217 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
217 lines
8.8 KiB
Plaintext
---
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layout: docs
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page_title: OIDC Auth Method
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description: >-
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The OIDC auth method can be used to authenticate with Consul using OpenID
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Connect (OIDC). This method allows authentication via a configured OIDC
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provider using the user's web browser. This method may be initiated from the
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Consul UI or the command line.
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---
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# OIDC Auth Method
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<EnterpriseAlert>
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This feature requires version 1.8.0+ of
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self-managed Consul Enterprise.
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Refer to the{' '}
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<a href="/docs/enterprise#consul-enterprise-feature-availability">enterprise feature matrix</a>
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{' '}for additional information.
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</EnterpriseAlert>
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The `oidc` auth method can be used to authenticate with Consul using
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[OIDC](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OpenID_Connect). This method allows
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authentication via a configured OIDC provider using the user's web browser.
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This method may be initiated from the Consul UI or the command line.
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This page assumes general knowledge of [OIDC
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concepts](https://developer.okta.com/blog/2017/07/25/oidc-primer-part-1) and
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the concepts described in the main [auth method
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documentation](/docs/security/acl/auth-methods).
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Both the [`jwt`](/docs/security/acl/auth-methods/jwt) and the
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[`oidc`](/docs/security/acl/auth-methods/oidc) auth method types allow additional
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processing of the claims data in the JWT.
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@include 'jwt_or_oidc.mdx'
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## Config Parameters
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The following auth method [`Config`](/api-docs/acl/auth-methods#config)
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parameters are required to properly configure an auth method of type
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`oidc`:
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- `OIDCDiscoveryURL` `(string: <required>)` - The OIDC Discovery URL, without any
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.well-known component (base path).
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- `OIDCDiscoveryCACert` `(string: "")` - PEM encoded CA cert for use by the TLS
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client used to talk with the OIDC Discovery URL. NOTE: Every line must end
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with a newline (`\n`). If not set, system certificates are used.
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- `OIDCClientID` `(string: <required>)` - The OAuth Client ID configured with
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your OIDC provider.
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- `OIDCClientSecret` `(string: <required>)` - The OAuth Client Secret configured with
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your OIDC provider.
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- `AllowedRedirectURIs` `(array<string>)` - A list of allowed
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values for `redirect_uri`. Must be non-empty.
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- `ClaimMappings` `(map[string]string)` - Mappings of claims (key) that
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[will be copied to a metadata field](#trusted-identity-attributes-via-claim-mappings)
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(value). Use this if the claim you are capturing is singular (such as an attribute).
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When mapped, the values can be any of a number, string, or boolean and will
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all be stringified when returned.
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- `ListClaimMappings` `(map[string]string)` - Mappings of claims (key)
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[will be copied to a metadata field](#trusted-identity-attributes-via-claim-mappings)
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(value). Use this if the claim you are capturing is list-like (such as groups).
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When mapped, the values in each list can be any of a number, string, or
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boolean and will all be stringified when returned.
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- `OIDCScopes` `(array<string>)` - A list of OIDC scopes.
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- `OIDCACRValues` `(array<string>)` - A list of Authentication Context Class Reference values to use for the authentication request. See [OIDC reference](https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html#rfc.section.3.1.2.1) for more info on this parameter. Added in v1.11.0.
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- `JWTSupportedAlgs` `(array<string>)` - JWTSupportedAlgs is a list of
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supported signing algorithms. Defaults to `RS256`. ([Available
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algorithms](https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/blob/main/vendor/github.com/coreos/go-oidc/jose.go#L7))
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- `BoundAudiences` `(array<string>)` - List of `aud` claims that are valid for
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login; any match is sufficient.
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- `VerboseOIDCLogging` `(bool: false)` - Log received OIDC tokens and claims when
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debug-level logging is active. Not recommended in production since sensitive
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information may be present in OIDC responses.
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### Sample Config
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```json
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{
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...other fields...
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"Config": {
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"AllowedRedirectURIs": [
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"http://localhost:8550/oidc/callback",
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"http://localhost:8500/ui/oidc/callback"
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],
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"BoundAudiences": [
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"V1RPi2MYptMV1RPi2MYptMV1RPi2MYpt"
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],
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"ClaimMappings": {
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"http://example.com/first_name": "first_name",
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"http://example.com/last_name": "last_name"
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},
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"ListClaimMappings": {
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"http://consul.com/groups": "groups"
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},
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"OIDCClientID": "V1RPi2MYptMV1RPi2MYptMV1RPi2MYpt",
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"OIDCClientSecret": "...(omitted)...",
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"OIDCDiscoveryURL": "https://my-corp-app-name.auth0.com/"
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}
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}
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```
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## JWT Verification
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JWT signatures will be verified against public keys from the issuer via OIDC
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discovery. Keys will be fetched from the OIDC Discovery URL during
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authentication and OIDC validation criteria (e.g. `iss`, `aud`, etc.) will be
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applied.
