User guide: Token normalization¶
Broadly, the term token normalization in authentication systems usually implies the exchange of an authentication token, as provided by the user in a given format, and/or its associated identity claims, for another freshly issued token/set of claims, of a given (normalized) structure or format.
The most typical use-case for token normalization involves accepting tokens issued by multiple trusted sources and of often varied authentication protocols, while ensuring that the eventual different data structures adopted by each of those sources are normalized, thus allowing to simplify policies and authorization checks that depend on those values. In general, however, any modification to the identity claims can be for the purpose of normalization.
This user guide focuses on the aspect of mutation of the identity claims resolved from an authentication token, to a certain data format and/or by extending them, so that required attributes can thereafter be trusted to be present among the claims, in a desired form. For such, Authorino allows to extend resolved identity objects with custom attributes (custom claims) of either static values or with values fetched from the Authorization JSON.
For not only normalizing the identity claims for purpose of writing simpler authorization checks and policies, but also getting Authorino to issue a new token in a normalized format, check the Festival Wristband tokens feature.
Authorino capabilities featured in this guide:
- Identity verification & authentication → Identity extension
- Identity verification & authentication → API key
- Identity verification & authentication → JWT verification
- Authorization → Pattern-matching authorization
Check out as well the user guides about Authentication with API keys, OpenID Connect Discovery and authentication with JWTs and Simple pattern-matching authorization policies.
For further details about Authorino features in general, check the docs.
Requirements¶
- Kubernetes server with permissions to install cluster-scoped resources (operator, CRDs and RBAC)
- Identity Provider (IdP) that implements OpenID Connect authentication and OpenID Connect Discovery (e.g. Keycloak)
- jq, to extract parts of JSON responses
If you do not own a Kubernetes server already and just want to try out the steps in this guide, you can create a local containerized cluster by executing the command below. In this case, the main requirement is having Kind installed, with either Docker or Podman.
Deploy the identity provider and authentication server by executing the command below. For the examples in this guide, we are going to use a Keycloak server preloaded with all required realm settings.
kubectl create namespace keycloak
kubectl -n keycloak apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kuadrant/authorino-examples/main/keycloak/keycloak-deploy.yaml
The next steps walk you through installing Authorino, deploying and configuring a sample service called Talker API to be protected by the authorization service.
Using Kuadrant |
---|
If you are a user of Kuadrant and already have your workload cluster configured and sample service application deployed, as well as your Gateway API network resources applied to route traffic to your service, skip straight to step ❺. At step ❺, instead of creating an For more about using Kuadrant to enforce authorization, check out Kuadrant auth. |
❶ Install the Authorino Operator (cluster admin required)¶
The following command will install the Authorino Operator in the Kubernetes cluster. The operator manages instances of the Authorino authorization service.
curl -sL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Kuadrant/authorino-operator/main/utils/install.sh | bash -s
❷ Deploy Authorino¶
The following command will request an instance of Authorino as a separate service1 that watches for AuthConfig
resources in the default
namespace2, with TLS disabled3.
kubectl apply -f -<<EOF
apiVersion: operator.authorino.kuadrant.io/v1beta1
kind: Authorino
metadata:
name: authorino
spec:
listener:
tls:
enabled: false
oidcServer:
tls:
enabled: false
EOF
❸ Deploy the Talker API¶
The Talker API is a simple HTTP service that echoes back in the response whatever it gets in the request. We will use it in this guide as the sample service to be protected by Authorino.
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kuadrant/authorino-examples/main/talker-api/talker-api-deploy.yaml
❹ Setup Envoy¶
The following bundle from the Authorino examples deploys the Envoy proxy and configuration to wire up the Talker API behind the reverse-proxy, with external authorization enabled with the Authorino instance.4
kubectl apply -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kuadrant/authorino-examples/main/envoy/envoy-notls-deploy.yaml
The command above creates an Ingress
with host name talker-api.127.0.0.1.nip.io
. If you are using a local Kubernetes cluster created with Kind, forward requests from your local port 8000 to the Envoy service running inside the cluster:
❺ Create an AuthConfig
¶
Create an Authorino AuthConfig
custom resource declaring the auth rules to be enforced.
This example implements a policy that only users bound to the admin
role can send DELETE
requests.
The config trusts access tokens issued by a Keycloak realm as well as API keys labeled specifically to a selected group (friends
). The roles of the identities handled by Keycloak are managed in Keycloak, as realm roles. Particularly, users john
and peter
are bound to the member
role, while user jane
is bound to roles member
and admin
. As for the users authenticating with API key, they are all bound to the admin
role.
Without normalizing identity claims from these two different sources, the policy would have to handle the differences of data formats with additional ifs-and-elses. Instead, the config here uses the identity.extendedProperties
option to ensure a custom roles
(Array) claim is always present in the identity object. In the case of Keycloak ID tokens, the value is extracted from the realm_access.roles
claim; for API key-resolved objects, the custom claim is set to the static value ["admin"]
.
