loginsrv
loginsrv is a standalone minimalistic login server providing a JWT login for multiple login backends.
** Attention: Update to v1.3.0 for Google Login Update !!!! **
Google will stop support for the Google+ APIs. So we changed loginsrv to use the standard oauth endpoints for Google login.
Please update loginsrv to v1.3.0 if you are using google login.
** Attention: Since v1.3.0, pure HTTP is not supported by default **
Since v1.3.0, loginsrv sets the secure flag for the login cookie. So, if you use HTTP fo connect with the browser, e.g. for testing, you browser will ignore the cookie.
Use the flag -cookie-secure=false
when testing without HTTPS.
Abstract
Loginsrv provides a minimal endpoint for authentication. The login is performed against the providers and returned as a JSON Web Token (JWT).
It can be used as:
- Standalone microservice
- Docker container
- Golang library
- Caddy plugin. (See caddy/README.md for details)
Supported Provider Backends
The following providers (login backends) are supported.
- Htpasswd
- OSIAM
- Simple (user/password pairs by configuration)
- Httpupstream
- OAuth2
- GitHub login
- Google login
- Bitbucket login
- Facebook login
- Gitlab login
Questions
For questions and support please use the Gitter chat room.
Configuration and Startup
Config Options
Note for Caddy users: Not all parameters are available in Caddy. See the table for details. With Caddy, the parameter names can also be used with _
in the names, e.g. cookie_http_only
.
Parameter | Type | Default | Caddy | Description |
---|---|---|---|---|
-cookie-domain | string | X | Optional domain parameter for the cookie | |
-cookie-expiry | string | session | X | Expiry duration for the cookie, e.g. 2h or 3h30m |
-cookie-http-only | boolean | true | X | Set the cookie with the HTTP only flag |
-cookie-name | string | “jwt_token” | X | Name of the JWT cookie |
-cookie-secure | boolean | true | X | Set the secure flag on the JWT cookie. (Set this to false for plain HTTP support) |
-github | value | X | OAuth config in the form: client_id=..,client_secret=..[,scope=..][,redirect_uri=..] | |
value | X | OAuth config in the form: client_id=..,client_secret=..[,scope=..][,redirect_uri=..] | ||
-bitbucket | value | X | OAuth config in the form: client_id=..,client_secret=..[,scope=..][,redirect_uri=..] | |
value | X | OAuth config in the form: client_id=..,client_secret=..[,scope=..][,redirect_uri=..] | ||
-gitlab | value | X | OAuth config in the form: client_id=..,client_secret=..[,scope=..,][redirect_uri=..] | |
-host | string | “localhost” | – | Host to listen on |
-htpasswd | value | X | Htpasswd login backend opts: file=/path/to/pwdfile | |
-jwt-expiry | go duration | 24h | X | Expiry duration for the JWT token, e.g. 2h or 3h30m |
-jwt-secret | string | “random key” | X | Secret used to sign the JWT token. (See caddy/README.md for details.) |
-jwt-secret-file | string | X | File to load the jwt-secret from, e.g. /run/secrets/some.key . Takes precedence over jwt-secret! |
|
-jwt-algo | string | “HS512” | X | Signing algorithm to use (ES256, ES384, ES512, RS256, RS384, RS512, HS256, HS384, HS512) |
-log-level | string | “info” | – | Log level |
-login-path | string | “/login” | X | Path of the login resource |
-logout-url | string | X | URL or path to redirect to after logout | |
-osiam | value | X | OSIAM login backend opts: endpoint=..,client_id=..,client_secret=.. | |
-port | string | “6789” | – | Port to listen on |
-redirect | boolean | true | X | Allow dynamic overwriting of the the success by query parameter |
-redirect-query-parameter | string | “backTo” | X | URL parameter for the redirect target |
-redirect-check-referer | boolean | true | X | Check the referer header to ensure it matches the host header on dynamic redirects |
-redirect-host-file | string | “” | X | A file containing a list of domains that redirects are allowed to, one domain per line |
-simple | value | X | Simple login backend opts: user1=password,user2=password,.. | |
-success-url | string | “/” | X | URL to redirect to after login |
-template | string | X | An alternative template for the login form | |
-text-logging | boolean | true | – | Log in text format instead of JSON |
-jwt-refreshes | int | 0 | X | The maximum number of JWT refreshes |
-grace-period | go duration | 5s | – | Duration to wait after SIGINT/SIGTERM for existing requests. No new requests are accepted. |
-user-file | string | X | A YAML file with user specific data for the tokens. (see below for an example) | |
-user-endpoint | string | X | URL of an endpoint providing user specific data for the tokens. (see below for an example) | |
-user-endpoint-token | string | X | Authentication token used when communicating with the user endpoint | |
-user-endpoint-timeout | go duration | 5s | X | Timeout used when communicating with the user endpoint |
Environment Variables
All of the above Config Options can also be applied as environment variables by using variables named this way: LOGINSRV_OPTION_NAME
.
