Chapter 5. Using OpenID Connect (OIDC) multitenancy
This guide demonstrates how your OpenID Connect (OIDC) application can support multitenancy to serve multiple tenants from a single application. These tenants can be distinct realms or security domains within the same OIDC provider or even distinct OIDC providers.
Each customer functions as a distinct tenant when serving multiple customers from the same application, such as in a SaaS environment. By enabling multitenancy support to your applications, you can support distinct authentication policies for each tenant, even authenticating against different OIDC providers, such as Keycloak and Google.
To authorize a tenant by using Bearer Token Authorization, see the OpenID Connect (OIDC) Bearer token authentication guide.
To authenticate and authorize a tenant by using the OIDC authorization code flow, read the OpenID Connect authorization code flow mechanism for protecting web applications guide.
Also, see the OpenID Connect (OIDC) configuration properties reference guide.
5.1. Prerequisites Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
To complete this guide, you need:
- Roughly 15 minutes
- An IDE
-
JDK 17+ installed with
JAVA_HOMEconfigured appropriately - Apache Maven 3.8.6 or later
- A working container runtime (Docker or Podman)
- Optionally the Quarkus CLI if you want to use it
- Optionally Mandrel or GraalVM installed and configured appropriately if you want to build a native executable (or Docker if you use a native container build)
- jq tool
5.2. Architecture Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
In this example, we build a very simple application that supports two resource methods:
-
/{tenant}
This resource returns information obtained from the ID token issued by the OIDC provider about the authenticated user and the current tenant.
-
/{tenant}/bearer
This resource returns information obtained from the Access Token issued by the OIDC provider about the authenticated user and the current tenant.
5.3. Solution Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
For a thorough understanding, we recommend you build the application by following the upcoming step-by-step instructions.
Alternatively, if you prefer to start with the completed example, clone the Git repository: git clone https://github.com/quarkusio/quarkus-quickstarts.git -b 3.27, or download an archive.
The solution is located in the security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstart directory.
5.4. Creating the Maven project Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
First, we need a new project. Create a new project with the following command:
Using the Quarkus CLI:
quarkus create app org.acme:security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstart \ --extension='oidc,rest-jackson' \ --no-code cd security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstartquarkus create app org.acme:security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstart \ --extension='oidc,rest-jackson' \ --no-code cd security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstartCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow To create a Gradle project, add the
--gradleor--gradle-kotlin-dsloption.For more information about how to install and use the Quarkus CLI, see the Quarkus CLI guide.
Using Maven:
Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow To create a Gradle project, add the
-DbuildTool=gradleor-DbuildTool=gradle-kotlin-dsloption.
For Windows users:
-
If using cmd, (don’t use backward slash
\and put everything on the same line) -
If using Powershell, wrap
-Dparameters in double quotes e.g."-DprojectArtifactId=security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstart"
If you already have your Quarkus project configured, add the oidc extension to your project by running the following command in your project base directory:
Using the Quarkus CLI:
quarkus extension add oidc
quarkus extension add oidcCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Using Maven:
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions='oidc'
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions='oidc'Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Using Gradle:
./gradlew addExtension --extensions='oidc'
./gradlew addExtension --extensions='oidc'Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
This adds the following to your build file:
Using Maven:
<dependency> <groupId>io.quarkus</groupId> <artifactId>quarkus-oidc</artifactId> </dependency><dependency> <groupId>io.quarkus</groupId> <artifactId>quarkus-oidc</artifactId> </dependency>Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Using Gradle:
implementation("io.quarkus:quarkus-oidc")implementation("io.quarkus:quarkus-oidc")Copy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
5.5. Writing the application Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
Start by implementing the /{tenant} endpoint. As you can see from the source code below, it is just a regular Jakarta REST resource:
To resolve the tenant from incoming requests and map it to a specific quarkus-oidc tenant configuration in application.properties, create an implementation for the io.quarkus.oidc.TenantConfigResolver interface, which can dynamically resolve tenant configurations:
In the preceding implementation, tenants are resolved from the request path. If no tenant can be inferred, null is returned to indicate that the default tenant configuration should be used.
The tenant-a application type is hybrid; it can accept HTTP bearer tokens if provided. Otherwise, it initiates an authorization code flow when authentication is required.
5.6. Configuring the application Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
The first configuration is the default tenant configuration that should be used when the tenant cannot be inferred from the request. Be aware that a %prod profile prefix is used with quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url to support testing a multitenant application with Dev Services For Keycloak. This configuration uses a Keycloak instance to authenticate users.
The second configuration, provided by TenantConfigResolver, is used when an incoming request is mapped to the tenant-a tenant.
