Authorization | api/oidc/authorize |
Token | api/oidc/token |
Introspection | api/oidc/introspect |
Revocation | api/oidc/revoke |
Userinfo | api/oidc/userinfo |