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## OIDC Authentication
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Consul includes two built-in OIDC login flows: the Consul UI, and the CLI using
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[`consul login`](/commands/login).
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### Redirect URIs
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An important part of OIDC auth method configuration is properly setting
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redirect URIs. This must be done both in Consul and with the OIDC provider, and
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these configurations must align. The redirect URIs are specified for an auth
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method with the [`AllowedRedirectURIs`](#allowedredirecturis) parameter. There
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are different redirect URIs to configure the Consul UI and CLI flows, so one or
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both will need to be set up depending on the installation.
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#### Consul UI
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Logging in via the Consul UI requires a redirect URI of the form:
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`http://localhost:8500/ui/oidc/callback` or
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`https://{host:port}/ui/oidc/callback`
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The "host:port" must be correct for the Consul agent serving the Consul UI.
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#### CLI
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If you plan to support authentication via `consul login -type=oidc -method=<name>`, a localhost redirect URI must be set (usually this is
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`http://localhost:8550/oidc/callback`). Logins via the CLI may specify a
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different host and/or listening port if needed, and a URI with this host/port
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must match one of the configured redirected URIs. These same "localhost" URIs
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must be added to the provider as well.
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### OIDC Login
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#### Consul UI
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1. Click the "Log in" link at the top right of the menu bar.
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2. Click one of the "Continue with..." buttons for your OIDC auth method of choice.
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3. Complete the authentication with the configured provider.
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#### CLI
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```shell-session
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$ consul login -method=oidc -type=oidc -token-sink-file=consul.token
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Complete the login via your OIDC provider. Launching browser to:
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https://myco.auth0.com/authorize?redirect_uri=http%3A%2F%2Flocalhost%3A8550%2Foidc%2Fcallback&client_id=r3qXc2bix9eF...
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```
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The browser will open to the generated URL to complete the provider's login.
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The URL may be entered manually if the browser cannot be automatically opened.
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The callback listener may be customized with the following optional parameters.
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These are typically not required to be set:
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The callback listener defaults to listen on `localhost:8550`. If you want to
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customize that use the optional flag
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[`-oidc-callback-listen-addr=<host:port>`](/commands/login#oidc-callback-listen-addr).
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## OIDC Configuration Troubleshooting
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The amount of configuration required for OIDC is relatively small, but it can
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be tricky to debug why things aren't working. Some tips for setting up OIDC:
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- Monitor the log output for the Consul servers. Important information about
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OIDC validation failures will be emitted.
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- Ensure Redirect URIs are correct in Consul and on the provider. They need to
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match exactly. Check: http/https, 127.0.0.1/localhost, port numbers, whether
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trailing slashes are present.
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- [`BoundAudiences`](#boundaudiences) is optional and typically
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not required. OIDC providers will use the `client_id` as the audience and
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OIDC validation expects this.
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- Check your provider for what scopes are required in order to receive all of
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the information you need. The scopes "profile" and "groups" often need to be
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requested, and can be added by setting
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`[OIDCScopes](#oidcscopes)="profile,groups"` on the auth method.
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- If you're seeing claim-related errors in logs, review the provider's docs
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very carefully to see how they're naming and structuring their claims.
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Depending on the provider, you may be able to construct a simple `curl`
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[implicit grant](https://developer.okta.com/blog/2018/05/24/what-is-the-oauth2-implicit-grant-type)
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request to obtain a JWT that you can inspect. An example of how to decode the
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JWT (in this case located in the `access_token` field of a JSON response):
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cat jwt.json | jq --raw-output .access_token | cut -d. -f2 | base64 --decode
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- The [`VerboseOIDCLogging`](#verboseoidclogging) option is available which
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will log the received OIDC token if debug level logging is enabled. This can
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be helpful when debugging provider setup and verifying that the received
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claims are what you expect. Since claims data is logged verbatim and may
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contain sensitive information, this option should not be used in production.
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@include 'jwt_claim_mapping_details.mdx'
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