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Chapter 7. Configuring the database
This chapter explains how to configure the Red Hat build of Keycloak server to store data in a relational database.
7.1. Supported databases
The server has built-in support for different databases. You can query the available databases by viewing the expected values for the db
configuration option. The following table lists the supported databases and their tested versions.
Database | Option value | Tested Version |
---|---|---|
MariaDB Server |
| 10.11 |
Microsoft SQL Server |
| 2022 |
MySQL |
| 8.0 |
Oracle Database |
| 19.3 |
PostgreSQL |
| 16 |
Amazon Aurora PostgreSQL |
| 16.1 |
By default, the server uses the dev-file
database. This is the default database that the server will use to persist data and only exists for development use-cases. The dev-file
database is not suitable for production use-cases, and must be replaced before deploying to production.
7.2. Installing a database driver
Database drivers are shipped as part of Red Hat build of Keycloak except for the Oracle Database and Micrsoft SQL Server drivers which need to be installed separately.
Install the necessary driver if you want to connect to one of these databases or skip this section if you want to connect to a different database for which the database driver is already included.
7.2.1. Installing the Oracle Database driver
To install the Oracle Database driver for Red Hat build of Keycloak:
Download the
ojdbc11
andorai18n
JAR files from one of the following sources:- Zipped JDBC driver and Companion Jars version 23.3.0.23.09 from the Oracle driver download page.
-
Maven Central via
ojdbc11
andorai18n
. - Installation media recommended by the database vendor for the specific database in use.
-
When running the unzipped distribution: Place the
ojdbc11
andorai18n
JAR files in Red Hat build of Keycloak’sproviders
folder When running containers: Build a custom Red Hat build of Keycloak image and add the JARs in the
providers
folder. When building a custom image for the Operator, those images need to be optimized images with all build-time options of Red Hat build of Keycloak set.A minimal Dockerfile to build an image which can be used with the Red Hat build of Keycloak Operator and includes Oracle Database JDBC drivers downloaded from Maven Central looks like the following:
FROM registry.redhat.io/rhbk/keycloak-rhel9:24 ADD --chown=keycloak:keycloak --chmod=644 https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/com/oracle/database/jdbc/ojdbc11/23.3.0.23.09/ojdbc11-23.3.0.23.09.jar /opt/keycloak/providers/ojdbc11.jar ADD --chown=keycloak:keycloak --chmod=644 https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/com/oracle/database/nls/orai18n/23.3.0.23.09/orai18n-23.3.0.23.09.jar /opt/keycloak/providers/orai18n.jar # Setting the build parameter for the database: ENV KC_DB=oracle # Add all other build parameters needed, for example enable health and metrics: ENV KC_HEALTH_ENABLED=true ENV KC_METRICS_ENABLED=true # To be able to use the image with the Red Hat build of Keycloak Operator, it needs to be optimized, which requires Red Hat build of Keycloak's build step: RUN /opt/keycloak/bin/kc.sh build
See the Running Red Hat build of Keycloak in a container chapter for details on how to build optimized images.
Then continue configuring the database as described in the next section.
7.2.2. Installing the Microsoft SQL Server driver
To install the Microsoft SQL Server driver for Red Hat build of Keycloak:
Download the
mssql-jdbc
JAR file from one of the following sources:- Download a version from the Microsoft JDBC Driver for SQL Server page.
-
Maven Central via
mssql-jdbc
. - Installation media recommended by the database vendor for the specific database in use.
-
When running the unzipped distribution: Place the
mssql-jdbc
in Red Hat build of Keycloak’sproviders
folder When running containers: Build a custom Red Hat build of Keycloak image and add the JARs in the
providers
folder. When building a custom image for the Red Hat build of Keycloak Operator, those images need to be optimized images with all build-time options of Red Hat build of Keycloak set.A minimal Dockerfile to build an image which can be used with the Red Hat build of Keycloak Operator and includes Microsoft SQL Server JDBC drivers downloaded from Maven Central looks like the following:
FROM registry.redhat.io/rhbk/keycloak-rhel9:24 ADD --chown=keycloak:keycloak --chmod=644 https://repo1.maven.org/maven2/com/microsoft/sqlserver/mssql-jdbc/12.4.2.jre11/mssql-jdbc-12.4.2.jre11.jar /opt/keycloak/providers/mssql-jdbc.jar # Setting the build parameter for the database: ENV KC_DB=mssql # Add all other build parameters needed, for example enable health and metrics: ENV KC_HEALTH_ENABLED=true ENV KC_METRICS_ENABLED=true # To be able to use the image with the Red Hat build of Keycloak Operator, it needs to be optimized, which requires Red Hat build of Keycloak's build step: RUN /opt/keycloak/bin/kc.sh build
See the Running Red Hat build of Keycloak in a container chapter for details on how to build optimized images.