Both configurations map to the same Keycloak server instance while using distinct realms.
Alternatively, you can configure the tenant tenant-a directly in application.properties:
In that case, also use a custom TenantConfigResolver to resolve it:
You can define multiple tenants in your configuration file. To map them correctly when resolving a tenant from your TenantResolver implementation, ensure each has a unique alias.
However, using a static tenant resolution, which involves configuring tenants in application.properties and resolving them with TenantResolver, does not work for testing endpoints with Dev Services for Keycloak because it does not know how the requests are be mapped to individual tenants, and cannot dynamically provide tenant-specific quarkus.oidc.<tenant-id>.auth-server-url values. Therefore, using %prod prefixes with tenant-specific URLs within application.properties does not work in both test and development modes.
When a current tenant represents an OIDC web-app application, the current io.vertx.ext.web.RoutingContext contains a tenant-id attribute by the time the custom tenant resolver has been called for all the requests completing the code authentication flow and the already authenticated requests, when either a tenant-specific state or session cookie already exists. Therefore, when working with multiple OIDC providers, you only need a path-specific check to resolve a tenant id if the RoutingContext does not have the tenant-id attribute set, for example:
This is how Quarkus OIDC resolves static custom tenants if no custom TenantResolver is registered.
A similar technique can be used with TenantConfigResolver, where a tenant-id provided in the context can return OidcTenantConfig already prepared with the previous request.
If you also use Hibernate ORM multitenancy or MongoDB with Panache multitenancy and both tenant ids are the same, you can get the tenant id from the RoutingContext attribute with tenant-id. You can find more information here:
5.7. Starting and configuring the Keycloak server Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
To start a Keycloak server, you can use Docker and run the following command:
docker run --name keycloak -e KC_BOOTSTRAP_ADMIN_USERNAME=admin -e KC_BOOTSTRAP_ADMIN_PASSWORD=admin -p 8180:8080 quay.io/keycloak/keycloak:{keycloak.version} start-dev
docker run --name keycloak -e KC_BOOTSTRAP_ADMIN_USERNAME=admin -e KC_BOOTSTRAP_ADMIN_PASSWORD=admin -p 8180:8080 quay.io/keycloak/keycloak:{keycloak.version} start-dev
where keycloak.version is set to 26.0.7 or higher.
Access your Keycloak server at localhost:8180.
Log in as the admin user to access the Keycloak administration console. The username and password are both admin.
Now, import the realms for the two tenants:
- Import the default-tenant-realm.json to create the default realm.
-
Import the tenant-a-realm.json to create the realm for the tenant
tenant-a.
For more information, see the Keycloak documentation about how to create a new realm.
5.8. Running and using the application Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
5.8.1. Running in developer mode Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
To run the microservice in dev mode, use:
Using the Quarkus CLI:
quarkus dev
quarkus devCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Using Maven:
./mvnw quarkus:dev
./mvnw quarkus:devCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Using Gradle:
./gradlew --console=plain quarkusDev
./gradlew --console=plain quarkusDevCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
5.8.2. Running in JVM mode Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
After exploring the application in dev mode, you can run it as a standard Java application.
First, compile it:
Using the Quarkus CLI:
quarkus build
quarkus buildCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Using Maven:
./mvnw install
./mvnw installCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Using Gradle:
./gradlew build
./gradlew buildCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
Then run it:
java -jar target/quarkus-app/quarkus-run.jar
java -jar target/quarkus-app/quarkus-run.jar
5.8.3. Running in native mode Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
This same demo can be compiled into native code; no modifications are required.
This implies that you no longer need to install a JVM on your production environment, as the runtime technology is included in the produced binary, and optimized to run with minimal resources.
Compilation takes a bit longer, so this step is turned off by default; let’s build again by enabling the native build:
Using the Quarkus CLI:
quarkus build --native
quarkus build --nativeCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Using Maven:
./mvnw install -Dnative
./mvnw install -DnativeCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow Using Gradle:
./gradlew build -Dquarkus.native.enabled=true
./gradlew build -Dquarkus.native.enabled=trueCopy to Clipboard Copied! Toggle word wrap Toggle overflow
After a little while, you can run this binary directly:
./target/security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstart-runner
./target/security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstart-runner
5.9. Test the application Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
5.9.1. Use the browser Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
To test the application, open your browser and access the following URL:
If everything works as expected, you are redirected to the Keycloak server to authenticate. Be aware that the requested path defines a default tenant, which we don’t have mapped in the configuration file. In this case, the default configuration is used.
