このコンテンツは選択した言語では利用できません。
Chapter 5. Identity Brokering APIs
Red Hat Single Sign-On can delegate authentication to a parent IDP for login. A typical example of this is the case where you want users to be able to login through a social provider like Facebook or Google. Red Hat Single Sign-On also allows you to link existing accounts to a brokered IDP. This section talks about some APIs that your applications can use as it pertains to identity brokering.
5.1. Retrieving External IDP Tokens
Red Hat Single Sign-On allows you to store tokens and responses from the authentication process with the external IDP. For that, you can use the Store Token
configuration option on the IDP’s settings page.
Application code can retrieve these tokens and responses to pull in extra user information, or to securely invoke requests on the external IDP. For example, an application might want to use the Google token to invoke on other Google services and REST APIs. To retrieve a token for a particular identity provider you need to send a request as follows:
GET /auth/realms/{realm}/broker/{provider_alias}/token HTTP/1.1 Host: localhost:8080 Authorization: Bearer <KEYCLOAK ACCESS TOKEN>
An application must have authenticated with Red Hat Single Sign-On and have received an access token. This access token will need to have the broker
client-level role read-token
set. This means that the user must have a role mapping for this role and the client application must have that role within its scope. In this case, given that you are accessing a protected service in Red Hat Single Sign-On, you need to send the access token issued by Red Hat Single Sign-On during the user authentication. In the broker configuration page you can automatically assign this role to newly imported users by turning on the Stored Tokens Readable
switch.
These external tokens can be re-established by either logging in again through the provider, or using the client initiated account linking API.
5.2. Client Initiated Account Linking
Some applications want to integrate with social providers like Facebook, but do not want to provide an option to login via these social providers. Red Hat Single Sign-On offers a browser-based API that applications can use to link an existing user account to a specific external IDP. This is called client-initiated account linking. Account linking can only be initiated by OIDC applications.
The way it works is that the application forwards the user’s browser to a URL on the Red Hat Single Sign-On server requesting that it wants to link the user’s account to a specific external provider (i.e. Facebook). The server initiates a login with the external provider. The browser logs in at the external provider and is redirected back to the server. The server establishes the link and redirects back to the application with a confirmation.
There are some preconditions that must be met by the client application before it can initiate this protocol:
- The desired identity provider must be configured and enabled for the user’s realm in the admin console.
- The user account must already be logged in as an existing user via the OIDC protocol
-
The user must have an
account.manage-account
oraccount.manage-account-links
role mapping. - The application must be granted the scope for those roles within its access token
- The application must have access to its access token as it needs information within it to generate the redirect URL.
To initiate the login, the application must fabricate a URL and redirect the user’s browser to this URL. The URL looks like this:
/{auth-server-root}/auth/realms/{realm}/broker/{provider}/link?client_id={id}&redirect_uri={uri}&nonce={nonce}&hash={hash}
Here’s a description of each path and query param:
- provider
-
This is the provider alias of the external IDP that you defined in the
Identity Provider
section of the admin console. - client_id
- This is the OIDC client id of your application. When you registered the application as a client in the admin console, you had to specify this client id.
- redirect_uri
- This is the application callback URL you want to redirect to after the account link is established. It must be a valid client redirect URI pattern. In other words, it must match one of the valid URL patterns you defined when you registered the client in the admin console.
- nonce
- This is a random string that your application must generate
- hash
-
This is a Base64 URL encoded hash. This hash is generated by Base64 URL encoding a SHA_256 hash of
nonce
+token.getSessionState()
+token.getIssuedFor()
+provider
. The token variable are obtained from the OIDC access token. Basically you are hashing the random nonce, the user session id, the client id, and the identity provider alias you want to access.
Here’s an example of Java Servlet code that generates the URL to establish the account link.
KeycloakSecurityContext session = (KeycloakSecurityContext) httpServletRequest.getAttribute(KeycloakSecurityContext.class.getName()); AccessToken token = session.getToken(); String clientId = token.getIssuedFor(); String nonce = UUID.randomUUID().toString(); MessageDigest md = null; try { md = MessageDigest.getInstance("SHA-256"); } catch (NoSuchAlgorithmException e) { throw new RuntimeException(e); } String input = nonce + token.getSessionState() + clientId + provider; byte[] check = md.digest(input.getBytes(StandardCharsets.UTF_8)); String hash = Base64Url.encode(check); request.getSession().setAttribute("hash", hash); String redirectUri = ...; String accountLinkUrl = KeycloakUriBuilder.fromUri(authServerRootUrl) .path("/auth/realms/{realm}/broker/{provider}/link") .queryParam("nonce", nonce) .queryParam("hash", hash) .queryParam("client_id", clientId) .queryParam("redirect_uri", redirectUri).build(realm, provider).toString();
Why is this hash included? We do this so that the auth server is guaranteed to know that the client application initiated the request and no other rogue app just randomly asked for a user account to be linked to a specific provider. The auth server will first check to see if the user is logged in by checking the SSO cookie set at login. It will then try to regenerate the hash based on the current login and match it up to the hash sent by the application.
After the account has been linked, the auth server will redirect back to the redirect_uri
. If there is a problem servicing the link request, the auth server may or may not redirect back to the redirect_uri
. The browser may just end up at an error page instead of being redirected back to the application. If there is an error condition and the auth server deems it safe enough to redirect back to the client app, an additional error
query parameter will be appended to the redirect_uri
.
While this API guarantees that the application initiated the request, it does not completely prevent CSRF attacks for this operation. The application is still responsible for guarding against CSRF attacks target at itself.
5.2.1. Refreshing External Tokens
If you are using the external token generated by logging into the provider (i.e. a Facebook or GitHub token), you can refresh this token by re-initiating the account linking API.