So e.g. jwt-secret
can be set by environment variable LOGINSRV_JWT_SECRET
.
Startup Examples
The simplest way to use loginsrv is by the provided docker container.
E.g. configured with the simple provider:
$ docker run -d -p 8080:8080 tarent/loginsrv -cookie-secure=false -jwt-secret my_secret -simple bob=secret
$ curl --data "username=bob&password=secret" 127.0.0.1:8080/login
eyJhbGciOiJIUzUxMiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJib2IifQ.uWoJkSXTLA_RvfLKe12pb4CyxQNxe5_Ovw-N5wfQwkzXz2enbhA9JZf8MmTp9n-TTDcWdY3Fd1SA72_M20G9lQ
The same configuration could be written with environment variables this way:
$ docker run -d -p 8080:8080 -E COOKIE_SECURE=false -e LOGINSRV_JWT_SECRET=my_secret -e LOGINSRV_BACKEND=provider=simple,bob=secret tarent/loginsrv
API
GET /login
Per default, it returns a simple bootstrap styled login form for unauthenticated requests and a page with user info for authenticated requests.
When the call accepts a JSON output, the json content of the token is returned to authenticated requests.
The returned HTML follows the UI composition conventions from (lib-compose)[https://github.com/tarent/lib-compose],
so it can be embedded into an existing layout.
Parameter-Type | Parameter | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
Http-Header | Accept: text/html | Return the login form or user html. | default |
Http-Header | Accept: application/json | Return the user Object as json, or 403 if not authenticated. |
GET /login/
Starts the OAuth Web Flow with the configured provider. E.g. GET /login/github
redirects to the GitHub login form.
POST /login
Performs the login and returns the JWT. Depending on the content-type and parameters, a classical JSON-Rest or a redirect can be performed.
Runtime Parameters
Parameter-Type | Parameter | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
Http-Header | Accept: text/html | Set the JWT as a cookie named ‘jwt_token’ | default |
Http-Header | Accept: application/jwt | Returns the JWT within the body. No cookie is set | |
Http-Header | Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded | Expect the credentials as form encoded parameters | default |
Http-Header | Content-Type: application/json | Take the credentials from the provided JSON object | |
Post-Parameter | username | The username | |
Post-Parameter | password | The password | |
Get or Post | backTo | Dynamic redirect target after login (see (Redirects)[#redirects]) | -success-url |
Possible Return Codes
Code | Meaning | Description |
---|---|---|
200 | OK | Successfully authenticated |
403 | Forbidden | The credentials are wrong |
400 | Bad Request | Missing parameters |
500 | Internal Server Error | Internal error, e.g. the login provider is not available or failed |
303 | See Other | Sets the JWT as a cookie, if the login succeeds and redirect to the URLs provided in redirectSuccess or redirectError |
Hint: The status 401 Unauthorized
is not used as a return code to not conflict with an HTTP Basic authentication.
JWT-Refresh
If the POST-Parameters for username and password are missing and a valid JWT-Cookie is part of the request, then the JWT-Cookie is refreshed.
