wasp/web/docs/auth/social-auth/keycloak.md
2024-03-18 13:09:08 +01:00

12 KiB

title
Keycloak

import useBaseUrl from '@docusaurus/useBaseUrl'; import DefaultBehaviour from './_default-behaviour.md'; import OverrideIntro from './_override-intro.md'; import OverrideExampleIntro from './_override-example-intro.md'; import UsingAuthNote from './_using-auth-note.md'; import WaspFileStructureNote from './_wasp-file-structure-note.md'; import GetUserFieldsType from './_getuserfields-type.md'; import ApiReferenceIntro from './_api-reference-intro.md'; import UserSignupFieldsExplainer from '../_user-signup-fields-explainer.md';

Wasp supports Keycloak Authentication out of the box.

Keycloak is an open-source identity and access management solution for modern applications and services. Keycloak provides both SAML and OpenID protocol solutions. It also has a very flexible and powerful administration UI.

Let's walk through enabling Keycloak authentication, explain some of the default settings, and show how to override them.

Setting up Keycloak Auth

Enabling Keycloak Authentication comes down to a series of steps:

  1. Enabling Keycloak authentication in the Wasp file.
  2. Adding the User entity.
  3. Creating a Keycloak client.
  4. Adding the necessary Routes and Pages
  5. Using Auth UI components in our Pages.

1. Adding Keycloak Auth to Your Wasp File

Let's start by properly configuring the Auth object:

app myApp {
  wasp: {
    version: "^0.13.0"
  },
  title: "My App",
  auth: {
    // 1. Specify the User entity (we'll define it next)
    // highlight-next-line
    userEntity: User,
    methods: {
      // 2. Enable Keycloak Auth
      // highlight-next-line
      keycloak: {}
    },
    onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
  },
}
app myApp {
  wasp: {
    version: "^0.13.0"
  },
  title: "My App",
  auth: {
    // 1. Specify the User entity (we'll define it next)
    // highlight-next-line
    userEntity: User,
    methods: {
      // 2. Enable Keycloak Auth
      // highlight-next-line
      keycloak: {}
    },
    onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
  },
}

The userEntity is explained in the social auth overview.

2. Adding the User Entity

Let's now define the app.auth.userEntity entity:

// ...
// 3. Define the User entity
// highlight-next-line
entity User {=psl
    id          Int     @id @default(autoincrement())
    // ...
psl=}
// ...
// 3. Define the User entity
// highlight-next-line
entity User {=psl
    id          Int     @id @default(autoincrement())
    // ...
psl=}

3. Creating a Keycloak Client

  1. Log into your Keycloak admin console.
  2. Under Clients, click on Create Client.

Keycloak Screenshot 1

  1. Fill in the Client ID and choose a name for the client.

Keycloak Screenshot 2

  1. In the next step, enable Client Authentication.

Keycloak Screenshot 3

  1. Under Valid Redirect URIs, add http://localhost:3001/auth/keycloak/callback for local development.

Keycloak Screenshot 4

- Once you know on which URL(s) your API server will be deployed, also add those URL(s).
- For example: `https://my-server-url.com/auth/keycloak/callback`.
  1. Click Save.
  2. In the Credentials tab, copy the Client Secret value, which we'll use in the next step.

Keycloak Screenshot 5

4. Adding Environment Variables

Add these environment variables to the .env.server file at the root of your project (take their values from the previous step):

KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_ID=your-keycloak-client-id
KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_SECRET=your-keycloak-client-secret
KEYCLOAK_REALM_URL=https://your-keycloak-url.com/realms/master

We assumed in the KEYCLOAK_REALM_URL env variable that you are using the master realm. If you are using a different realm, replace master with your realm name.

5. Adding the Necessary Routes and Pages

Let's define the necessary authentication Routes and Pages.

Add the following code to your main.wasp file:

// ...

// 6. Define the routes
route LoginRoute { path: "/login", to: LoginPage }
page LoginPage {
  component: import { Login } from "@src/pages/auth.jsx"
}
// ...

// 6. Define the routes
route LoginRoute { path: "/login", to: LoginPage }
page LoginPage {
  component: import { Login } from "@src/pages/auth.tsx"
}

We'll define the React components for these pages in the src/pages/auth.{jsx,tsx} file below.

