KeyCloak
This page describes StackState v4.4.x.
The StackState 4.4 version range is End of Life (EOL) and no longer supported. We encourage customers still running the 4.4 version range to upgrade to a more recent release.
Overview
StackState can authenticate using KeyCloak as an authentication provider, you will need to configure both StackState and KeyCloak to be able to talk to each other. The following sections describe the respective setups.
Configure KeyCloak
Before you can configure StackState to authenticate using KeyCloak, you need to add a new client configuration to the KeyCloak Authentication Server. The necessary settings for the client are:
Client ID - The ID of the client that is connecting, we recommend naming this
stackstate
Client Protocol - Set to
openid-connect
Access Type - Set to
confidential
, so that a secret is used to establish the connection between KeyCloak and StackStateStandard Flow Enabled - Set to
Enabled
Implicit Flow Enabled - Set to
Disabled
Root URL - The root location of StackState (the same value configured in as base URL of the StackState configuration
Valid redirect URIs - This should be
/loginCallback/*
Base URL - This should point to the root location of StackState
Configure StackState
Kubernetes
To configure StackState to authenticate using KeyCloak, KeyCloak details and user role mapping needs to be added to the file authentication.yaml
. For example:
Follow the steps below to configure StackState to authenticate using KeyCloak:
In
authentication.yaml
- add details of the KeyCloak authentication provider (see the example above). The KeyCloak specific values can be obtained from the client configuration in KeyCloak:url - The base URI for the KeyCloak instance
realm - The KeyCloak realm to connect to
authenticationMethod - Set to
client_secret_basic
, this is currently the only supported value.clientId - The ID of the KeyCloak client as configured in KeyCloak
secret - The secret attached to the KeyCloak client, which is used to authenticate this client to KeyCloak
redirectUri - Optional: The URI where the login callback endpoint of StackState is reachable. Populated by default using the
stackstate.baseUrl
, but can be overridden (must be a fully qualified URL that points to the/loginCallback
path)jwsAlgorithm - Set this to
RS256
, this is currently the only supported value.jwtClaims - Optional: The roles or username can be retrieved from a different attribute than the Keycloak default behavior
usernameField - Optional: The field in the OIDC user profile that should be used as the username. By default this will be the
preferred_username
.groupsField - Optional: StackState will always, and by default only, use the
roles
Keycloak provides. But it can also add roles from the field specified here. This is mainly useful when Keycloak is mapping roles/groups from a third-party system.
In
authentication.yaml
- map user roles from KeyCloak to the correct StackState subjects using theroles.guest
,roles.powerUser
,roles.platformAdmin
orroles.admin
settings (see the example above). For details, see the default StackState roles. More StackState roles can also be created, see the RBAC documentation.Store the file
authentication.yaml
together with thevalues.yaml
file from the StackState installation instructions.Run a Helm upgrade to apply the changes:
Note:
The first run of the helm upgrade command will result in pods restarting, which may cause a short interruption of availability.
Include
authentication.yaml
on everyhelm upgrade
run.The authentication configuration is stored as a Kubernetes secret.
Linux
To configure StackState to use a KeyCloak authentication provider on Linux, KeyCloak details and user role mapping needs to be added to the file application_stackstate.conf
. This should replace the existing authentication
section that is nested in stackstate.api
. For example:
Follow the steps below to configure StackState to authenticate using KeyCloak:
In
application_stackstate.conf
- add details of the KeyCloak authentication provider (see the example above). This should replace the existingauthentication
section that is nested instackstate.api
. The KeyCloak specific values can be obtained from the client configuration in KeyCloak:clientId - The ID of the KeyCloak client as configured in KeyCloak.
secret - The secret attached to the KeyCloak client, which is used to authenticate this client to KeyCloak.
keycloakBaseUri - The base URI for the KeyCloak instance.
realm - The KeyCloak realm to connect to.
redirectUri - The URI where the login callback endpoint of StackState is reachable (must be a fully qualified URL that points to the
/loginCallback
path).authenticationMethod - Set this to
client_secret_basic
which is the only supported value for now.jwsAlgorithm - Set this to
RS256
, which is the only supported value for now.jwtClaims - Optional (not in example): The roles or username can be retrieved from a different attribute than the Keycloak default behavior.
-. usernameField - Optional: The field in the OIDC user profile that should be used as the username. By default this will be the
preferred_username
.groupsField - Optional: StackState will always, and by default only, use the
roles
Keycloak provides. But it can also add roles from the field specified here. This is mainly useful when Keycloak is mapping roles/groups from a third-party system.
In
application_stackstate.conf
- map user roles from KeyCloak to the correct StackState subjects using theguestGroups
,powerUserGroups
,adminGroups
orplatformAdminGroups
settings (see the example above). For details, see the default StackState roles. More StackState roles can also be created, see the RBAC documentation.Restart StackState to apply the changes.
See also
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