A minimal forward authentication service that provides OAuth/SSO login and authentication for the traefik reverse proxy/load balancer.
- Seamlessly overlays any http service with a single endpoint (see:
url-path
in Configuration) - Supports multiple providers including Google and OpenID Connect (supported by Azure, Github, Salesforce etc.)
- Supports multiple domains/subdomains by dynamically generating redirect_uri's
- Allows authentication to be selectively applied/bypassed based on request parameters (see
rules
in Configuration) - Supports use of centralised authentication host/redirect_uri (see
auth-host
in Configuration) - Allows authentication to persist across multiple domains (see Cookie Domains)
- Supports extended authentication beyond Google token lifetime (see:
lifetime
in Configuration)
We recommend using the 2
tag on docker hub (thomseddon/traefik-forward-auth:2
).
You can also use the latest incremental releases found on docker hub and github.
ARM releases are also available on docker hub, just append -arm
or -arm64
to your desired released (e.g. 2-arm
or 2.1-arm64
).
v2 was released in June 2019, whilst this is fully backwards compatible, a number of configuration options were modified, please see the upgrade guide to prevent warnings on startup and ensure you are using the current configuration.
See below for instructions on how to setup your Provider Setup.
docker-compose.yml:
version: '3'
services:
traefik:
image: traefik:v2.2
command: --providers.docker
ports:
- "8085:80"
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
traefik-forward-auth:
image: thomseddon/traefik-forward-auth:2
environment:
- PROVIDERS_GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID=your-client-id
- PROVIDERS_GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET=your-client-secret
- SECRET=something-random
- INSECURE_COOKIE=true # Example assumes no https, do not use in production
labels:
- "traefik.http.middlewares.traefik-forward-auth.forwardauth.address=http://traefik-forward-auth:4181"
- "traefik.http.middlewares.traefik-forward-auth.forwardauth.authResponseHeaders=X-Forwarded-User"
- "traefik.http.services.traefik-forward-auth.loadbalancer.server.port=4181"
whoami:
image: containous/whoami
labels:
- "traefik.http.routers.whoami.rule=Host(`whoami.mycompany.com`)"
- "traefik.http.routers.whoami.middlewares=traefik-forward-auth"
Please see the examples directory for a more complete docker-compose.yml or kubernetes/simple-separate-pod.
Also in the examples directory is docker-compose-auth-host.yml and kubernetes/advanced-separate-pod which shows how to configure a central auth host, along with some other options.
Below are some general notes on provider setup, specific instructions and examples for a number of providers can be found on the Provider Setup wiki page.
Head to https://console.developers.google.com and make sure you've switched to the correct email account.
Create a new project then search for and select "Credentials" in the search bar. Fill out the "OAuth Consent Screen" tab.
Click "Create Credentials" > "OAuth client ID". Select "Web Application", fill in the name of your app, skip "Authorized JavaScript origins" and fill "Authorized redirect URIs" with all the domains you will allow authentication from, appended with the url-path
(e.g. https://app.test.com/_oauth)
You must set the providers.google.client-id
and providers.google.client-secret
config options.
Any provider that supports OpenID Connect 1.0 can be configured via the OIDC config options below.
You must set the providers.oidc.issuer-url
, providers.oidc.client-id
and providers.oidc.client-secret
config options.
Please see the Provider Setup wiki page for examples.
For providers that don't support OpenID Connect, we also have the Generic OAuth2 provider where you can statically configure the OAuth2 and "user" endpoints.
You must set:
providers.generic-oauth.auth-url
- URL the client should be sent to authenticate the authenticateproviders.generic-oauth.token-url
- URL the service should call to exchange an auth code for an access tokenproviders.generic-oauth.user-url
- URL used to retrieve user info (service makes a GET request)providers.generic-oauth.client-id
- Client IDproviders.generic-oauth.client-secret
- Client Secret
You can also set:
providers.generic-oauth.scope
- Any scopes that should be included in the request (default: profile, email)providers.generic-oauth.token-style
- How token is presented when querying the User URL. Can beheader
orquery
, defaults toheader
. Withheader
the token is provided in an Authorization header, with query the token is provided in theaccess_token
query string value.
Please see the Provider Setup wiki page for examples.
