armuk / signonotron2

Single sign-on service for GOV.UK

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Sign-on-o-Tron II

This is a centralised OAuth 2-based single sign-on provider for GDS services.

We use Devise to provide username / password sign-in, and Doorkeeper to provide an OAuth 2 provider.

Details of our interpretation of OAuth are provided in an accompanying document

Usage

The application has two rake tasks to create new users and client applications.

To create a new client application to which Sign-on-o-Tron will provide sign-on services:

rake applications:create name=ClientName description="What does this app do" home_uri="https://myapp.com" redirect_uri="https://myapp.com/auth/gds/callback"

This will create and return a client ID and secret that can be used in the app (normally via GDS-SSO).

You can then add the ID and secret to the app's ENV using your preferred method.

To create a new user, use the following syntax:

rake users:create name='First Last' email=user@example.com applications=Comma,Seperated,ListOf,Application,Names* [github=username] [twitter=username]

* You can also set the applications in a comma separated list via an ENV['APPLICATIONS'] variable if you prefer.

Getting this working in development.

More detail is contained in the GDS-SSO Repo, but if you just want to get this working, follow the steps below:

  • If you haven't already set real tokens in your app's ENV, you'll first need to run the following command to make sure your signonotron2 database has got OAuth config that matches what the apps use in development mode:

    bundle exec ./script/make_oauth_work_in_dev

  • You must then make sure you set an environment variable when you run your app. e.g.:

    GDS_SSO_STRATEGY=real bundle exec rails s

Creating new permissions

To create a new permission for an existing app, you first need to have the “superadmin” role on your account (or have access to someone who does): you’ll then be able to access the “Administer applications” menu item. Under the application you want to change, follow the “Supported Permissions” link and add a new permission from there.

Note that this UI won’t let you edit or delete existing permissions.

Running the Application

The web application itself is run like any other Rails app, for example: script/rails s

In development, you can run a DelayedJob worked to process background jobs: rake jobs:work

Implementation Notes

The application is divided into two parts: user management (User sign-on and passwords) and OAuth delegation (SSO service, contacts API).

Uesr management is handled by Devise. Configuration is in config/initializers/devise and views are either concrete (under app/views/devise) or pulled in from the Devise gem. Likewise with Controllers, though Devise controllers should inherit from Devise::SomeController (e.g., as with the PasswordsController).

API authentication is handled by Doorkeeper. It's a bit of a tricky beast, but not too bad overall, and it nicely separates concerns. Instead of exposing the current user with current_user, Doorkeeper exposes the current valid OAuth token as doorkeeper_token. Doorkeeper tokens are associated with a resource owner through an authenticator block, defined in config/initializers/doorkeeper.

To require Devise authentication in a controller (i.e., you want a user sitting at a computer looking at the page), add before_filter :authenticate_user! to the controller.

For example:

class SettingsController
  before_filter :authenticate_user!

  def show
    settings = current_user.settings
  end
end

To require Doorkeeper authentication in a controller (i.e., you want an application that has been granted a token on behalf of a user to interact with the controller), add doorkeeper_for :all or doorkeeper_for :action to the controller.

For example:

class AutomaticApiController
  doorkeeper_for :swizzle

  def swizzle
    @token_owning_user = User.find_by_id(doorkeeper_token.resource_owner_id)
  end
end

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Single sign-on service for GOV.UK