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diff --git a/deps/rabbitmq_auth_backend_oauth2/README.md b/deps/rabbitmq_auth_backend_oauth2/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..d98d259779 --- /dev/null +++ b/deps/rabbitmq_auth_backend_oauth2/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,280 @@ +# OAuth 2.0 (JWT) Token Authorisation Backend for RabbitMQ + +[](https://travis-ci.org/rabbitmq/rabbitmq-auth-backend-oauth2) + +This [RabbitMQ authentication/authorisation backend](https://www.rabbitmq.com/access-control.html) plugin lets applications (clients) +and users authenticate and authorize using JWT-encoded [OAuth 2.0 access tokens](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6749#section-1.4). + +It is not specific to but developed against [Cloud Foundry UAA](https://github.com/cloudfoundry/uaa). + +An OAuth 2.0 primer is available [elsewhere on the Web](https://auth0.com/blog/oauth2-the-complete-guide/). + + +## Supported RabbitMQ Versions + +The plugin targets and ships with RabbitMQ 3.8. Like all RabbitMQ [plugins](https://www.rabbitmq.com/plugins.html), it must be enabled before it can be used: + +``` shell +rabbitmq-plugins enable rabbitmq_auth_backend_oauth2 +``` + + +## How it Works + +### Authorization Workflow + +This plugin does not communicate with an UAA server. It decodes an access token provided by +the client and authorises a user based on the data stored in the token. + +The token can be any [JWT token](https://jwt.io/introduction/) which +contains the `scope` and `aud` fields. The way the token was +retrieved (such as what grant type was used) is outside of the scope +of this plugin. + +### Prerequisites + +To use this plugin + +1. UAA should be configured to produce encrypted JWT tokens containing a set of RabbitMQ permission scopes +2. All RabbitMQ nodes must be [configured to use the `rabbit_auth_backend_oauth2` backend](https://www.rabbitmq.com/access-control.html) +3. All RabbitMQ nodes must be configure with a resource service ID (`resource_server_id`) that matches the scope prefix (e.g. `rabbitmq` in `rabbitmq.read:*/*`). + +### Authorization Flow + +1. Client authorize with OAuth 2.0 provider, requesting an `access_token` (using any grant type desired) +2. Token scope returned by OAuth 2.0 provider must include RabbitMQ resource scopes that follow a convention used by this plugin: `configure:%2F/foo` means "configure permissions for 'foo' in vhost '/'") +3. Client passes the token as password when connecting to a RabbitMQ node. **The username field is ignored**. +4. The translated permissions are stored as part of the authenticated connection state and used the same + way permissions from RabbitMQ's internal database would be used. + + +## Usage + +The plugin needs a UAA signing key to be configured in order to decrypt and verify client-provided tokens. +To get the signing key from a running UAA node, use the +[token_key endpoint](https://docs.cloudfoundry.org/api/uaa/version/4.6.0/index.html#token-key-s) +or [uaac](https://github.com/cloudfoundry/cf-uaac) (the `uaac signing key` command). + +The following fields are required: `kty`, `value`, `alg`, and `kid`. + +Assuming UAA reports the following signing key information: + +``` +uaac signing key + kty: RSA + e: AQAB + use: sig + kid: a-key-ID + alg: RS256 + value: -----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY----- +MIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEA2dP+vRn+Kj+S/oGd49kq +6+CKNAduCC1raLfTH7B3qjmZYm45yDl+XmgK9CNmHXkho9qvmhdksdzDVsdeDlhK +IdcIWadhqDzdtn1hj/22iUwrhH0bd475hlKcsiZ+oy/sdgGgAzvmmTQmdMqEXqV2 +B9q9KFBmo4Ahh/6+d4wM1rH9kxl0RvMAKLe+daoIHIjok8hCO4cKQQEw/ErBe4SF +2cr3wQwCfF1qVu4eAVNVfxfy/uEvG3Q7x005P3TcK+QcYgJxav3lictSi5dyWLgG +QAvkknWitpRK8KVLypEj5WKej6CF8nq30utn15FQg0JkHoqzwiCqqeen8GIPteI7 +VwIDAQAB +-----END PUBLIC KEY----- + n: ANnT_r0Z_io_kv6BnePZKuvgijQHbggta2i30x-wd6o5mWJuOcg5fl5oCvQjZh15IaPar5oXZLHcw1bHXg5YSiHXCFmnYag83bZ9YY_9tolMK4R9G3eO-YZSnLImfqMv7HYBoAM75pk0JnTKhF6ldgfavShQZqOAIYf-vneMDNax_ZMZdEbzACi3vnWqCByI6JPIQju + HCkEBMPxKwXuEhdnK98EMAnxdalbuHgFTVX8X8v7hLxt0O8dNOT903CvkHGICcWr95YnLUouXcli4BkAL5JJ1oraUSvClS8qRI-Vino-ghfJ6t9LrZ9eRUINCZB6Ks8Igqqnnp_BiD7XiO1c +``` + +it will translate into the following configuration (in the [advanced RabbitMQ config format](https://www.rabbitmq.com/configure.html)): + +```erlang +[ + %% ... + %% backend configuration + {rabbitmq_auth_backend_oauth2, [ + {resource_server_id, <<"my_rabbit_server">>}, + %% UAA signing key configuration + {key_config, [ + {signing_keys, #{ + <<"a-key-ID">> => {pem, <<"-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY----- +MIIBIjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQEFAAOCAQ8AMIIBCgKCAQEA2dP+vRn+Kj+S/oGd49kq +6+CKNAduCC1raLfTH7B3qjmZYm45yDl+XmgK9CNmHXkho9qvmhdksdzDVsdeDlhK +IdcIWadhqDzdtn1hj/22iUwrhH0bd475hlKcsiZ+oy/sdgGgAzvmmTQmdMqEXqV2 +B9q9KFBmo4Ahh/6+d4wM1rH9kxl0RvMAKLe+daoIHIjok8hCO4cKQQEw/ErBe4SF +2cr3wQwCfF1qVu4eAVNVfxfy/uEvG3Q7x005P3TcK+QcYgJxav3lictSi5dyWLgG +QAvkknWitpRK8KVLypEj5WKej6CF8nq30utn15FQg0JkHoqzwiCqqeen8GIPteI7 +VwIDAQAB +-----END PUBLIC KEY-----">>} + }} + ]} + ]} +]. +``` + +If a symmetric key is used, the configuration will look like this: + +```erlang +[ + {rabbitmq_auth_backend_oauth2, [ + {resource_server_id, <<"my_rabbit_server">>}, + {key_config, [ + {signing_keys, #{ + <<"a-key-ID">> => {map, #{<<"kty">> => <<"MAC">>, + <<"alg">> => <<"HS256">>, + <<"value">> => <<"my_signing_key">>}} + }} + ]} + ]}, +]. +``` + +### Resource Server ID and Scope Prefixes + +OAuth 2.0 (and thus UAA-provided) tokens use scopes to communicate what set of permissions particular +client has been granted. The scopes are free form strings. + +`resource_server_id` is a prefix used for scopes in UAA to avoid scope collisions (or unintended overlap). +It is an empty string by default. + +### Scope-to-Permission Translation + +Scopes are translated into permission grants to RabbitMQ resources for the provided token. + +The current scope format is `<permission>:<vhost_pattern>/<name_pattern>[/<routing_key_pattern>]` where + + * `<permission>` is an access permission (`configure`, `read`, or `write`) + * `<vhost_pattern>` is a wildcard pattern for vhosts token has access to. + * `<name_pattern>` is a wildcard pattern for resource name + * `<routing_key_pattern>` is an optional wildcard pattern for routing key in topic authorization + +Wildcard patterns are strings with optional wildcard symbols `*` that match +any sequence of characters. + +Wildcard patterns match as following: + + * `*` matches any string + * `foo*` matches any string starting with a `foo` + * `*foo` matches any string ending with a `foo` + * `foo*bar` matches any string starting with a `foo` and ending with a `bar` + +There can be multiple wildcards in a pattern: + + * `start*middle*end` + * `*before*after*` + +**To use special characters like `*`, `%`, or `/` in a wildcard pattern, +the pattern must be [URL-encoded](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Percent-encoding).** + +These are the typical permissions examples: + +- `read:*/*`(`read:*/*/*`) - read permissions to any resource on any vhost +- `write:*/*`(`write:*/*/*`) - write permissions to any resource on any vhost +- `read:vhost1/*`(`read:vhost1/*/*`) - read permissions to any resource on the `vhost1` vhost +- `read:vhost1/some*` - read permissions to all the resources, starting with `some` on the `vhost1` vhost +- `write:vhsot1/some*/routing*` - topic write permissions to publish to an exchange starting with `some` with a routing key starting with `routing` + +See the [wildcard matching test suite](./test/wildcard_match_SUITE.erl) and [scopes test suite](./test/scope_SUITE.erl) for more examples. + +Scopes should be prefixed with `resource_server_id`. For example, +if `resource_server_id` is "my_rabbit", a scope to enable read from any vhost will +be `my_rabbit.read:*/*`. + +### Using a different token field for the Scope + +By