ceph/doc/radosgw/keycloak.rst

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Keycloak integration with RadosGW
=================================
Keycloak can be setup as an OpenID Connect Identity Provider, which can be used by mobile/ web apps
to authenticate their users. The Web token returned as a result of authentication can be used by the
mobile/ web app to call AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity to get back a set of temporary S3 credentials,
which can be used by the app to make S3 calls.
Setting up Keycloak
====================
Installing and bringing up Keycloak can be found here: https://www.keycloak.org/docs/latest/server_installation/.
Configuring Keycloak to talk to RGW
===================================
The following configurables have to be added for RGW to talk to Keycloak::
[client.radosgw.gateway]
rgw sts key = {sts key for encrypting/ decrypting the session token}
rgw s3 auth use sts = true
Example showing how to fetch a web token from Keycloak
======================================================
Several examples of apps authenticating with Keycloak are given here: https://github.com/keycloak/keycloak-quickstarts/blob/latest/docs/getting-started.md
Taking the example of app-profile-jee-jsp app given in the link above, its client id and client secret, can be used to fetch the
access token (web token) for an application using grant type 'client_credentials' as given below::
KC_REALM=demo
KC_CLIENT=<client id>
KC_CLIENT_SECRET=<client secret>
KC_SERVER=<host>:8080
KC_CONTEXT=auth
# Request Tokens for credentials
KC_RESPONSE=$( \
curl -k -v -X POST \
-H "Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded" \
-d "scope=openid" \
-d "grant_type=client_credentials" \
-d "client_id=$KC_CLIENT" \
-d "client_secret=$KC_CLIENT_SECRET" \
"http://$KC_SERVER/$KC_CONTEXT/realms/$KC_REALM/protocol/openid-connect/token" \
| jq .
)
KC_ACCESS_TOKEN=$(echo $KC_RESPONSE| jq -r .access_token)
An access token can also be fetched for a particular user with grant type 'password', using client id, client secret, username and its password
as given below::
KC_REALM=demo
KC_USERNAME=<username>
KC_PASSWORD=<userpassword>
KC_CLIENT=<client id>
KC_CLIENT_SECRET=<client secret>
KC_SERVER=<host>:8080
KC_CONTEXT=auth
# Request Tokens for credentials
KC_RESPONSE=$( \
curl -k -v -X POST \
-H "Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded" \
-d "scope=openid" \
-d "grant_type=password" \
-d "client_id=$KC_CLIENT" \
-d "client_secret=$KC_CLIENT_SECRET" \
-d "username=$KC_USERNAME" \
-d "password=$KC_PASSWORD" \
"http://$KC_SERVER/$KC_CONTEXT/realms/$KC_REALM/protocol/openid-connect/token" \
| jq .
)
KC_ACCESS_TOKEN=$(echo $KC_RESPONSE| jq -r .access_token)
KC_ACCESS_TOKEN can be used to invoke AssumeRoleWithWebIdentity as given in
:doc:`STS`.
Attaching tags to a user in Keycloak
====================================
We need to create a user in keycloak, and add tags to it as its attributes.
Add a user as shown below:
.. image:: ../images/keycloak-adduser.png
:align: center
Add user details as shown below:
.. image:: ../images/keycloak-userdetails.png
:align: center
Add user credentials as shown below:
.. image:: ../images/keycloak-usercredentials.png
:align: center
Add tags to the 'attributes' tab of the user as shown below:
.. image:: ../images/keycloak-usertags.png
:align: center
Add a protocol mapper for the user attribute to a client as shown below:
.. image:: ../images/keycloak-userclientmapper.png
:align: center
After following the steps shown above, the tag 'Department' will appear in the JWT (web token), under 'https://aws.amazon.com/tags' namespace.
The tags can be verified using token introspection of the JWT. The command to introspect a token using client id and client secret is shown below::
KC_REALM=demo
KC_CLIENT=<client id>
KC_CLIENT_SECRET=<client secret>
KC_SERVER=<host>:8080
KC_CONTEXT=auth
curl -k -v \
-X POST \
-u "$KC_CLIENT:$KC_CLIENT_SECRET" \
-d "token=$KC_ACCESS_TOKEN" \
"http://$KC_SERVER/$KC_CONTEXT/realms/$KC_REALM/protocol/openid-connect/token/introspect" \
| jq .