To authenticate to the application, enter the following credentials in the Keycloak login page:
-
Username:
alice -
Password:
alice
After clicking the Login button, you are redirected back to the application.
If you try now to access the application at the following URL:
You are redirected again to the Keycloak login page. However, this time, you are going to authenticate by using a different realm.
In both cases, the landing page shows the user’s name and email if the user is successfully authenticated. Although alice exists in both tenants, the application treats them as distinct users in separate realms.
5.10. Tenant resolution Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
5.10.1. Tenant resolution order Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
OIDC tenants are resolved in the following order:
-
io.quarkus.oidc.Tenantannotation is checked first if the proactive authentication is disabled. -
Dynamic tenant resolution using a custom
TenantConfigResolver. -
Static tenant resolution using one of these options: custom
TenantResolver, configured tenant paths, and defaulting to the last request path segment as a tenant id.
Finally, the default OIDC tenant is selected if a tenant id has not been resolved after the preceding steps.
See the following sections for more information:
Additionally, for the OIDC web-app applications, the state and session cookies also provide a hint about the tenant resolved with one of the above mentioned options at the time when the authorization code flow started. See the Tenant resolution for OIDC web-app applications section for more information.
5.10.2. Resolve with annotations Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
You can use the io.quarkus.oidc.Tenant annotation for resolving the tenant identifiers as an alternative to using io.quarkus.oidc.TenantResolver.
Proactive HTTP authentication must be disabled (quarkus.http.auth.proactive=false) for this to work. For more information, see the Proactive authentication guide.
Assuming your application supports two OIDC tenants, the hr and default tenants, all resource methods and classes carrying @Tenant("hr") are authenticated by using the OIDC provider configured by quarkus.oidc.hr.auth-server-url. In contrast, all other classes and methods are still authenticated by using the default OIDC provider.
- 1
- The
io.quarkus.oidc.Tenantannotation must be placed on either the resource class or resource method.
In the example above, authentication of the sayHello endpoint is enforced with the @Authenticated annotation.
Alternatively, if you use an the HTTP Security policy to secure the endpoint, then, for the @Tenant annotation be effective, you must delay this policy’s permission check as shown in the following example:
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.paths=/api/hello quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.methods=GET quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.policy=authenticated quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.applies-to=JAXRS
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.paths=/api/hello
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.methods=GET
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.policy=authenticated
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.applies-to=JAXRS
- 1
- Tell Quarkus to run the HTTP permission check after the tenant has been selected with the
@Tenantannotation.
The io.quarkus.oidc.Tenant annotation can be used to select tenant for a WebSockets Next server endpoint. The annotation must be placed on the endpoint class, because the SecurityIdentity is created before the HTTP connection is upgraded to a WebSocket connection. For more information about the HTTP upgrade security, see the Secure HTTP upgrade section of the Quarkus "WebSockets Next reference" guide.
5.10.3. Dynamic tenant configuration resolution Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
If you need a more dynamic configuration for the different tenants you want to support and don’t want to end up with multiple entries in your configuration file, you can use the io.quarkus.oidc.TenantConfigResolver.
This interface allows you to dynamically create tenant configurations at runtime:
The OidcTenantConfig returned by this method is the same one used to parse the oidc namespace configuration from the application.properties. You can populate it by using any settings supported by the quarkus-oidc extension.
If the dynamic tenant resolver returns null, a Static tenant configuration resolution is attempted next.
5.10.3.1. Update resolved dynamic tenant configuration Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
It may be necessary to update the already resolved tenant configuration. For example, a client secret may have to be updated following a client secret update in the registered OIDC application.
To update the configuration, use OidcTenantConfigBuilder to create a new instance of OidcTenantConfig and modify it as required before returning it:
- 1
- Use
io.quarkus.oidc.runtime.TenantConfigBeanto get the already resolved tenant configuration. Alternatively, you can use the tenantOidcTenantConfigcached in your resolver. - 2
- You may want to check if this configuration has already been updated, to avoid multiple redundant updates, for example, due to multliple redirects.
- 3
- Use the resolved configuration to create a builder and update it as required.
- 4
- Create an initial configuration if no configuration already exists.
This is all you have to do update the already resolved dynamic tenantr configuration, without having to reconnect to the provider.
If reconnecting is necessary, for example, the UserInfo endpoint address may have changed for the tenant to rediscover it, then simply set a RoutingContext replace-tenant-configuration-context property to true:
- 1
- Replace the resolved tenant configuration and re-connect to the provider
Finally, if you decide to update the resoved configuration while the existing OIDC session is still active, you may to have the session cookie removed and the user re-authenticated to align with the latest tenant configuration requirements. Set a RoutingContext remove-session-cookie property to true if it is necessary:
- 1
- Update the tenant configuration, remove the session cookie and triger the user re-authentication. If possible, prefer to get the user log-out first, instead of triggering the re-authentication at the tenant resolution time.
