# Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may # not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain # a copy of the License at # # http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 # # Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software # distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT # WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the # License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations # under the License. from positional import positional from keystoneauth1 import access from keystoneauth1.identity.v3 import federation __all__ = ('OidcAuthorizationCode', 'OidcPassword', 'OidcAccessToken') class _OidcBase(federation.FederationBaseAuth): """Base class for different OpenID Connect based flows. The OpenID Connect specification can be found at:: ``http://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html`` """ def __init__(self, auth_url, identity_provider, protocol, client_id, client_secret, access_token_endpoint, grant_type, access_token_type, **kwargs): """The OpenID Connect plugin expects the following. :param auth_url: URL of the Identity Service :type auth_url: string :param identity_provider: Name of the Identity Provider the client will authenticate against :type identity_provider: string :param protocol: Protocol name as configured in keystone :type protocol: string :param client_id: OAuth 2.0 Client ID :type client_id: string :param client_secret: OAuth 2.0 Client Secret :type client_secret: string :param access_token_endpoint: OpenID Connect Provider Token Endpoint, for example: https://localhost:8020/oidc/OP/token :type access_token_endpoint: string :param grant_type: OpenID Connect grant type, it represents the flow that is used to talk to the OP. Valid values are: "authorization_code", "refresh_token", or "password". :type grant_type: string :param access_token_type: OAuth 2.0 Authorization Server Introspection token type, it is used to decide which type of token will be used when processing token introspection. Valid values are: "access_token" or "id_token" :type access_token_type: string """ super(_OidcBase, self).__init__(auth_url, identity_provider, protocol, **kwargs) self.client_id = client_id self.client_secret = client_secret self.access_token_endpoint = access_token_endpoint self.grant_type = grant_type self.access_token_type = access_token_type def _get_access_token(self, session, payload): """Exchange a variety of user supplied values for an access token. :param session: a session object to send out HTTP requests. :type session: keystoneauth1.session.Session :param payload: a dict containing various OpenID Connect values, for example:: {'grant_type': 'password', 'username': self.username, 'password': self.password, 'scope': self.scope} :type payload: dict """ client_auth = (self.client_id, self.client_secret) op_response = session.post(self.access_token_endpoint, requests_auth=client_auth, data=payload, authenticated=False) access_token = op_response.json()[self.access_token_type] return access_token def _get_keystone_token(self, session, access_token): r"""Exchange an access token for a keystone token. By Sending the access token in an `Authorization: Bearer` header, to an OpenID Connect protected endpoint (Federated Token URL). The OpenID Connect server will use the access token to look up information about the authenticated user (this technique is called instrospection). The output of the instrospection will be an OpenID Connect Claim, that will be used against the mapping engine. Should the mapping engine succeed, a Keystone token will be presented to the user. :param session: a session object to send out HTTP requests. :type session: keystoneauth1.session.Session :param access_token: The OpenID Connect access token. :type access_token: str """ # use access token against protected URL headers = {'Authorization': 'Bearer ' + access_token} auth_response = session.post(self.federated_token_url, headers=headers, authenticated=False) return auth_response class OidcPassword(_OidcBase): """Implementation for OpenID Connect Resource Owner Password Credential.""" @positional(4) def __init__(self, auth_url, identity_provider, protocol, client_id, client_secret, access_token_endpoint, grant_type='password', access_token_type='access_token', username=None, password=None, scope='profile'): """The OpenID Password plugin expects the following. :param username: Username used to authenticate :type username: string :param password: Password used to authenticate :type password: string :param scope: OpenID Connect scope that is requested from OP, defaults to "profile", for example: "profile email" :type scope: string """ super(OidcPassword, self).