6. Create the Client Pages

:::info We are using Tailwind CSS to style the pages. Read more about how to add it here. :::

Let's now create an auth.{jsx,tsx} file in the src/pages. It should have the following code:

import { LoginForm } from 'wasp/client/auth'

export function Login() {
  return (
    <Layout>
      <LoginForm />
    </Layout>
  )
}

// A layout component to center the content
export function Layout({ children }) {
  return (
    <div className="w-full h-full bg-white">
      <div className="min-w-full min-h-[75vh] flex items-center justify-center">
        <div className="w-full h-full max-w-sm p-5 bg-white">
          <div>{children}</div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
  )
}
import { LoginForm } from 'wasp/client/auth'

export function Login() {
  return (
    <Layout>
      <LoginForm />
    </Layout>
  )
}

// A layout component to center the content
export function Layout({ children }: { children: React.ReactNode }) {
  return (
    <div className="w-full h-full bg-white">
      <div className="min-w-full min-h-[75vh] flex items-center justify-center">
        <div className="w-full h-full max-w-sm p-5 bg-white">
          <div>{children}</div>
        </div>
      </div>
    </div>
  )
}

:::info Auth UI Our pages use an automatically generated Auth UI component. Read more about Auth UI components here. :::

Conclusion

Yay, we've successfully set up Keycloak Auth!

Running wasp db migrate-dev and wasp start should now give you a working app with authentication. To see how to protect specific pages (i.e., hide them from non-authenticated users), read the docs on using auth.

Default Behaviour

Add keycloak: {} to the auth.methods dictionary to use it with default settings:

app myApp {
  wasp: {
    version: "^0.13.0"
  },
  title: "My App",
  auth: {
    userEntity: User,
    methods: {
      // highlight-next-line
      keycloak: {}
    },
    onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
  },
}
app myApp {
  wasp: {
    version: "^0.13.0"
  },
  title: "My App",
  auth: {
    userEntity: User,
    methods: {
      // highlight-next-line
      keycloak: {}
    },
    onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
  },
}

Overrides

Data Received From Keycloak

We are using Keycloak's API and its /userinfo endpoint to fetch the user's data.

{
  sub: '5adba8fc-3ea6-445a-a379-13f0bb0b6969',
  email_verified: true,
  name: 'Test User',
  preferred_username: 'test',
  given_name: 'Test',
  family_name: 'User',
  email: 'test@example.com'
}

The fields you receive will depend on the scopes you requested. The default scope is set to profile only. If you want to get the user's email, you need to specify the email scope in the configFn function.

For up-to-date info about the data received from Keycloak, please refer to the Keycloak API documentation.

Using the Data Received From Keycloak

app myApp {
  wasp: {
    version: "^0.13.0"
  },
  title: "My App",
  auth: {
    userEntity: User,
    methods: {
      keycloak: {
        // highlight-next-line
        configFn: import { getConfig } from "@src/auth/keycloak.js",
        // highlight-next-line
        userSignupFields: import { userSignupFields } from "@src/auth/keycloak.js"
      }
    },
    onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
  },
}

entity User {=psl
    id                        Int     @id @default(autoincrement())
    username                  String  @unique
    displayName               String
psl=}

// ...
export const userSignupFields = {
  username: () => "hardcoded-username",
  displayName: (data) => data.profile.name,
}

export function getConfig() {
  return {
    scopes: ['profile', 'email'],
  }
}
app myApp {
  wasp: {
    version: "^0.13.0"
  },
  title: "My App",
  auth: {
    userEntity: User,
    methods: {
      keycloak: {
        // highlight-next-line
        configFn: import { getConfig } from "@src/auth/keycloak.js",
        // highlight-next-line
        userSignupFields: import { userSignupFields } from "@src/auth/keycloak.js"
      }
    },
    onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
  },
}

entity User {=psl
    id                        Int     @id @default(autoincrement())
    username                  String  @unique
    displayName               String
psl=}

// ...
import { defineUserSignupFields } from 'wasp/server/auth'

export const userSignupFields = defineUserSignupFields({
  username: () => "hardcoded-username",
  displayName: (data: any) => data.profile.name,
})

export function getConfig() {
  return {
    scopes: ['profile', 'email'],
  }
}

Using Auth

API Reference

app myApp {
  wasp: {
    version: "^0.13.0"
  },
  title: "My App",
  auth: {
    userEntity: User,
    methods: {
      keycloak: {
        // highlight-next-line
        configFn: import { getConfig } from "@src/auth/keycloak.js",
        // highlight-next-line
        userSignupFields: import { userSignupFields } from "@src/auth/keycloak.js"
      }
    },
    onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
  },
}
app myApp {
  wasp: {
    version: "^0.13.0"
  },
  title: "My App",
  auth: {
    userEntity: User,
    methods: {
      keycloak: {
        // highlight-next-line
        configFn: import { getConfig } from "@src/auth/keycloak.js",
        // highlight-next-line
        userSignupFields: import { userSignupFields } from "@src/auth/keycloak.js"
      }
    },
    onAuthFailedRedirectTo: "/login"
  },
}

The keycloak dict has the following properties:

  • configFn: ExtImport

    This function must return an object with the scopes for the OAuth provider.

    export function getConfig() {
      return {
        scopes: ['profile', 'email'],
      }
    }
    
    export function getConfig() {
      return {
        scopes: ['profile', 'email'],
      }
    }
    
  • userSignupFields: ExtImport

    Read more about the userSignupFields function here.