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A Keycloak plugin for migrating users from legacy systems

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Keycloak user migration plugin

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Introduction

This is a user migration plugin for Keycloak. Read more at:

https://codesoapbox.dev/keycloak-user-migration

Compatibility history

Keycloak Version Commit
18.X Current
17.X ca82b795c793094f6d67dac3dc14dcdfd2d0ed59
16.X 489779543989b1880177c802f5ee62769a945b85
15.X 922c69440a776f0cab80b68b90c90a6ba620cdd9
12.X 0966d9ba7c94ba461783a5d8dda0735a35c4e6b8
11.x 9f59cdf7fa888c31c5cda3d1fe014c9a0682ab30
9.X c9c64162b91cedc29d8bf360c3df50b69fdb4c6b

Prerequisites - REST endpoints in the legacy system

You must provide two REST endpoints (GET and POST) in your legacy authentication system under the URI ${restClientUri }/{$username_or_email}, where ${restClientUri} is a configurable base URL for the endpoints and {$username_or_email} is the username or e-mail of the user that is attempting to sign in.

Note: it's important that the GET endpoint supports both username and e-mail, as otherwise the "forgotten password" action will not work correctly until user migration is triggered.

It is possible to configure the plugin to use the legacy userId instead of the username when making the credential verification request. This option is useful if your legacy system allows users to change their usernames and should only be used when the legacy user ids are migrated to Keycloak.

An example implementation of the REST endpoints is available in the ./docker/legacy-system-example folder (see: UserMigrationController class).

GET

The GET request will have to return user data as a JSON response in the form:

{
  "id": "string",
  "username": "string",
  "email": "string",
  "firstName": "string",
  "lastName": "string",
  "enabled": "boolean",
  "emailVerified": "boolean",
  "attributes": {
    "key": [
      "value"
    ]
  },
  "roles": [
    "string"
  ],
  "groups": [
    "string"
  ],
  "requiredActions": [
    "requiredActions"
  ]
}

Any HTTP status other than 200 will be interpreted as the user not having been found.

The id attribute in the above response is optional. If it's not set then Keycloak will generate a new user id automatically.

POST

The POST request is for password validation. It will have to accept the following body:

{
  "password": "string"
}

...And return HTTP status 200 if the password is correct. Any other response will be treated as invalid credentials.

Example REST client behavior

Let's assume we have configured the legacy REST service under the URL http://www.old-legacy-system.com/auth.

If a user with the username bob and the password password123 tries to log in through Keycloak for the first time (giving correct credentials), a GET request will be performed to http://www.old-legacy-system.com/auth/bob. The response might look like this:

{
  "id": "12345678",
  "username": "bob",
  "email": "[email protected]",
  "firstName": "Bob",
  "lastName": "Smith",
  "enabled": "true",
  "emailVerified": "true",
  "attributes": {
    "position": [
      "rockstar-developer"
    ],
    "likes": [
      "cats",
      "dogs",
      "cookies"
    ]
  },
  "roles": [
    "admin"
  ],
  "groups": [
    "migrated_users"
  ],
  "requiredActions": [
    "CONFIGURE_TOTP",
    "UPDATE_PASSWORD",
    "UPDATE_PROFILE",
    "update_user_locale"
  ]
}

As the user has been found, its counterpart will be created in Keycloak and a federation link to the legacy system will be created for it. That way, there will no longer be a need to make the GET request again (but all credential checks will still go through the legacy system). After creating the user, a POST request will be performed to http://www.old-legacy-system.com/auth/bob, with the body:

{
  "password": "password123"
}

If the plugin is configured to use the user id as the path parameter for the credential verification request, the POST request will be performed to http://www.old-legacy-system.com/auth/12345678, instead.

As this is the correct password, the user will be logged in. After the first successful login, the federation link to the legacy system is severed and any interactions with the user will be done completely through Keycloak.

Launching and configuring the example

You can launch the demo Keycloak service and an example legacy service using Docker Compose. You can learn more about the example legacy app in its README.md file.

The following example uses the default master realm but the demo will also work with custom realms.

Configuration

  1. Run mvn clean package in the repository root
  2. Navigate to ./docker
  3. Execute docker-compose up
  4. Open http://localhost:8024/auth/admin/ in a browser
  5. Log in with the credentials:
  • User: admin
  • Password: admin
  1. Navigate to "User federation":

Sidebar

  1. Choose "User migration using a REST client" from the "Add provider..." dropdown:

User federation dropdown

  1. Provide the legacy system endpoint URI in the "Rest client URI" field. For the provided example legacy app the correct value is: http://legacy-system-example:8080/user-migration-support:

Rest client URI input for the provided example

  1. Click "save":

Save button

User migration should now work - Keycloak will recognize all users from your legacy authentication system and migrate them automatically.

Verification

  1. Sign out from the admin account:

Sign out from admin account

  1. Go to the http://localhost:8024/auth/realms/master/account URI. Click the Sign in button to login as an example user:

Welcome to Keycloak account

  1. Enter user credentials [*] into the login form:
  • Username: lucy
  • Password: password

Login form

The example migrates the user with Update Profile as a required action. Therefore, we need to submit the profile data to activate the user in Keycloak:

Migration with required action

Setting requiredActions, groups, attributes or roles is completely optional and is included in the example legacy system for illustration purposes only.

  1. The example user is successfully migrated. Log in again as admin (http://localhost:8024/auth/admin/) and navigate to Users to verify the results:

Realm user list

[*] You can find the list of available test users in the Swagger docs for the example legacy system: http://localhost:8080/swagger-ui.html by calling the /users endpoint.

Optional - additional configuration

Additional configuration options are available for fine-tuning the migration.

Bearer Token Auth

Bearer Token Auth

The migration endpoint can be secured with an API token. The configured value will be sent as a bearer token in the authorization header.

If bearer auth is enabled, the configured token value is set to SECRET_API_TOKEN when making the request to the migration endpoints, the rest client will send the following authorization header:

Authorization: Bearer SECRET_API_TOKEN

Basic Auth for migration endpoint

HTTP Basic Token Auth

The migration endpoint can be secured with HTTP basic auth. The configured value will be sent as a Basic auth string in the authorization header. Keep in mind that this approach is only secure over an encrypted connection (i.e. HTTPS)

If basic auth is enabled, the username and password will be sent in the authorization header:

Authorization: Basic base64encode(username:password)

Legacy role conversion

Conversion

If role names in Keycloak do not perfectly match those in the legacy system, you can configure the provider to automatically map legacy roles to Keycloak roles, by specifying the mapping in the format legacyRole:keycloakRole.

Migrate unmapped roles

This switch can be toggled to decide whether roles which are not defined in the legacy role conversion map should be migrated anyway or simply ignored.

Group role conversion

If group names in Keycloak do not perfectly match those in the legacy system, you can configure the provider to automatically map legacy groups to Keycloak groups, by specifying the mapping in the format legacyGroup:keycloakGroup.

Migrate unmapped groups

This switch can be toggled to decide whether groups which are not defined in the legacy group conversion map should be migrated anyway or simply ignored.

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