__init__( auth_url=auth_url, identity_provider=identity_provider, protocol=protocol, client_id=client_id, client_secret=client_secret, access_token_endpoint=access_token_endpoint, grant_type=grant_type, access_token_type=access_token_type) self.username = username self.password = password self.scope = scope def get_unscoped_auth_ref(self, session): """Authenticate with OpenID Connect and get back claims. This is a multi-step process. First an access token must be retrieved, to do this, the username and password, the OpenID Connect client ID and secret, and the access token endpoint must be known. Secondly, we then exchange the access token upon accessing the protected Keystone endpoint (federated auth URL). This will trigger the OpenID Connect Provider to perform a user introspection and retrieve information (specified in the scope) about the user in the form of an OpenID Connect Claim. These claims will be sent to Keystone in the form of environment variables. :param session: a session object to send out HTTP requests. :type session: keystoneauth1.session.Session :returns: a token data representation :rtype: :py:class:`keystoneauth1.access.AccessInfoV3` """ # get an access token payload = {'grant_type': self.grant_type, 'username': self.username, 'password': self.password, 'scope': self.scope} access_token = self._get_access_token(session, payload) response = self._get_keystone_token(session, access_token) # grab the unscoped token return access.create(resp=response) class OidcAuthorizationCode(_OidcBase): """Implementation for OpenID Connect Authorization Code.""" @positional(4) def __init__(self, auth_url, identity_provider, protocol, client_id, client_secret, access_token_endpoint, grant_type='authorization_code', access_token_type='access_token', redirect_uri=None, code=None): """The OpenID Authorization Code plugin expects the following. :param redirect_uri: OpenID Connect Client Redirect URL :type redirect_uri: string :param code: OAuth 2.0 Authorization Code :type code: string """ super(OidcAuthorizationCode, self).__init__( auth_url=auth_url, identity_provider=identity_provider, protocol=protocol, client_id=client_id, client_secret=client_secret, access_token_endpoint=access_token_endpoint, grant_type=grant_type, access_token_type=access_token_type) self.redirect_uri = redirect_uri self.code = code def get_unscoped_auth_ref(self, session): """Authenticate with OpenID Connect and get back claims. This is a multi-step process. First an access token must be retrieved, to do this, an authorization code and redirect URL must be given. Secondly, we then exchange the access token upon accessing the protected Keystone endpoint (federated auth URL). This will trigger the OpenID Connect Provider to perform a user introspection and retrieve information (specified in the scope) about the user in the form of an OpenID Connect Claim. These claims will be sent to Keystone in the form of environment variables. :param session: a session object to send out HTTP requests. :type session: keystoneauth1.session.Session :returns: a token data representation :rtype: :py:class:`keystoneauth1.access.AccessInfoV3` """ # get an access token payload = {'grant_type': self.grant_type, 'redirect_uri': self.redirect_uri, 'code': self.code} access_token = self._get_access_token(session, payload) response = self._get_keystone_token(session, access_token) # grab the unscoped token return access.create(resp=response) class OidcAccessToken(_OidcBase): """Implementation for OpenID Connect access token reuse.""" @positional(5) def __init__(self, auth_url, identity_provider, protocol, access_token, **kwargs): """The OpenID Connect plugin based on the Access Token. It expects the following: :param auth_url: URL of the Identity Service :type auth_url: string :param identity_provider: Name of the Identity Provider the client will authenticate against :type identity_provider: string :param protocol: Protocol name as configured in keystone :type protocol: string :param access_token: OpenID Connect Access token :type access_token: string """ super(OidcAccessToken, self).__init__(auth_url, identity_provider, protocol, client_id=None, client_secret=None, access_token_endpoint=None, grant_type=None, access_token_type=None, **kwargs) self.access_token = access_token def get_unscoped_auth_ref(self, session): """Authenticate with OpenID Connect and get back claims. We exchange the access token upon accessing the protected Keystone endpoint (federated auth URL). This will trigger the OpenID Connect Provider to perform a user introspection and retrieve information (specified in the scope) about the user in the form of an OpenID Connect Claim. These claims will be sent to Keystone in the form of environment variables. :param session: a session object to send out HTTP requests. :type session: keystoneclient.session.Session :returns: a token data representation :rtype: :py:class:`keystoneauth1.access.AccessInfoV3` """ response = self._get_keystone_token(session, self.access_token) return access.create(resp=response)