The following configuration options are supported:
Usage:
traefik-forward-auth [OPTIONS]
Application Options:
--log-level=[trace|debug|info|warn|error|fatal|panic] Log level (default: warn) [$LOG_LEVEL]
--log-format=[text|json|pretty] Log format (default: text) [$LOG_FORMAT]
--auth-host= Single host to use when returning from 3rd party auth [$AUTH_HOST]
--config= Path to config file [$CONFIG]
--cookie-domain= Domain to set auth cookie on, can be set multiple times [$COOKIE_DOMAIN]
--insecure-cookie Use insecure cookies [$INSECURE_COOKIE]
--cookie-name= Cookie Name (default: _forward_auth) [$COOKIE_NAME]
--csrf-cookie-name= CSRF Cookie Name (default: _forward_auth_csrf) [$CSRF_COOKIE_NAME]
--default-action=[auth|allow] Default action (default: auth) [$DEFAULT_ACTION]
--default-provider=[google|oidc|generic-oauth] Default provider (default: google) [$DEFAULT_PROVIDER]
--domain= Only allow given email domains, comma separated, can be set multiple times [$DOMAIN]
--lifetime= Lifetime in seconds (default: 43200) [$LIFETIME]
--logout-redirect= URL to redirect to following logout [$LOGOUT_REDIRECT]
--url-path= Callback URL Path (default: /_oauth) [$URL_PATH]
--secret= Secret used for signing (required) [$SECRET]
--whitelist= Only allow given user ID, comma separated, can be set multiple times [$WHITELIST]
--rule.<name>.<param>= Rule definitions, param can be: "action", "rule" or "provider"
Google Provider:
--providers.google.client-id= Client ID [$PROVIDERS_GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID]
--providers.google.client-secret= Client Secret [$PROVIDERS_GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET]
--providers.google.prompt= Space separated list of OpenID prompt options [$PROVIDERS_GOOGLE_PROMPT]
OIDC Provider:
--providers.oidc.issuer-url= Issuer URL [$PROVIDERS_OIDC_ISSUER_URL]
--providers.oidc.client-id= Client ID [$PROVIDERS_OIDC_CLIENT_ID]
--providers.oidc.client-secret= Client Secret [$PROVIDERS_OIDC_CLIENT_SECRET]
--providers.oidc.resource= Optional resource indicator [$PROVIDERS_OIDC_RESOURCE]
Generic OAuth2 Provider:
--providers.generic-oauth.auth-url= Auth/Login URL [$PROVIDERS_GENERIC_OAUTH_AUTH_URL]
--providers.generic-oauth.token-url= Token URL [$PROVIDERS_GENERIC_OAUTH_TOKEN_URL]
--providers.generic-oauth.user-url= URL used to retrieve user info [$PROVIDERS_GENERIC_OAUTH_USER_URL]
--providers.generic-oauth.client-id= Client ID [$PROVIDERS_GENERIC_OAUTH_CLIENT_ID]
--providers.generic-oauth.client-secret= Client Secret [$PROVIDERS_GENERIC_OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET]
--providers.generic-oauth.scope= Scopes (default: profile, email) [$PROVIDERS_GENERIC_OAUTH_SCOPE]
--providers.generic-oauth.token-style=[header|query] How token is presented when querying the User URL (default: header)
[$PROVIDERS_GENERIC_OAUTH_TOKEN_STYLE]
--providers.generic-oauth.resource= Optional resource indicator [$PROVIDERS_GENERIC_OAUTH_RESOURCE]
Help Options:
-h, --help Show this help message
All options can be supplied in any of the following ways, in the following precedence (first is highest precedence):
- Command Arguments/Flags - As shown above
- Environment Variables - As shown in square brackets above
- File
- Use INI format (e.g.
url-path = _oauthpath
) - Specify the file location via the
--config
flag or$CONFIG
environment variable - Can be specified multiple times, each file will be read in the order they are passed
- Use INI format (e.g.
-
auth-host
When set, when a user returns from authentication with a 3rd party provider they will always be forwarded to this host. By using one central host, this means you only need to add this
auth-host
as a valid redirect uri to your 3rd party provider.The host should be specified without protocol or path, for example:
--auth-host="auth.example.com"
For more details, please also read the Auth Host Mode, operation mode in the concepts section.
Please Note - this should be considered advanced usage, if you are having problems please try disabling this option and then re-read the Auth Host Mode section.
-
config
Used to specify the path to a configuration file, can be set multiple times, each file will be read in the order they are passed. Options should be set in an INI format, for example:
url-path = _oauthpath
-
cookie-domain
When set, if a user successfully completes authentication, then if the host of the original request requiring authentication is a subdomain of a given cookie domain, then the authentication cookie will be set for the higher level cookie domain. This means that a cookie can allow access to multiple subdomains without re-authentication. Can be specificed multiple times.
For example:
--cookie-domain="example.com" --cookie-domain="test.org"
For example, if the cookie domain
test.com
has been set, and a request comes in onapp1.test.com
, following authentication the auth cookie will be set for the wholetest.com
domain. As such, if another request is forwarded for authentication fromapp2.test.com
, the original cookie will be sent and so the request will be allowed without further authentication.Beware however, if using cookie domains whilst running multiple instances of traefik/traefik-forward-auth for the same domain, the cookies will clash. You can fix this by using a different
cookie-name
in each host/cluster or by using the samecookie-secret
in both instances. -
insecure-cookie
If you are not using HTTPS between the client and traefik, you will need to pass the
insecure-cookie
option which will mean theSecure
attribute on the cookie will not be set. -
cookie-name
Set the name of the cookie set following successful authentication.