This only happens if the jwt-refreshes config option is set to a value greater than 0.
DELETE /login
Deletes the JWT cookie.
For simple usage in web applications, this can also be called by GET|POST /login?logout=true
API Examples
Example:
Default is to return the token as Content-Type application/jwt within the body.
curl -i --data "username=bob&password=secret" http://127.0.0.1:6789/login
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/jwt
Date: Mon, 14 Nov 2016 21:35:42 GMT
Content-Length: 100
eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJib2IifQ.-51G5JQmpJleARHp8rIljBczPFanWT93d_N_7LQGUXU
Example: Credentials as JSON
The credentials can also be sent JSON encoded.
curl -i -H 'Content-Type: application/json' --data '{"username": "bob", "password": "secret"}' http://127.0.0.1:6789/login
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/jwt
Date: Mon, 14 Nov 2016 21:35:42 GMT
Content-Length: 100
eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJib2IifQ.-51G5JQmpJleARHp8rIljBczPFanWT93d_N_7LQGUXU
Example: web based flow with ‘Accept: text/html’
Sets the JWT as a cookie and redirects to a web page.
curl -i -H 'Accept: text/html' --data "username=bob&password=secret" http://127.0.0.1:6789/login
HTTP/1.1 303 See Other
Location: /
Set-Cookie: jwt_token=eyJhbGciOiJIUzI1NiIsInR5cCI6IkpXVCJ9.eyJzdWIiOiJib2IifQ.-51G5JQmpJleARHp8rIljBczPFanWT93d_N_7LQGUXU; HttpOnly
Example: AJAX call with JQuery to fetch a JWT token and create a cookie from it
Creates a cookie from a successful API call to login.
$.ajax({
url: "http://localhost:8080/login",
type: 'POST',
dataType: 'text',
contentType: 'application/json',
data: JSON.stringify( {
'username': 'demo',
'password': 'demo'
}),
success: function(data) {
document.cookie = "jwt_token=" + data + ";path=/";
},
error: function (xhr, ajaxOptions, thrownError) {
}
});
Make sure your main page has JQuery:
Redirects
The API has support for a redirect query parameter, e.g. ?backTo=/dynamic/return/path
. For security reasons, the default behaviour is very restrictive:
- Only local redirects (same host) are allowed.
- The
Referer
header is checked to ensure that the call to the login page came from the same page.
These restrictions are there, to prevent you from unchecked redirect attacks, e.g. phishing or login attacks.
If you know, what you are doing, you can disable the Referer
check with --redirect-check-referer=false
and provide a whitelist file
for allowed external domains with --redirect-host-file=/some/domains.txt
.
The JWT Token
Depending on the provider, the token may look as follows:
{
"sub": "smancke",
"picture": "https://avatars2.githubusercontent.com/u/4291379?v=3",
"name": "Sebastian Mancke",
"email": "s.mancke@tarent.de",
"origin": "github"
}
Provider Backends
Htpasswd
Authentication against htpasswd file. MD5, SHA1 and Bcrypt are supported. But we recommend to only use Bcrypt for security reasons (e.g. htpasswd -B -C 15
).
Parameters for the provider:
Parameter-Name | Description |
---|---|
file | Path to the password file (multiple files can be used by separating them with ‘;’) |
Example:
loginsrv -htpasswd file=users
Httpupstream
Authentication against an upstream HTTP server by performing a HTTP Basic authentication request and checking the response for a HTTP 200 OK status code. Anything other than a 200 OK status code will result in a failure to authenticate.
Parameters for the provider:
Parameter-Name | Description |
---|---|
upstream | HTTP/HTTPS URL to call |
skipverify | True to ignore TLS errors (optional, false by default) |
timeout | Request timeout (optional 1m by default, go duration syntax is supported) |
Example:
loginsrv -httpupstream upstream=https://google.com,timeout=1s
OSIAM
OSIAM is a secure identity management solution providing REST based services for authentication and authorization.
