Also improve some part of the documentation.
3.5 KiB
Getting Started
Authelia can be tested in a matter of seconds with docker-compose based on the latest image available on Dockerhub.
Pre-requisites
In order to test Authelia, we need to make sure that:
- Docker and docker-compose are installed on your computer.
- Ports 8080 and 8085 are not already used on your machine.
- Some subdomains of example.com redirect to your test infrastructure.
Docker & docker-compose
Make sure you have docker and docker-compose installed on your machine. Here are the versions used for testing in Travis:
$ docker --version
Docker version 17.03.1-ce, build c6d412e
$ docker-compose --version
docker-compose version 1.14.0, build c7bdf9e
Available port
Make sure you don't have anything listening on port 8080 and 8085.
The port 8080 will be our frontend load balancer serving both Authelia's portal and the applications we want to protect.
The port 8085 is serving a webmail used to receive fake emails sent by Authelia to validate your identity when registering U2F or TOTP secrets or when resetting your password.
Subdomain aliases
In order to simulate the behavior of a DNS resolving some test subdomains of example.com to your machine, we need to add the following lines to your /etc/hosts. It will alias the subdomains so that nginx can redirect requests to the correct virtual host.
127.0.0.1 home.example.com
127.0.0.1 public.example.com
127.0.0.1 dev.example.com
127.0.0.1 admin.example.com
127.0.0.1 mx1.mail.example.com
127.0.0.1 mx2.mail.example.com
127.0.0.1 single_factor.example.com
127.0.0.1 login.example.com
Deploy
To deploy Authelia using the latest image from Dockerhub, run the following command:
./scripts/example-dockerhub/deploy-example.sh
Test it!
After few seconds the services should be running and you should be able to visit https://home.example.com:8080/.
When accessing the login page, since this is a test environment a self-signed certificate exception should appear, it has to be trusted before you can get to the home page. The certificate must also be trusted for each subdomain, therefore it is normal to see this exception several times.
Below is what the login page looks like after you accepted all exceptions:
You can use one of the users listed in https://home.example.com:8080/. The rights granted to each user and group is also provided there.
At some point, you'll be required to register your second factor, either U2F or TOTP. Since your security is Authelia's priority, it will send an email to the email address of the user to confirm the user identity. Since we're running a test environment, we provide a fake webmail called MailCatcher from which you can checkout the email and confirm your identity. The webmail is accessible from http://localhost:8085.
Note: If you cannot deploy the fake webmail for any reason. You can configure Authelia to use the filesystem notifier (option available in config.template.yml) that will send the content of the email in a file instead of sending an email. It is advised to use this option for testing only.
Enjoy!