Kuadrant users –
Remember to create an AuthPolicy instead of an AuthConfig.
For more, see Kuadrant auth.
|
kubectl apply -f -<<EOF
apiVersion: authorino.kuadrant.io/v1beta2
kind: AuthConfig
metadata:
name: talker-api-protection
spec:
hosts:
- talker-api.127.0.0.1.nip.io
authentication:
"keycloak-kuadrant-realm":
jwt:
issuerUrl: http://keycloak.keycloak.svc.cluster.local:8080/realms/kuadrant
overrides:
"roles":
selector: auth.identity.realm_access.roles
"api-key-friends":
apiKey:
selector:
matchLabels:
group: friends
credentials:
authorizationHeader:
prefix: APIKEY
defaults:
"roles":
value: ["admin"]
authorization:
"only-admins-can-delete":
when:
- selector: context.request.http.method
operator: eq
value: DELETE
patternMatching:
patterns:
- selector: auth.identity.roles
operator: incl
value: admin
EOF
❻ Create an API key¶
kubectl apply -f -<<EOF
apiVersion: v1
kind: Secret
metadata:
name: api-key-1
labels:
authorino.kuadrant.io/managed-by: authorino
group: friends
stringData:
api_key: ndyBzreUzF4zqDQsqSPMHkRhriEOtcRx
type: Opaque
EOF
❼ Consume the API¶
Obtain an access token and consume the API as Jane (admin)¶
Obtain an access token with the Keycloak server for Jane:
The AuthConfig
deployed in the previous step is suitable for validating access tokens requested inside the cluster. This is because Keycloak's iss
claim added to the JWTs matches always the host used to request the token and Authorino will later try to match this host to the host that provides the OpenID Connect configuration.
Obtain an access token from within the cluster for the user Jane, whose e-mail has been verified:
ACCESS_TOKEN=$(kubectl run token --attach --rm --restart=Never -q --image=curlimages/curl -- http://keycloak.keycloak.svc.cluster.local:8080/realms/kuadrant/protocol/openid-connect/token -s -d 'grant_type=password' -d 'client_id=demo' -d 'username=jane' -d 'password=p' -d 'scope=openid' | jq -r .access_token)
If your Keycloak server is reachable from outside the cluster, feel free to obtain the token directly. Make sure the host name set in the OIDC issuer endpoint in the AuthConfig
matches the one used to obtain the token and is as well reachable from within the cluster.
Consume the API as Jane:
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $ACCESS_TOKEN" -X DELETE http://talker-api.127.0.0.1.nip.io:8000/hello -i
# HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Obtain an access token and consume the API as John (member)¶
Obtain an access token with the Keycloak server for John:
ACCESS_TOKEN=$(kubectl run token --attach --rm --restart=Never -q --image=curlimages/curl -- http://keycloak.keycloak.svc.cluster.local:8080/realms/kuadrant/protocol/openid-connect/token -s -d 'grant_type=password' -d 'client_id=demo' -d 'username=john' -d 'password=p' -d 'scope=openid' | jq -r .access_token)
Consume the API as John:
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $ACCESS_TOKEN" -X DELETE http://talker-api.127.0.0.1.nip.io:8000/hello -i
# HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden
Consume the API using the API key to authenticate (admin)¶
curl -H "Authorization: APIKEY ndyBzreUzF4zqDQsqSPMHkRhriEOtcRx" -X DELETE http://talker-api.127.0.0.1.nip.io:8000/hello -i
# HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Cleanup¶
If you have started a Kubernetes cluster locally with Kind to try this user guide, delete it by running:
Otherwise, delete the resources created in each step:
kubectl delete secret/api-key-1
kubectl delete authconfig/talker-api-protection
kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kuadrant/authorino-examples/main/envoy/envoy-notls-deploy.yaml
kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/kuadrant/authorino-examples/main/talker-api/talker-api-deploy.yaml
kubectl delete authorino/authorino
kubectl delete namespace keycloak
To uninstall the Authorino Operator and manifests (CRDs, RBAC, etc), run:
kubectl delete -f https://raw.githubusercontent.com/Kuadrant/authorino-operator/main/config/deploy/manifests.yaml
-
In contrast to a dedicated sidecar of the protected service and other architectures. Check out Architecture > Topologies for all options. ↩
-
namespaced
reconciliation mode. See Cluster-wide vs. Namespaced instances. ↩ -
For other variants and deployment options, check out Getting Started, as well as the
Authorino
CRD specification. ↩ -
For details and instructions to setup Envoy manually, see Protect a service > Setup Envoy in the Getting Started page. If you are running your ingress gateway in Kubernetes and wants to avoid setting up and configuring your proxy manually, check out Kuadrant. ↩