It implements the multiple OAuth2 flows, as well as SCIM for managing the user data.
To start loginsrv against the default OSIAM configuration on the same machine, use the following example.
loginsrv --jwt-secret=jwtsecret --text-logging -osiam endpoint=http://localhost:8080,client_id=example-client,client_secret=secret'
Then go to http://127.0.0.1:6789/login and login with admin/koala
.
Simple
Simple is a demo provider for testing only. It holds a user/password table in memory.
Example
loginsrv -simple bob=secret
OAuth2
The OAuth Web Flow (aka 3-legged-OAuth flow) is also supported.
Currently the following OAuth provider is supported:
- GitHub
- Bitbucket
- Gitlab
An OAuth provider supports the following parameters:
Parameter-Name | Description |
---|---|
client_id | OAuth Client ID |
client_secret | OAuth Client Secret |
scope | Space separated scope List (optional) |
redirect_uri | Alternative Redirect URI (optional) |
When configuring the OAuth parameters at your external OAuth provider, a redirect URI has to be supplied. This redirect URI has to point to the path /login/<provider>
.
If not supplied, the OAuth redirect URI is calculated out of the current URL. This should work in most cases and should even work
if loginsrv is routed through a reverse proxy, if the headers X-Forwarded-Host
and X-Forwarded-Proto
are set correctly.
GitHub Startup Example
$ docker run -p 80:80 tarent/loginsrv -github client_id=xxx,client_secret=yyy
Templating
A custom template can be supplied by the parameter template
.
You can find the original template in login/login_form.go.
The templating uses the Golang template package. A short intro can be found here.
When you specify a custom template, only the layout of the original template is replaced. The partials of the original are still loaded into the template context and can be used by your template. So a minimal unstyled login template could look like this:
Custom claims
To customize the content of the JWT token either a file wich contains
user data or an endpoint providing claims can be provided.
User file
A user file is a YAML file which contains additional information which
is encoded in the token. After successful authentication against a
backend system, the user is searched within the file and the content
of the claims parameter is used to enhance the user JWT claim
parameters.
To match an entry, the user file is searched in linear order and all attributes has to match
the data of the authentication backend. The first matching entry will be used and all parameters
below the claim attribute are written into the token. The following attributes can be used for matching:
sub
– the username (all backends)origin
– the provider or backend name (all backends)email
– the mail address (the OAuth provider)domain
– the domain (Google only)groups
– the full path string of user groups enclosed in an array (Gitlab only)
Example:
- The user bob will become the
"role": "superAdmin"
, when authenticating with htpasswd file - The user admin@example.org will become
"role": "admin"
and"projects": ["example"]
, when authenticating with Google OAuth - All other Google users with the domain example will become
"role": "user"
and"projects": ["example"]
- All other Gitlab users with group
example/subgroup
andothergroup
will become"role": "admin"
. - All others will become
"role": "unknown"
, independent of the authentication provider
- sub: bob
origin: htpasswd
claims:
role: superAdmin
- email: admin@example.org
origin: Google
claims:
role: admin
projects:
- example
- domain: example.org
origin: Google
claims:
role: user
projects:
- example
- groups:
- example/subgroup
- othergroup
origin: gitlab
claims:
role: admin
- claims:
role: unknown
User endpoint
A user endpoint is a http endpoint which provides additional
information on an authenticated user. After successful authentication
against a backend system, the endpoint gets called and the provided
information is used to enhance the user JWT claim parameters.
loginsrv passes these parameters to the endpoint:
sub
– the username (all backends)origin
– the provider or backend name (all backends)email
– the mail address (the OAuth provider)domain
– the domain (Google only)groups
– the full path string of user groups enclosed in an array (Gitlab only)
An interaction looks like this
GET /claims?origin=google&sub=test@example.com&email=test@example.com HTTP/1.1
Host: localhost:8080
Accept: */*
Authorization: Bearer token
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Content-Type: application/json
{
"sub":"test@example.com",
"uid":"113",
"origin":"google",
"permissions": ["read", "write"]
}