A minimal forward authentication service that provides Google oauth based login and authentication for the traefik reverse proxy.
- Seamlessly overlays any http service with a single endpoint (see:
-url-path
in Configuration) - Supports multiple domains/subdomains by dynamically generating redirect_uri's
- Allows authentication to persist across multiple domains (see Cookie Domains)
- Supports extended authentication beyond Google token lifetime (see:
-lifetime
in Configuration)
See the (examples) directory for example docker compose and traefik configuration files that demonstrates the forward authentication configuration for traefik and passing required configuration values to traefik-forward-auth.
The following configuration is supported:
Flag | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
-client-id | string | *Google Client ID (required) |
-client-secret | string | *Google Client Secret (required) |
-secret | string | *Secret used for signing (required) |
-config | string | Path to config file |
-auth-host | string | Central auth login (see below) |
-cookie-domains | string | Comma separated list of cookie domains (see below) |
-cookie-name | string | Cookie Name (default "_forward_auth") |
-cookie-secure | bool | Use secure cookies (default true) |
-csrf-cookie-name | string | CSRF Cookie Name (default "_forward_auth_csrf") |
-domain | string | Comma separated list of email domains to allow |
-whitelist | string | Comma separated list of email addresses to allow |
-lifetime | int | Session length in seconds (default 43200) |
-url-path | string | Callback URL (default "_oauth") |
-prompt | string | Space separated list of OpenID prompt options |
-log-level | string | Log level: trace, debug, info, warn, error, fatal, panic (default "warn") |
-log-format | string | Log format: text, json, pretty (default "text") |
Configuration can also be supplied as environment variables (use upper case and swap -
's for _
's e.g. -client-id
becomes CLIENT_ID
)
Configuration can also be supplied via a file, you can specify the location with -config
flag, the format is flag value
one per line, e.g. client-id your-client-id
)
Head to https://console.developers.google.com & 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)
The authenticated user is set in the X-Forwarded-User
header, to pass this on add this to the authResponseHeaders
as shown here.
You can restrict who can login with the following parameters:
-domain
- Use this to limit logins to a specific domain, e.g. test.com only-whitelist
- Use this to only allow specific users to login e.g. thom@test.com only
Note, if you pass whitelist
then only this is checked and domain
is effectively ignored.
You can supply a comma separated list of cookie domains, if the host of the original request is a subdomain of any given cookie domain, the authentication cookie will set with the given domain.
For example, if cookie domain is test.com
and a request comes in on app1.test.com
, the cookie will be set for the whole test.com
domain. As such, if another request is forwarded for authentication from app2.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 the same cookie-secret
in both instances, or using a different cookie-name
on each.
Overlay is the default operation mode, in this mode the authorisation endpoint is overlayed onto any domain. By default the /_oauth
path is used, this can be customised using the -url-path
option.
If a request comes in for www.myapp.com/home
then the user will be redirected to the google login, following this they will be sent back to www.myapp.com/_oauth
, where their token will be validated (this request will not be forwarded to your application). Following successful authoristion, the user will return to their originally requested url of www.myapp.com/home
.
As the hostname in the redirect_uri
is dynamically generated based on the orignal 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).
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
2018 Thom Seddon