3.7 KiB
SSOwat
A simple LDAP SSO for NGINX, written in Lua.
Installation
- Fetch the repository
git clone https://github.com/YunoHost/SSOwat /etc/ssowat
NGINX configuration
- Add SSOwat's NGINX configuration (
http{}
scope)
nano /etc/nginx/conf.d/ssowat.conf
lua_shared_dict cache 10m;
init_by_lua_file /etc/ssowat/init.lua;
access_by_lua_file /etc/ssowat/access.lua;
You can also put the access_by_lua_file
directive in a server{}
scope if you want to protect only a vhost.
SSOwat configuration
mv /etc/ssowat/conf.json.example /etc/ssowat/conf.json
nano /etc/ssowat/conf.json
If you use YunoHost, you may want to edit the /etc/ssowat/conf.json.persistent
file, since the /etc/ssowat/conf.json
will often be overwritten.
Available parameters
Only the portal_domain
SSOwat configuration parameters is required, but it is recommended to know the others to fully understand what you can do with it.
cookie_secret_file
: Where the secret used for signing and encrypting cookie is stored. It should only be readable by root.cookie_name
: The name of the cookie used for authentication. Its content is expected to be a JWT signed with the cookie secret and should contain a keyuser
andpassword
(which is needed for Basic HTTP Auth). Because JWT is only encoded and signed (not encrypted), thepassword
is expected to be encrypted using the cookie secret.portal_domain
: Domain of the authentication portal. It has to be a domain, IP addresses will not work with SSOwat (Required).portal_path
: URI of the authentication portal (default:/ssowat/
). This path must end with “/
”.domains
: List of handled domains (default: similar toportal_domain
).redirected_urls
: Array of URLs and/or URIs to redirect and their redirect URI/URL (example:{ "/": "example.org/subpath" }
).redirected_regex
: Array of regular expressions to be matched against URLs and URIs and their redirect URI/URL (example:{ "example.org/megusta$": "example.org/subpath" }
).
permissions
The list of permissions depicted as follows:
"myapp.main": {
"auth_header": true,
"label": "MyApp",
"public": true,
"show_tile": true,
"uris": [
"example.tld/myapp"
],
"users": [
"JaneDoe",
"JohnDoe"
]
},
"myapp.admin": {
"auth_header": true,
"label": "MyApp (admin)",
"public": false,
"show_tile": false,
"uris": [
"example.tld/myapp/admin"
],
"users": [
"JaneDoe"
]
},
"myapp.api": {
"auth_header": false,
"label": "MyApp (api)",
"public": true,
"show_tile": false,
"uris": [
"re:domain%.tld/%.well%-known/.*"
],
"users": []
}
auth_header
Does the SSO add an authentication header that allows certain apps to connect automatically? (True by default)
label
A user-friendly name displayed in the portal and in the administration panel to manage permission. (By convention it is of the form: Name of the app (specificity of this permission))
public
Can a person who is not connected to the SSO have access to this authorization?
show_tile
Display or not the tile in the user portal.
uris
A list of url attatched to this permission, a regex url start with re:
.
users
A list of users which is allowed to access to this permission. If public
.