Then continue configuring the database as described in the next section.
7.3. Configuring a database
For each supported database, the server provides some opinionated defaults to simplify database configuration. You complete the configuration by providing some key settings such as the database host and credentials.
Start the server and set the basic options to configure a database
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --db postgres --db-url-host mypostgres --db-username myuser --db-password change_me
This command includes the minimum settings needed to connect to the database.
The default schema is keycloak
, but you can change it by using the db-schema
configuration option.
Do NOT use the --optimized
flag for the start
command if you want to use a particular DB (except the H2). Executing the build phase before starting the server instance is necessary. You can achieve it either by starting the instance without the --optimized
flag, or by executing the build
command before the optimized start. For more information, see Configuring Red Hat build of Keycloak.
7.4. Overriding default connection settings
The server uses JDBC as the underlying technology to communicate with the database. If the default connection settings are insufficient, you can specify a JDBC URL using the db-url
configuration option.
The following is a sample command for a PostgreSQL database.
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --db postgres --db-url jdbc:postgresql://mypostgres/mydatabase
Be aware that you need to escape characters when invoking commands containing special shell characters such as ;
using the CLI, so you might want to set it in the configuration file instead.
7.5. Overriding the default JDBC driver
The server uses a default JDBC driver accordingly to the database you chose.
To set a different driver you can set the db-driver
with the fully qualified class name of the JDBC driver:
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --db postgres --db-driver=my.Driver
Regardless of the driver you set, the default driver is always available at runtime.
Only set this property if you really need to. For instance, when leveraging the capabilities from a JDBC Driver Wrapper for a specific cloud database service.
7.6. Configuring Unicode support for the database
Unicode support for all fields depends on whether the database allows VARCHAR and CHAR fields to use the Unicode character set.
- If these fields can be set, Unicode is likely to work, usually at the expense of field length.
- If the database only supports Unicode in the NVARCHAR and NCHAR fields, Unicode support for all text fields is unlikely to work because the server schema uses VARCHAR and CHAR fields extensively.
The database schema provides support for Unicode strings only for the following special fields:
- Realms: display name, HTML display name, localization texts (keys and values)
- Federation Providers: display name
- Users: username, given name, last name, attribute names and values
- Groups: name, attribute names and values
- Roles: name
- Descriptions of objects
Otherwise, characters are limited to those contained in database encoding, which is often 8-bit. However, for some database systems, you can enable UTF-8 encoding of Unicode characters and use the full Unicode character set in all text fields. For a given database, this choice might result in a shorter maximum string length than the maximum string length supported by 8-bit encodings.
7.6.1. Configuring Unicode support for an Oracle database
Unicode characters are supported in an Oracle database if the database was created with Unicode support in the VARCHAR and CHAR fields. For example, you configured AL32UTF8 as the database character set. In this case, the JDBC driver requires no special settings.
If the database was not created with Unicode support, you need to configure the JDBC driver to support Unicode characters in the special fields. You configure two properties. Note that you can configure these properties as system properties or as connection properties.
-
Set
oracle.jdbc.defaultNChar
totrue
. Optionally, set
oracle.jdbc.convertNcharLiterals
totrue
.NoteFor details on these properties and any performance implications, see the Oracle JDBC driver configuration documentation.
7.6.2. Unicode support for a Microsoft SQL Server database
Unicode characters are supported only for the special fields for a Microsoft SQL Server database. The database requires no special settings.
The sendStringParametersAsUnicode
property of JDBC driver should be set to false
to significantly improve performance. Without this parameter, the Microsoft SQL Server might be unable to use indexes.
7.6.3. Configuring Unicode support for a MySQL database
Unicode characters are supported in a MySQL database if the database was created with Unicode support in the VARCHAR and CHAR fields when using the CREATE DATABASE command.
Note that the utf8mb4 character set is not supported due to different storage requirements for the utf8 character set. See MySQL documentation for details. In that situation, the length restriction on non-special fields does not apply because columns are created to accommodate the number of characters, not bytes. If the database default character set does not allow Unicode storage, only the special fields allow storing Unicode values.
- Start MySQL Server.
- Under JDBC driver settings, locate the JDBC connection settings.