Default:
_forward_auth
-
csrf-cookie-name
Set the name of the temporary CSRF cookie set during authentication.
Default:
_forward_auth_csrf
-
default-action
Specifies the behavior when a request does not match any rules. Valid options are
auth
orallow
.Default:
auth
(i.e. all requests require authentication) -
default-provider
Set the default provider to use for authentication, this can be overridden within rules. Valid options are currently
google
oroidc
.Default:
google
-
domain
When set, only users matching a given domain will be permitted to access.
For example, setting
--domain=example.com --domain=test.org
would mean that only users from example.com or test.org will be permitted. So thom@example.com would be allowed but thom@another.com would not.For more details, please also read User Restriction in the concepts section.
-
lifetime
How long a successful authentication session should last, in seconds.
Default:
43200
(12 hours) -
logout-redirect
When set, users will be redirected to this URL following logout.
-
match-whitelist-or-domain
When enabled, users will be permitted if they match either the
whitelist
ordomain
parameters.This will be enabled by default in v3, but is disabled by default in v2 to maintain backwards compatibility.
Default:
false
For more details, please also read User Restriction in the concepts section.
-
url-path
Customise the path that this service uses to handle the callback following authentication.
Default:
/_oauth
Please note that when using the default Overlay Mode requests to this exact path will be intercepted by this service and not forwarded to your application. Use this option (or Auth Host Mode) if the default
/_oauth
path will collide with an existing route in your application. -
secret
Used to sign cookies authentication, should be a random (e.g.
openssl rand -hex 16
) -
whitelist
When set, only specified users will be permitted.
For example, setting
--whitelist=thom@example.com --whitelist=alice@example.com
would mean that only those two exact users will be permitted. So thom@example.com would be allowed but john@example.com would not.For more details, please also read User Restriction in the concepts section.
-
rule
Specify selective authentication rules. Rules are specified in the following format:
rule.<name>.<param>=<value>
<name>
can be any string and is only used to group rules together<param>
can be:action
- same usage asdefault-action
, supported values:auth
(default)allow
domains
- optional, same usage asdomain
provider
- same usage asdefault-provider
, supported values:google
oidc
rule
- a rule to match a request, this uses traefik's v2 rule parser for which you can find the documentation here: https://docs.traefik.io/v2.0/routing/routers/#rule, supported values are summarised here:Headers(`key`, `value`)
HeadersRegexp(`key`, `regexp`)
Host(`example.com`, ...)
HostRegexp(`example.com`, `{subdomain:[a-z]+}.example.com`, ...)
Method(methods, ...)
Path(`path`, `/articles/{category}/{id:[0-9]+}`, ...)
PathPrefix(`/products/`, `/articles/{category}/{id:[0-9]+}`)
Query(`foo=bar`, `bar=baz`)
whitelist
- optional, same usage as whitelist`](#whitelist)
For example:
# Allow requests that being with `/api/public` and contain the `Content-Type` header with a value of `application/json` rule.1.action = allow rule.1.rule = PathPrefix(`/api/public`) && Headers(`Content-Type`, `application/json`) # Allow requests that have the exact path `/public` rule.two.action = allow rule.two.rule = Path(`/public`) # Use OpenID Connect provider (must be configured) for requests that begin with `/github` rule.oidc.action = auth rule.oidc.provider = oidc rule.oidc.rule = PathPrefix(`/github`) # Allow jane@example.com to `/janes-eyes-only` rule.two.action = allow rule.two.rule = Path(`/janes-eyes-only`) rule.two.whitelist = jane@example.com
Note: It is possible to break your redirect flow with rules, please be careful not to create an
allow
rule that matches your redirect_uri unless you know what you're doing. This limitation is being tracked in in #101 and the behaviour will change in future releases.
You can restrict who can login with the following parameters:
domain
- Use this to limit logins to a specific domain, e.g. test.com onlywhitelist
- Use this to only allow specific users to login e.g. thom@test.com only
Note, if you pass both whitelist
and domain
, then the default behaviour is for only whitelist
to be used and domain
will be effectively ignored. You can allow users matching either whitelist
or domain
by passing the match-whitelist-or-domain
parameter (this will be the default behaviour in v3). If you set domains
or whitelist
on a rule, the global configuration is ignored.
The authenticated user is set in the X-Forwarded-User
header, to pass this on add this to the authResponseHeaders
config option in traefik, as shown below in the Applying Authentication section.