5.10.4. Static tenant configuration resolution Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
When you set multiple tenant configurations in the application.properties file, you only need to specify how the tenant identifier gets resolved. To configure the resolution of the tenant identifier, use one of the following options:
These tenant resolution options are tried in the order they are listed until the tenant id gets resolved. If the tenant id remains unresolved (null), the default (unnamed) tenant configuration is selected.
5.10.4.1. Resolve with TenantResolver Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
The following application.properties example shows how you can resolve the tenant identifier of two tenants named a and b by using the TenantResolver method:
You can return the tenant id of either a or b from io.quarkus.oidc.TenantResolver:
In this example, the value of the last request path segment is a tenant id, but if required, you can implement a more complex tenant identifier resolution logic.
5.10.4.2. Configure tenant paths Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
You can use the quarkus.oidc.tenant-paths configuration property for resolving the tenant identifier as an alternative to using io.quarkus.oidc.TenantResolver. Here is how you can select the hr tenant for the sayHello endpoint of the HelloResource resource used in the previous example:
quarkus.oidc.hr.tenant-paths=/api/hello quarkus.oidc.a.tenant-paths=/api/* quarkus.oidc.b.tenant-paths=/*/hello
quarkus.oidc.hr.tenant-paths=/api/hello
quarkus.oidc.a.tenant-paths=/api/*
quarkus.oidc.b.tenant-paths=/*/hello
- 1
- Same path-matching rules apply as for the
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.paths=/api/helloconfiguration property from the previous example. - 2
- The wildcard placed at the end of the path represents any number of path segments. However the path is less specific than the
/api/hello, therefore thehrtenant will be used to secure thesayHelloendpoint. - 3
- The wildcard in the
/*/hellorepresents exactly one path segment. Nevertheless, the wildcard is less specific than theapi, therefore thehrtenant will be used.
Path-matching mechanism works exactly same as in the Authorization using configuration.
5.10.4.3. Use request path segments to find tenant id Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
The default resolution for a tenant identifier is convention based, whereby the authentication request must include the tenant identifier in one of the path segments of the request path.
The following application.properties example shows how you can configure two tenants named google and github:
In the provided example, both tenants configure OIDC web-app applications to use an authorization code flow to authenticate users and require session cookies to be generated after authentication. After Google or GitHub authenticates the current user, the user gets returned to the /signed-in area for authenticated users, such as a secured resource path on the JAX-RS endpoint.
Finally, to complete the default tenant resolution, set the following configuration property:
quarkus.http.auth.permission.login.paths=/google,/github quarkus.http.auth.permission.login.policy=authenticated
quarkus.http.auth.permission.login.paths=/google,/github
quarkus.http.auth.permission.login.policy=authenticated
If the endpoint is running on http://localhost:8080, you can also provide UI options for users to log in to either http://localhost:8080/google or http://localhost:8080/github, without having to add specific /google or /github JAX-RS resource paths.
Tenant identifiers are also recorded in the session cookie names after the authentication is completed. Therefore, authenticated users can access the secured application area without requiring either the google or github path values to be included in the secured URL.
Default resolution can also work for Bearer token authentication. Still, it might be less practical because a tenant identifier must always be set as the last path segment value.
5.10.4.4. Resolve tenants with a token issuer claim Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
OIDC tenants which support Bearer token authentication can be resolved using the access token’s issuer. The following conditions must be met for the issuer-based resolution to work:
-
The access token must be in the JWT format and contain an issuer (
iss) token claim. -
Only OIDC tenants with the application type
serviceorhybridare considered. These tenants must have a token issuer discovered or configured.
The issuer-based resolution is enabled with the quarkus.oidc.resolve-tenants-with-issuer property. For example:
5.10.5. Tenant resolution for OIDC web-app applications Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
Tenant resolution for the OIDC web-app applications must be done at least 3 times during an authorization code flow, when the OIDC tenant-specific configuration affects how each of the following steps is run.
Step 1: Unauthenticated user accesses an endpoint and is redirected to OIDC provider
When an unauthenticated user accesses a secured path, the user is redirected to the OIDC provider to authenticate and the tenant configuration is used to build the redirect URI.
All the static and dynamic tenant resolution options listed in the Static tenant configuration resolution and Dynamic tenant configuration resolution sections can be used to resolve a tenant.
