OmniAuth::OpenIDConnect
Originally was omniauth-openid-connect
I've forked this repository and launch as separate gem because maintaining of original was dropped.
Installation
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'omniauth_openid_connect'
And then execute:
$ bundle
Or install it yourself as:
$ gem install omniauth_openid_connect
Supported Ruby Versions
OmniAuth::OpenIDConnect is tested under 2.4, 2.5, 2.6, 2.7
Usage
Example configuration
config.omniauth :openid_connect, {
name: :my_provider,
scope: [:openid, :email, :profile, :address],
response_type: :code,
uid_field: "preferred_username",
client_options: {
port: 443,
scheme: "https",
host: "myprovider.com",
identifier: ENV["OP_CLIENT_ID"],
secret: ENV["OP_SECRET_KEY"],
redirect_uri: "http://myapp.com/users/auth/openid_connect/callback",
},
}
Options Overview
Field | Description | Required | Default | Example/Options |
---|---|---|---|---|
name | Arbitrary string to identify connection and identify it from other openid_connect providers | no | String: openid_connect | :my_idp |
issuer | Root url for the authorization server | yes | https://myprovider.com | |
discovery | Should OpenID discovery be used. This is recommended if the IDP provides a discovery endpoint. See client config for how to manually enter discovered values. | no | false | one of: true, false |
client_auth_method | Which authentication method to use to authenticate your app with the authorization server | no | Sym: basic | "basic", "jwks" |
scope | Which OpenID scopes to include (:openid is always required) | no | Array [:openid] | [:openid, :profile, :email] |
response_type | Which OAuth2 response type to use with the authorization request | no | String: code | one of: 'code', 'id_token' |
state | A value to be used for the OAuth2 state parameter on the authorization request. Can be a proc that generates a string. | no | Random 16 character string | Proc.new { SecureRandom.hex(32) } |
response_mode | The response mode per spec | no | nil | one of: :query, :fragment, :form_post, :web_message |
display | An optional parameter to the authorization request to determine how the authorization and consent page | no | nil | one of: :page, :popup, :touch, :wap |
prompt | An optional parameter to the authrization request to determine what pages the user will be shown | no | nil | one of: :none, :login, :consent, :select_account |
send_scope_to_token_endpoint | Should the scope parameter be sent to the authorization token endpoint? | no | true | one of: true, false |
post_logout_redirect_uri | The logout redirect uri to use per the session management draft | no | empty | https://myapp.com/logout/callback |
uid_field | The field of the user info response to be used as a unique id | no | 'sub' | "sub", "preferred_username" |
client_options | A hash of client options detailed in its own section | yes |
Client Config Options
These are the configuration options for the client_options hash of the configuration.
Field | Description | Default | Replaced by discovery? |
---|---|---|---|
identifier | The OAuth2 client_id | ||
secret | The OAuth2 client secret | ||
redirect_uri | The OAuth2 authorization callback url in your app | ||
scheme | The http scheme to use | https | |
host | The host of the authorization server | nil | |
port | The port for the authorization server | 443 | |
authorization_endpoint | The authorize endpoint on the authorization server | /authorize | yes |
token_endpoint | The token endpoint on the authorization server | /token | yes |
userinfo_endpoint | The user info endpoint on the authorization server | /userinfo | yes |
jwks_uri | The jwks_uri on the authorization server | /jwk | yes |
end_session_endpoint | The url to call to log the user out at the authorization server | nil | yes |
Additional Configuration Notes
-
name
is arbitrary, I recommend using the name of your provider. The name configuration exists because you could be using multiple OpenID Connect providers in a single app.
NOTE: if you use this gem with Devise you should use :openid_connect
name,
or Devise would route to 'users/auth/:provider' rather than 'users/auth/openid_connect'
-
response_type
tells the authorization server which grant type the application wants to use, currently, only:code
(Authorization Code grant) and:id_token
(Implicit grant) are valid. - If you want to pass
state
paramete by yourself. You can set Proc Object. e.g.state: Proc.new { SecureRandom.hex(32) }
-
nonce
is optional. If don't want to pass "nonce" parameter to provider, You should specifyfalse
tosend_nonce
option. (default true) - Support for other client authentication methods. If don't specified
:client_auth_method
option, automatically set:basic
. - Use "OpenID Connect Discovery", You should specify
true
todiscovery
option. (default false) - In "OpenID Connect Discovery", generally provider should have Webfinger endpoint.
If provider does not have Webfinger endpoint, You can specify "Issuer" to option.
e.g.
issuer: "https://myprovider.com"
It means to get configuration from "https://myprovider.com/.well-known/openid-configuration". - The uid is by default using the
sub
value from theuser_info
response, which in some applications is not the expected value. To avoid such limitations, the uid label can be configured by providing the omniauthuid_field
option to a different label (i.e.preferred_username
) that appears in theuser_info
details. - The
issuer
property should exactly match the provider's issuer link. - The
response_mode
option is optional and specifies how the result of the authorization request is formatted. - Some OpenID Connect providers require the
scope
attribute in requests to the token endpoint, even if this is not in the protocol specifications. In those cases, thesend_scope_to_token_endpoint
property can be used to add the attribute to the token request. Initial value istrue
, which means that the scope attribute is included by default.
For the full low down on OpenID Connect, please check out the spec.
Contributing
- Fork it ( http://github.com/m0n9oose/omniauth-openid-connect/fork )
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
) - Cover your changes with tests and make sure they're green (
bundle install && bundle exec rake test
) - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Add some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request