Authentication can be applied in a variety of ways, either globally across all requests, or selectively to specific containers/ingresses.
This can be achieved by enabling forward authentication for an entire entrypoint, for example, with http only:
--entryPoints.http.address=:80
--entrypoints.http.http.middlewares=traefik-forward-auth # "default-traefik-forward-auth" on kubernetes
Or https:
--entryPoints.http.address=:80
--entryPoints.http.http.redirections.entryPoint.to=https
--entryPoints.http.http.redirections.entryPoint.scheme=https
--entryPoints.https.address=:443
--entrypoints.https.http.middlewares=traefik-forward-auth # "default-traefik-forward-auth" on kubernetes
Note: Traefik prepends the namespace to the name of middleware defined via a kubernetes resource. This is handled automatically when referencing the middleware from another resource in the same namespace (so the namespace does not need to be prepended when referenced). However the full name, including the namespace, must be used when referenced from static configuration (e.g. command arguments or config file), hence you must prepend the namespace to your traefik-forward-auth middleware reference, as shown in the comments above (e.g. default-traefik-forward-auth
if your middleware is named traefik-forward-auth
and is defined in the default
namespace).
If you choose not to enable forward authentication for a specific entrypoint, you can apply the middleware to selected ingressroutes:
apiVersion: traefik.containo.us/v1alpha1
kind: IngressRoute
metadata:
name: whoami
labels:
app: whoami
spec:
entryPoints:
- http
routes:
- match: Host(`whoami.example.com`)
kind: Rule
services:
- name: whoami
port: 80
middlewares:
- name: traefik-forward-auth
Note: If using auth host mode, you must apply the middleware to your auth host ingress.
See the examples directory for more examples.
You can apply labels to selected containers:
whoami:
image: containous/whoami
labels:
- "traefik.http.routers.whoami.rule=Host(`whoami.example.com`)"
- "traefik.http.routers.whoami.middlewares=traefik-forward-auth"
Note: If using auth host mode, you must apply the middleware to the traefik-forward-auth container.
See the examples directory for more examples.
You can also leverage the rules
config to selectively apply authentication via traefik-forward-auth. For example if you enabled global authentication by enabling forward authentication for an entire entrypoint, you can still exclude some patterns from requiring authentication:
# Allow requests to 'dash.example.com'
rule.1.action = allow
rule.1.rule = Host(`dash.example.com`)
# Allow requests to `app.example.com/public`
rule.two.action = allow
rule.two.rule = Host(`app.example.com`) && Path(`/public`)
Overlay is the default operation mode, in this mode the authorisation endpoint is overlaid onto any domain. By default the /_oauth
path is used, this can be customised using the url-path
option.
The user flow will be:
- Request to
www.myapp.com/home
- User redirected to Google login
- After Google login, user is redirected to
www.myapp.com/_oauth
- Token, user and CSRF cookie is validated (this request in intercepted and is never passed to your application)
- User is redirected to
www.myapp.com/home
- Request is allowed
As the hostname in the redirect_uri
is dynamically generated based on the original request, every hostname must be permitted in the Google OAuth console (e.g. www.myappp.com
would need to be added in the above example)
This is an optional mode of operation that is useful when dealing with a large number of subdomains, it is activated by using the auth-host
config option (see this example docker-compose.yml or this kubernetes example).
For example, if you have a few applications: app1.test.com
, app2.test.com
, appN.test.com
, adding every domain to Google's console can become laborious.
To utilise an auth host, permit domain level cookies by setting the cookie domain to test.com
then set the auth-host
to: auth.test.com
.
The user flow will then be:
- Request to
app10.test.com/home/page
- User redirected to Google login
- After Google login, user is redirected to
auth.test.com/_oauth
- Token, user and CSRF cookie is validated, auth cookie is set to
test.com
- User is redirected to
app10.test.com/home/page
- Request is allowed
With this setup, only auth.test.com
must be permitted in the Google console.
Two criteria must be met for an auth-host
to be used:
- Request matches given
cookie-domain
auth-host
is also subdomain of samecookie-domain
Please note: For Auth Host mode to work, you must ensure that requests to your auth-host are routed to the traefik-forward-auth container, as demonstrated with the service labels in the docker-compose-auth.yml example and the ingressroute resource in a kubernetes example.
The service provides an endpoint to clear a users session and "log them out". The path is created by appending /logout
to your configured path
and so with the default settings it will be: /_oauth/logout
.
You can use the logout-redirect
config option to redirect users to another URL following logout (note: the user will not have a valid auth cookie after being logged out).
Note: This only clears the auth cookie from the users browser and as this service is stateless, it does not invalidate the cookie against future use. So if the cookie was recorded, for example, it could continue to be used for the duration of the cookie lifetime.
2018 Thom Seddon