-
Add this connection property:
characterEncoding=UTF-8
7.6.4. Configuring Unicode support for a PostgreSQL database
Unicode is supported for a PostgreSQL database when the database character set is UTF8. Unicode characters can be used in any field with no reduction of field length for non-special fields. The JDBC driver requires no special settings. The character set is determined when the PostgreSQL database is created.
Check the default character set for a PostgreSQL cluster by entering the following SQL command.
show server_encoding;
If the default character set is not UTF 8, create the database with the UTF8 as the default character set using a command such as:
create database keycloak with encoding 'UTF8';
7.7. Preparing for Amazon Aurora PostgreSQL
When using Amazon Aurora PostgreSQL, the Amazon Web Services JDBC Driver offers additional features like transfer of database connections when a writer instance changes in a Multi-AZ setup. This driver is not part of the distribution and needs to be installed before it can be used.
To install this driver, apply the following steps:
-
When running the unzipped distribution: Download the JAR file from the Amazon Web Services JDBC Driver releases page and place it in Red Hat build of Keycloak’s
providers
folder. When running containers: Build a custom Red Hat build of Keycloak image and add the JAR in the
providers
folder.A minimal Dockerfile to build an image which can be used with the Red Hat build of Keycloak Operator looks like the following:
FROM registry.redhat.io/rhbk/keycloak-rhel9:24 ADD --chmod=0666 https://github.com/awslabs/aws-advanced-jdbc-wrapper/releases/download/2.3.1/aws-advanced-jdbc-wrapper-2.3.1.jar /opt/keycloak/providers/aws-advanced-jdbc-wrapper.jar
See the Running Red Hat build of Keycloak in a container chapter for details on how to build optimized images, and the Using custom Red Hat build of Keycloak images chapter on how to run optimized and non-optimized images with the Red Hat build of Keycloak Operator.
Configure Red Hat build of Keycloak to run with the following parameters:
db-url
-
Insert
aws-wrapper
to the regular PostgreSQL JDBC URL resulting in a URL likejdbc:aws-wrapper:postgresql://...
. db-driver
-
Set to
software.amazon.jdbc.Driver
to use the AWS JDBC wrapper. transaction-xa-enabled
-
Set to
false
, as the Amazon Web Services JDBC Driver does not support XA transactions.
7.8. Preparing for MySQL server
Beginning with MySQL 8.0.30, MySQL supports generated invisible primary keys for any InnoDB table that is created without an explicit primary key (more information here). If this feature is enabled, the database schema initialization and also migrations will fail with the error message Multiple primary key defined (1068)
. You then need to disable it by setting the parameter sql_generate_invisible_primary_key
to OFF
in your MySQL server configuration before installing or upgrading Red Hat build of Keycloak.
7.9. Changing database locking timeout in a cluster configuration
Because cluster nodes can boot concurrently, they take extra time for database actions. For example, a booting server instance may perform some database migration, importing, or first time initializations. A database lock prevents start actions from conflicting with each other when cluster nodes boot up concurrently.
The maximum timeout for this lock is 900 seconds. If a node waits on this lock for more than the timeout, the boot fails. The need to change the default value is unlikely, but you can change it by entering this command:
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-dblock-jpa-lock-wait-timeout 900
7.10. Using Database Vendors without XA transaction support
Red Hat build of Keycloak uses XA transactions and the appropriate database drivers by default. Certain vendors, such as Azure SQL and MariaDB Galera, do not support or rely on the XA transaction mechanism. To use Red Hat build of Keycloak without XA transaction support using the appropriate JDBC driver, enter the following command:
bin/kc.[sh|bat] build --db=<vendor> --transaction-xa-enabled=false
Red Hat build of Keycloak automatically chooses the appropriate JDBC driver for your vendor.
7.11. Setting JPA provider configuration option for migrationStrategy
To setup the JPA migrationStrategy (manual/update/validate) you should setup JPA provider as follows:
Setting the migration-strategy
for the quarkus
provider of the connections-jpa
SPI
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-connections-jpa-quarkus-migration-strategy=manual
If you want to get a SQL file for DB initialization, too, you have to add this additional SPI initializeEmpty (true/false):
Setting the initialize-empty
for the quarkus
provider of the connections-jpa
SPI
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-connections-jpa-quarkus-initialize-empty=false
In the same way the migrationExport to point to a specific file and location:
Setting the migration-export
for the quarkus
provider of the connections-jpa
SPI
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-connections-jpa-quarkus-migration-export=<path>/<file.sql>
7.12. Relevant options
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CLI: | (default) |
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CLI: | |
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🛠
CLI: |
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