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When and Why to Use OAuth2

Dave Syer
September 15, 2012

When and Why to Use OAuth2

Dave Syer

September 15, 2012
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  1. When and Why to Use OAuth2 Dave Syer, 2012 Twitter:

    @david_syer Email: [email protected] (Securing REST-ful Web Services with OAuth2)
  2. Agenda Why would I use OAuth2? If I was going

    to use Spring how would that look? What's the easiest way to get something working? Blog: http://blog.cloudfoundry.org/2012/10/09/oauth-rest/
  3. Introduction There is a strong trend distributed systems with lightweight

    architectures So what are people doing about security in such systems?
  4. What is a Lightweight Service? HTTP transport. Text-based message content,

    usually JSON. Small, compact messages, and quick responses. REST-ful, or at least inspired by the REST Some degree of statelessness Interoperability.
  5. What Are the Security Requirements Identity and permissions: how is

    identity and permission information conveyed to a service? how is it decoded and interpreted? what data are needed to make the access decision (user accounts, roles, ACLs etc.)? how is the data managed: who is responsible for storing and retrieving it?
  6. HTTP Basic Authentication something of a lowest common denominator supported

    on practically all servers natively and out of the box ubiquitous support on the client side in all languages Example: $ curl "https://$username:$password@myhost/resource"
  7. So what's wrong with that? Nothing, but... Where do you

    get the credentials (the username and password)? Fine for systems where all participants can share secrets securely In practice that means small systems Only supports username/password Only covers authentication
  8. User or Client Permissions Finer-grained information about the authenticated party

    Role-based access: very common, sometimes available in server/container Need to categorize user accounts, e.g. USER and ADMIN Often business requirements are more complex
  9. OAuth2 Centralizing account management and permissions: OAuth 2.0 adds an

    extra dimension - more information for the access decision Standards always help in security Lightweight - easy to curl Requires HTTPS for secure operation, but you can test with HTTP
  10. Quick Introduction to OAuth2 A Client application, often web application,

    acts on behalf of a User, but with the User's approval Authorization Server Resource Server Client application Common examples of Authorization Servers on the internet: Facebook - Graph API Google - Google APIs Cloud Foundry - Cloud Controller
  11. OAuth2 and the Lightweight Service Example command line Client: $

    curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" https://myhost/resource https://myhost is a Resource Server TOKEN is a Bearer Token it came from an Authorization Server
  12. OAuth2 Key Features Extremely simple for clients Access tokens carry

    information (beyond identity) Resource Servers are free to interpret tokens Example token contents: Client id Resource id (audience) User id Role assignments
  13. UAA Bearer Tokens OAuth 2.0 tokens are opaque to clients

    But they carry important information to Resource Servers Example of implementation (from Cloud Foundry UAA, JWT = signed, base64- encoded, JSON): { "client_id":"vmc", "exp":1346325625, "scope":["cloud_controller.read","openid","password.write"], "aud":["openid","cloud_controller","password"], "user_name":"[email protected]", "user_id":"52147673-9d60-4674-a6d9-225b94d7a64e", "email":"[email protected]", "jti":"f724ae9a-7c6f-41f2-9c4a-526cea84e614" }
  14. Obtaining a Client Credentials Token A client can act in

    its own right (not on behalf of a user): $ curl "https://myclient:[email protected]/oauth/tokens" -d grant_type=client_credentials -d client_id=myclient Result: { access_token: FUYGKRWFG.jhdfgair7fylzshjg.o98q47tgh.fljgh, expires_in: 43200, client_id: myclient, scope: uaa.admin }
  15. Obtaining a User Token A client can act on behalf

    of a user (e.g. authorization_code grant):
  16. Authorization Code Grant Summary Authorization Server authenticates the User 1.

    Client starts the authorization flow and obtain User's approval 2. Authorization Server issues an authorization code (opaque one-time token) 3. Client exchanges the authorization code for an access token. 4.
  17. Role of Client Application Register with Authorization Server (get a

    client_id and maybe a client_secret) Do not collect user credentials Obtain a token (opaque) from Authorization Server On its own behalf - client_credentials On behalf of a user Use it to access Resource Server
  18. Role of Resource Server Extract token from request and decode

    it 1. Make access control decision Scope Audience User account information (id, roles etc.) Client information (id, roles etc.) 2. Send 403 (FORBIDDEN) if token not sufficient 3.
  19. Role of the Authorization Server Grant tokens 1. Interface for

    users to confirm that they authorize the Client to act on their behalf 2. Authenticate users (/authorize) 3. Authenticate clients (/token) 4. #1 and #4 are covered thoroughly by the spec; #2 and #3 not (for good reasons).
  20. More on Scopes Per the spec they are arbitrary strings.

    The Authorization Server and the Resource Servers agree on the content and meanings. Examples: Google: https://www.googleapis.com/auth/userinfo.profile Facebook: email, read_stream, write_stream UAA: cloud_controller.read, cloud_controller.write, scim.read, openid Authorization Server has to decide whether to grant a token to a given client and user based on the requested scope (if any).
  21. UAA Scopes UAA scopes are actually Groups in the User

    accounts GET /Groups, Get /Users/{id} { "id": "73ba999e-fc34-49eb-ac26-dc8be52c1d82", "meta": {...}, "userName": "marissa", "groups": [ ... { "value": "23a71835-c7ce-43ac-b511-c84d3ae8e788", "display": "uaa.user", "membershipType": "DIRECT" } ], }
  22. Special Mention for Vmc The UAA authenticates requests from vmc

    in a special way: $ curl https://uaa.cloudfoundry.com/oauth/authorize -d response_type=token -d client_id=vmc -d redirect_uri=https:uaa.cloudfoundry.com/redirect/vmc -d source=credentials -d username=$username -d password=$password Result: 302 FOUND ... Location: https://uaa.cloudfoundry.com/redirect /vmc#access_token=FUYGKRWFG.jhdfgair7fylzshjg.o98q47tgh.fljgh...
  23. Authentication and the Authorization Server Authentication (checking user credentials) is

    orthogonal to authorization (granting tokens) They don't have to be handled in the same component of a large system Authentication is often deferred to existing systems (SSO) Authorization Server has to be able to authenticate the OAuth endpoints (/authorize and /token) It does not have to collect credentials (except for grant_type=password)
  24. Cloud Foundry UAA as a General Purpose Solution User Account

    and Authentication Service is part of Cloud Foundry open source and fairly generic sample apps (including login server) wrapper for Spring Security OAuth runs in a servlet container (e.g. tomcat) easy for Spring developers to install and customize look for UAA blogs at http://blog.cloudfoundry.org (and .com)
  25. UAA OAuth Implementation UAA makes some explicit choices where the

    spec allows it, and also adds some useful features: Client registration validation, e.g. implicit has no secret Client has separate allowed scopes for user tokens and client tokens (if allowed). User account management: groups = scopes, period-separated JWT tokens, signed but not encoded, includes audience (a.k.a. resource_id) /userinfo endpoint for remote authentication (SSO) Auto-approve for client apps that are part of platform Special authentication channels for /authorize: source=credentials - used by vmc source=login - used by Login Server (Login Server) autologin via code=...
  26. Alternatives to OAuth2 OAuth 1.0a SAML CAS Custom solution, e.g.

    HMAC signed requests Extensions to OAuth2
  27. In Conclusion Lightweight services demand lightweight infrastructure Security is important,

    but should be unobtrusive OAuth 2.0 is a standard, and has a lot of useful features Spring Security OAuth aims to be a complete solution at the framework level Cloud Foundry UAA adds some implementation details and makes some concrete choices