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Chapter 2. Configuring Red Hat build of Keycloak for production


A Red Hat build of Keycloak production environment provides secure authentication and authorization for deployments that range from on-premise deployments that support a few thousand users to deployments that serve millions of users.

This chapter describes the general areas of configuration required for a production ready Red Hat build of Keycloak environment. This information focuses on the general concepts instead of the actual implementation, which depends on your environment. The key aspects covered in this chapter apply to all environments, whether it is containerized, on-premise, GitOps, or Ansible.

2.1. TLS for secure communication

Red Hat build of Keycloak continually exchanges sensitive data, which means that all communication to and from Red Hat build of Keycloak requires a secure communication channel. To prevent several attack vectors, you enable HTTP over TLS, or HTTPS, for that channel.

To configure secure communication channels for Red Hat build of Keycloak, see Configuring TLS and Configuring outgoing HTTP requests.

To secure the cache communication for Red Hat build of Keycloak, see Configuring distributed caches.

2.2. The hostname for Red Hat build of Keycloak

In a production environment, Red Hat build of Keycloak instances usually run in a private network, but Red Hat build of Keycloak needs to expose certain public facing endpoints to communicate with the applications to be secured.

For details on the endpoint categories and instructions on how to configure the public hostname for them, see Configuring the hostname.

2.3. Reverse proxy in a distributed environment

Apart from Configuring the hostname, production environments usually include a reverse proxy / load balancer component. It separates and unifies access to the network used by your company or organization. For a Red Hat build of Keycloak production environment, this component is recommended.

For details on configuring proxy communication modes in Red Hat build of Keycloak, see Using a reverse proxy. That chapter also recommends which paths should be hidden from public access and which paths should be exposed so that Red Hat build of Keycloak can secure your applications.

2.4. Limit the number of queued requests

A production environment should protect itself from an overload situation, so that it responds to as many valid requests as possible, and to continue regular operations once the situation returns to normal again. One way of doing this is rejecting additional requests once a certain threshold is reached.

Load shedding should be implemented on all levels, including the load balancers in your environment. In addition to that, there is a feature in Red Hat build of Keycloak to limit the number of requests that can’t be processed right away and need to be queued. By default, there is no limit set. Set the option http-max-queued-requests to limit the number of queued requests to a given threshold matching your environment. Any request that exceeds this limit would return with an immediate 503 Server not Available response.

2.5. Production grade database

The database used by Red Hat build of Keycloak is crucial for the overall performance, availability, reliability and integrity of Red Hat build of Keycloak. For details on how to configure a supported database, see Configuring the database.

2.6. Support for Red Hat build of Keycloak in a cluster

To ensure that users can continue to log in when a Red Hat build of Keycloak instance goes down, a typical production environment contains two or more Red Hat build of Keycloak instances.

Red Hat build of Keycloak runs on top of JGroups and Infinispan, which provide a reliable, high-availability stack for a clustered scenario. When deployed to a cluster, the embedded Infinispan server communication should be secured. You secure this communication either by enabling authentication and encryption or by isolating the network used for cluster communication.

To find out more about using multiple nodes, the different caches and an appropriate stack for your environment, see Configuring distributed caches.

2.7. Configure Red Hat build of Keycloak Server with IPv4 or IPv6

The system properties java.net.preferIPv4Stack and java.net.preferIPv6Addresses are used to configure the JVM for use with IPv4 or IPv6 addresses.

By default, Red Hat build of Keycloak is accessible via IPv4 and IPv6 addresses at the same time. In order to run only with IPv4 addresses, you need to specify the property java.net.preferIPv4Stack=true. The latter ensures that any hostname to IP address conversions always return IPv4 address variants.

These system properties are conveniently set by the JAVA_OPTS_APPEND environment variable. For example, to change the IP stack preference to IPv4, set an environment variable as follows:

export JAVA_OPTS_APPEND="-Djava.net.preferIPv4Stack=true"
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