default the plugin will look for the `scope` key in the token, you can configure the plugin to also look in other fields using the `additional_rabbitmq_scopes` setting. + +```erlang +[ + {rabbitmq_auth_backend_oauth2, [ + {resource_server_id, <<"my_rabbit_server">>}, + {additional_rabbitmq_scopes, <<"my_custom_scope_key">>}, + ... + ]} + ]}, +]. +``` + +### Using Tokens with Clients + +A client must present a valid `access_token` acquired from an OAuth 2.0 provider (UAA) as the **password** +in order to authenticate with RabbitMQ. + +To learn more about UAA/OAuth 2.0 clients see [UAA docs](https://github.com/cloudfoundry/uaa/blob/master/docs/UAA-APIs.rst#id73). + +### Scope and Tags + +Users in RabbitMQ can have [tags associated with them](https://www.rabbitmq.com/access-control.html#user-tags). +Tags are used to [control access to the management plugin](https://www.rabbitmq.com/management.html#permissions). + + +In the OAuth context, tags can be added as part of the scope, using a format like `<resource_server_id>.tag:<tag>`. For +example, if `resource_server_id` is "my_rabbit", a scope to grant access to the management plugin with +the `monitoring` tag will be `my_rabbit.tag:monitoring`. + +## Examples + +The [demo](/demo) directory contains example configuration files which can be used to set up +a development UAA server and issue tokens, which can be used to access RabbitMQ +resources. + +### UAA and RabbitMQ Config Files + +To run the demo you need to have a [UAA](https://github.com/cloudfoundry/uaa) node +installed or built from source. + +To make UAA use a particular config file, such as those provided in the demo directory, +export the `CLOUDFOUNDRY_CONFIG_PATH` environment variable. For example, to use symmetric keys, +see the UAA config files under the `demo/symmetric_keys` directory. + +`demo/symmetric_keys/rabbit.config` contains a RabbitMQ configuration file that +sets up a matching signing key on the RabbitMQ end. + +### Running UAA + +To run UAA with a custom config file path, use the following from the UAA git repository: + +``` +CLOUDFOUNDRY_CONFIG_PATH=<path_to_plugin>/demo/symmetric_keys ./gradlew run +``` + +### Running RabbitMQ + +``` +RABBITMQ_CONFIG_FILE=<path_to_plugin>/demo/symmetric_keys/rabbitmq rabbitmq-server +## Or to run from source from the plugin directory +make run-broker RABBITMQ_CONFIG_FILE=demo/symmetric_keys/rabbitmq +``` + +The `rabbitmq_auth_backend_oauth2` plugin must be enabled on the RabbitMQ node. + +### Asymmetric Key Example + +To use an RSA (asymmetric) key, you can set `CLOUDFOUNDRY_CONFIG_PATH` to `demo/rsa_keys`. +This directory also contains `rabbit.config` file, as well as a public key (`public_key.pem`) +which will be used for signature verification. + +### UAA User and Permission Management + +UAA sets scopes from client scopes and user groups. The demo uses groups to set up +a set of RabbitMQ permissions scopes. + +The `demo/setup.sh` script can be used to configure a demo user and groups. +The script will also create RabbitMQ resources associated with permissions. +The script uses `uaac` and `bunny` (RabbitMQ client) and requires them to be installed. + +When running the script, UAA server and RabbitMQ server should be running. +You should configure `UAA_HOST` (localhost:8080/uaa for local machine) and +`RABBITMQCTL` (a path to `rabbitmqctl` script) environment variables to run this script. + +``` +gem install cf-uaac +gem install bunny +RABBITMQCTL=<path_to_rabbitmqctl> demo/setup.sh +``` + +Please refer to `demo/setup.sh` to get more info about configuring UAA permissions. + +The script will return access tokens which can be used to authenticate and authorise +in RabbitMQ. When connecting, pass the token in the **password** field. The username +field will be ignored as long as the token provides a client ID. + + +## License and Copyright + +(c) 2016-2020 VMware, Inc. or its affiliates. + +Released under the Mozilla Public License 2.0, same as RabbitMQ. |