NAME Plack::Auth::SSO::OIDC - implementation of OpenID Connect for Plack::Auth::SSO DESCRIPTION This is an implementation of Plack::Auth::SSO to authenticate against a openid connect server. It inherits all configuration options from its parent. SYNOPSIS # in your app.psi (Plack) use strict; use warnings; use Plack::Builder; use JSON; use Plack::Auth::SSO::OIDC; use Plack::Session::Store::File; my $uri_base = "http://localhost:5000"; builder { # session middleware needed to store "auth_sso" and/or "auth_sso_error" # in memory session store for testing purposes enable "Session"; # for authentication, redirect your users to this path mount "/auth/oidc" => Plack::Auth::SSO::OIDC->new( # plack application needs to know about the base url of this application uri_base => $uri_base, # after successfull authentication, user is redirected to this path (uri_base is used!) authorization_path => "/auth/callback", # when authentication fails at the identity provider # user is redirected to this path with session key "auth_sso_error" (hash) error_path => "/auth/error", # openid connect discovery url openid_uri => "https://example.oidc.org/auth/oidc/.well-known/openid-configuration", client_id => "my-client-id", client_secret => "myclient-secret", uid_key => "email" )->to_app(); # example psgi app that is called after successfull authentication at /auth/oidc (see above) # it expects session key "auth_sso" to be present # here you typically create a user session based on the uid in "auth_sso" mount "/auth/callback" => sub { my $env = shift; my $session = Plack::Session->new($env); my $auth_sso= $session->get("auth_sso"); my $user = MyUsers->get( $auth_sso->{uid} ); $session->set("user_id", $user->{id}); [ 200, [ "Content-Type" => "text/plain" ], [ "logged in! ", $user->{name} ]]; }; # example psgi app that is called after unsuccessfull authentication at /auth/oidc (see above) # it expects session key "auth_sso_error" to be present mount "/auth/error" => sub { my $env = shift; my $session = Plack::Session->new($env); my $auth_sso_error = $session->get("auth_sso_error"); [ 200, [ "Content-Type" => "text/plain" ], [ "something happened during single sign on authentication: ", $auth_sso_error->{content} ]]; }; }; CONSTRUCTOR ARGUMENTS uri_base See "uri_base" in Plack::Auth::SSO id See "id" in Plack::Auth::SSO session_key See "session_key" in Plack::Auth::SSO authorization_path See "authorization_path" in Plack::Auth::SSO error_path See "error_path" in Plack::Auth::SSO openid_uri base url of the OIDC discovery url. typically an url that ends on /.well-known/openid-configuration client_id client-id as given by the OIDC service client_secret client-secret as given by the OIDC service scope Scope requested from the OIDC service. Space separated string containing all scopes Default: "openid profile email" Please include scope "openid" cf. https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-basic-1_0.html#Scopes authorize_params Hash reference of parameters (values must be strings) that are added to the authorization url. Empty by default e.g. { prompt => "login", "kc_idp_hint" => "orcid" } Note that some parameters are set internally and therefore will have no effect: code_challenge code_challenge_method state scope client_id response_type redirect_uri allowed_authorize_params Array reference of parameter names. When constructing the authorization url, these parameters are copied from the current url query to the authorization url. This allows to add some dynamic configuration, but should be used with caution. Note that parameters from authorize_params always take precedence. uid_key Attribute from claims to be used as uid Note that all claims are also stored in $session->get("auth_sso")->{info} HOW IT WORKS the openid configuration is retrieved from {openid_uri} key authorization_endpoint must be present in openid configuration key token_endpoint must be present in openid configuration key jwks_uri must be present in openid configuration the user is redirected to the authorization endpoint with extra query parameters after authentication at the authorization endpoint, the user is redirected back to this url with query parameters code and state. When something happened at the authorization endpoint, query parameters error and error_description are returned, and no code. code is exchanged for a json string, using the token endpoint. This json string is a record that contains attributes like id_token and access_token. See https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html#TokenResponse for more information. key id_token in the token json string contains three parts: jwt jose header. Can be decoded with base64 into a json string jwt payload. Can be decoded with base64 into a json string jwt signature the jwt payload from the id_token is decoded into a json string and then to a perl hash. All this data is stored $session->{auth_sso}->{info}. One of these attributes will be the uid that will be stored at $session->{auth_sso}->{uid}. This is determined by configuration key uid_key (see above). e.g. "email" NOTES Can I reauthenticate when I visit the application? When this Plack application is for example mounted at /auth/oidc, then you can reauthenticate by visiting it again, but it depends on your configuration what actually happens at the openid connect server. If prompt is not set anywhere (neither in authorize_params nor in the current url if that is allowed), then the external server will just sent you back with the same tokens. Note that session("auth_sso") is removed at the start of every (re)authentication. LOGGING All subclasses of Plack::Auth::SSO use Log::Any to log messages to the category that equals the current package name. AUTHOR Nicolas Franck, LICENSE AND COPYRIGHT This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of either: the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation; or the Artistic License. See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/ for more information. SEE ALSO Plack::Auth::SSO