This packages allow you authenticate users with Keycloak Server.
It works on front. For APIs we recommend laravel-keycloak-guard.
- Have a Keycloak Server.
- Have a realm configured and a client that accepts authentication.
This package was tested with:
- Laravel: 5.8 / 7 / 8 / 9
- Keycloak: 4.8.3.Final / 11.0.2 / 15
Any other version is not guaranteed to work.
This is project is open source and maintained on my free time. So, if you have any problem you can open a Issue with all details (laravel version, keycloak version, the description of problem...) and I'll be happy to try to help.
- User access a guarded route and is redirected to Keycloak login.
- User signin and obtains a code.
- He's redirected to callback page and we change the code for a access token.
- We store it on session and validate user.
- User is logged.
- We redirect the user to "redirect_url" route (see config) or the intended one.
- We redirect the guest to "redirect_guest" route (see config).
Require the package
composer require lghs/laravel-keycloak-guard
If you want to change routes or the default values for Keycloak, publish the config file:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Lghs\KeycloakGuard\KeycloakServiceProvider"
After publishing config/keycloak.php
file, you can change the routes:
'redirect_url' => '/admin',
'redirect_guest' => 'hello',
'routes' => [
'login' => 'login',
'logout' => 'logout',
'register' => 'register',
'callback' => 'callback',
]
Change any value to change the URL.
Other configurations can be changed to have a new default value, but we recommend to use .env
file:
KEYCLOAK_BASE_URL
The Keycloak Server url. Generally is something like: https://your-domain.com/auth
.
KEYCLOAK_REALM
The Keycloak realm. The default is master
.
KEYCLOAK_REALM_PUBLIC_KEY
The Keycloak Server realm public key (string).
In dashboard go to: Keycloak >> Realm Settings >> Keys >> RS256 >> Public Key.
KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_ID
Keycloak Client ID.
In dashboard go to: Keycloak >> Clients >> Installation.
KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_SECRET
Keycloak Client Secret. If empty we'll not send it to Token Endpoint.
In dashboard go to: Keycloak >> Clients >> Installation.
KEYCLOAK_CACHE_OPENID
We can cache the OpenId Configuration: it's a list of endpoints we require to Keycloak.
If you activate it, remember to flush the cache when change the realm or url.
Just add the options you would like as an array to the" to "Just add the options you would like to guzzle_options array on keycloak.php config file. For example:
You should add Keycloak Web guard to your config/auth.php
.
Just add keycloak to "driver" option on configurations you want.
As my default is web, I add to it:
'guards' => [
'web' => [
'driver' => 'keycloak',
'provider' => 'users',
],
// ...
],
And change your provider config too:
'providers' => [
'users' => [
'driver' => 'keycloak-users',
'model' => Lghs\KeycloakGuard\Models\User::class,
],
// ...
]
Note: if you want use another User Model, check the FAQ How to implement my Model?.
We implement the Illuminate\Contracts\Auth\Guard
. So, all Laravel default methods will be available.
Ex: Auth::user()
returns the authenticated user.
You can check user has a role simply by Auth::hasRole('role')
;
This method accept two parameters: the first is the role (string or array of strings) and the second is the resource.
If not provided, resource will be the client_id, which is the regular check if you authenticating into this client to your front.
You can use Laravel Authorization Gate to check user against one or more roles (and resources).
For example, in your Controller you can check one role:
if (Gate::denies('keycloak', 'manage-account')) {
return abort(403);
}
Or multiple roles:
if (Gate::denies('keycloak', ['manage-account'])) {
return abort(403);
}
And roles for a resource:
if (Gate::denies('keycloak', 'manage-account', 'another-resource')) {
return abort(403);
}
This last use is not trivial, but you can extend the Guard to request authentication/authorization to multiple resources. By default, we request only the current client.
If you do not want to use the Gate or already implemented middlewares, you can check user against one or more roles using the keycloak-roles
Middleware.
Add this to your Controller's __construct
method:
$this->middleware('keycloak-roles:manage-something-cool');
// For multiple roles, separate with '|'
$this->middleware('keycloak-roles:manage-something-cool|manage-something-nice|manage-my-application');
This middleware works searching for all roles on default resource (client_id).
You can extend it and register your own middleware on Kernel.php or just use Auth::hasRole($roles, $resource)
on your Controller.
We registered a new user provider that you configured on config/auth.php
called "keycloak-users".
In this same configuration you setted the model. So you can register your own model extending Lghs\KeycloakGuard\Models\KeycloakUser
class and changing this configuration.
You can implement your own User Provider: just remember to implement the retrieveByCredentials
method receiving the Keycloak Profile information to retrieve a instance of model.
Eloquent/Database User Provider should work well as they will parse the Keycloak Profile and make a "where" to your database. So your user data must match with Keycloak Profile.
We register a login
route to redirect to Keycloak Server. After login we'll receive and proccess the token to authenticate your user.
There's no login/registration form.
Just add the keycloak
middleware:
// On RouteServiceProvider.php for example
Route::prefix('admin')
->middleware('keycloak')
->namespace($this->namespace)
->group(base_path('routes/web.php'));
// Or with Route facade in another place
Route::group(['middleware' => 'keycloak'], function () {
Route::get('/admin', 'Controller@admin');
});
On session. We recommend implement the database driver if you have load balance.
State is a unique and non-guessable string used to mitigate CSRF attacks.
We associate each authentication request about to be initiated with one random state and check on callback. You should do it if you are extending/implementing your own Auth controller.
Use KeycloakWeb::saveState()
method to save the already generated state to session and KeycloakWeb::validateState()
to check the current state against the saved one.
For some reason Laravel can present a problem with EncryptCookies middleware changing the session ID.
In this case, we will always try to login, as tokens cannot be retrieved.
You can remove session_id cookie from encryption:
// On your EncryptCookies middleware
class EncryptCookies extends Middleware
{
protected $except = [];
public function __construct(EncrypterContract $encrypter)
{
parent::__construct($encrypter);
/**
* This will disable in runtime.
*
* If you have a "session.cookie" option or don't care about changing the app name
* (in another environment, for example), you can only add it to "$except" array on top
*/
$this->disableFor(config('session.cookie'));
}
}
If your client is not public, you should provide a KEYCLOAK_CLIENT_SECRET
on your .env
.
In some use cases you may need to override the default Guzzle options - likely either to disable SSL verification or to set a Proxy to route all requests through.
Every [http://docs.guzzlephp.org/en/stable/request-options.html](Guzzle Request Option) is supported and is passed directly to the Guzzle Client instance.
Just add the options you would like to guzzle_options
array on keycloak.php
config file. For example:
'guzzle_options' => [
'verify' => false
]
- Duman Haydar @dumanhaydar
- Mário Valney @mariovalney
- Vizir Software Studio
With contributors on GitHub ❤️