Step 2: The user is redirected back to the endpoint
After the provider authentication, the user is redirected back to the Quarkus endpoint and the tenant configuration is used to complete the authorization code flow.
All the static and dynamic tenant resolution options listed in the Static tenant configuration resolution and Dynamic tenant configuration resolution sections can be used to resolve a tenant. Before the tenant resolution begins, the authorization code flow state cookie is used to set the already resolved tenant configuration id as a RoutingContext tenant-id attribute: both custom dynamic TenantConfigResolver and static TenantResolver tenant resolvers can check it.
Step 3: Authenticated user accesses the secured path using the session cookie
The tenant configuration determines how the session cookie is verified and refreshed. Before the tenant resolution begins, the authorization code flow session cookie is used to set the already resolved tenant configuration id as a RoutingContext tenant-id attribute: both custom dynamic TenantConfigResolver and static TenantResolver tenant resolvers can check it.
For example, here is how a custom TenantConfigResolver can avoid creating the already resolved tenant configuration, that may otherwise require blocking reads from the database or other remote sources:
The default configuration may look like this:
quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/default quarkus.oidc.client-id=client-default quarkus.oidc.credentials.secret=secret-default quarkus.oidc.application-type=web-app
quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/default
quarkus.oidc.client-id=client-default
quarkus.oidc.credentials.secret=secret-default
quarkus.oidc.application-type=web-app
The preceding example assumes that the tenant-a, tenant-b and default tenants are all used to protect the same endpoint paths. In other words, after the user has authenticated with the tenant-a configuration, this user will not be able to choose to authenticate with the tenant-b or default configuration before this user logs out and has a session cookie cleared or expired.
The situation where multiple OIDC web-app tenants protect the tenant-specific paths is less typical and also requires an extra care. When multiple OIDC web-app tenants such as tenant-a, tenant-b and default tenants are used to control access to the tenant specific paths, the users authenticated with one OIDC provider must not be able to access the paths requiring an authentication with another provider, otherwise the results can be unpredictable, most likely causing unexpected authentication failures. For example, if the tenant-a authentication requires a Keycloak authentication and the tenant-b authentication requires an Auth0 authentication, then, if the tenant-a authenticated user attempts to access a path secured by the tenant-b configuration, then the session cookie will not be verified, since the Auth0 public verification keys can not be used to verify the tokens signed by Keycloak. An easy, recommended way to avoid multiple web-app tenants conflicting with each other is to set the tenant specific session path as shown in the following example:
The default tenant configuration should be adjusted like this:
quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/default quarkus.oidc.client-id=client-default quarkus.oidc.credentials.secret=secret-default quarkus.oidc.authentication.cookie-path=/default quarkus.oidc.application-type=web-app
quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/default
quarkus.oidc.client-id=client-default
quarkus.oidc.credentials.secret=secret-default
quarkus.oidc.authentication.cookie-path=/default
quarkus.oidc.application-type=web-app
Having the same session cookie path when multiple OIDC web-app tenants protect the tenant-specific paths is not recommended and should be avoided as it requires even more care from the custom resolvers, for example:
- 1
- Check the request path to create tenant configurations.
- 2 4
- Let Quarkus use the already resolved tenant configuration if the already resolved tenant is expected for the current path.
- 3 5
- Remove the
tenant-idattribute if the already resolved tenant configuration is not expected for the current path. - 6
- Use the default tenant for all other paths. It is equivalent to removing the
tenant-idattribute.
5.11. Disabling tenant configurations Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
Custom TenantResolver and TenantConfigResolver implementations might return null if no tenant can be inferred from the current request and a fallback to the default tenant configuration is required.
If you expect the custom resolvers always to resolve a tenant, you do not need to configure the default tenant resolution.
-
To turn off the default tenant configuration, set
quarkus.oidc.tenant-enabled=false.
The default tenant configuration is automatically disabled when quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url is not configured, but either custom tenant configurations are available or TenantConfigResolver is registered.
Be aware that tenant-specific configurations can also be disabled, for example: quarkus.oidc.tenant-a.tenant-enabled=false.
5.12. Programmatic OIDC start-up for multiple tenants Copy linkLink copied to clipboard!
Static OIDC tenants can be created programmatically like in the example below:
The code above is a programmatic equivalent to the following configuration in the application.properties file:
quarkus.oidc.tenant-one.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/tenant-one quarkus.oidc.tenant-two.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/tenant-two
quarkus.oidc.tenant-one.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/tenant-one
quarkus.oidc.tenant-two.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/tenant-two