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nginx-openid-connect

Reference implementation of NGINX Plus as relying party for OpenID Connect authentication

Description

This repository describes how to enable OpenID Connect integration for NGINX Plus. The solution depends on NGINX Plus components (auth_jwt module and key-value store) and as such is not suitable for open source NGINX.

flowchart BT
    subgraph " "
        direction LR
        id1(User)==>|Request for app|id2
        id2-. Unauthenticated .->id1
        id2(NGINX+)-->|Authenticated|id3(Backend app)
    end
    subgraph IDP
        id4(Authorization Server)
    end
    id1<-. User authenticates directly with IdP .->IDP
    IDP<-. NGINX exchanges authorization code for ID token .->id2
    style id1 fill:#fff,stroke:#444,stroke-width:3px,color:#222
    style id3 fill:#fff,stroke:#444,stroke-width:3px,color:#222
    style id2 fill:#009639,stroke:#215732,stroke-width:2px,color:#fff
    style id4 fill:#666,stroke:#222,stroke-width:1px,color:#fff
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Figure 1. High level components of an OpenID Connect environment

This implementation assumes the following environment:

  • The identity provider (IdP) supports OpenID Connect 1.0
  • The authorization code flow is in use
  • NGINX Plus is configured as a relying party
  • The IdP knows NGINX Plus as a confidential client or a public client using PKCE

With this environment, both the client and NGINX Plus communicate directly with the IdP at different stages during the initial authentication event.

sequenceDiagram
    autonumber
    actor User
    participant Browser
    participant IdP
    participant NGINX Plus
    participant Web App
    User->>NGINX Plus: Requests protected resource
    NGINX Plus->>Browser: Sends redirect to IdP for authentication
    Browser->>IdP: Requests login page
    User->>IdP: Provides authentication and consent
    IdP->>Browser: Sends redirect w/ authZ code
    Browser->>NGINX Plus: Redirected for code exchange
    NGINX Plus->>IdP: Sends authZ code
    IdP->>NGINX Plus: Sends ID(+refresh) token
    NGINX Plus-->>NGINX Plus: Validates ID token, stores in keyval, creates session cookie
    Note right of NGINX Plus: keyvals zone for ID token (JWT)
    Note right of NGINX Plus: keyval zone for refresh token
    NGINX Plus->>Browser: Sends redirect to original URI with session cookie
    Browser->>NGINX Plus: Requests original URI, supplies session cookie
    NGINX Plus-->>NGINX Plus: Obtains ID token from keyval, validates JWT
    NGINX Plus->>Web App: Proxies request
    Web App->>Browser: Sends resource
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Figure 2. OpenID Connect authorization code flow protocol

NGINX Plus is configured to perform OpenID Connect authentication. Upon a first visit to a protected resource, NGINX Plus initiates the OpenID Connect authorization code flow and redirects the client to the OpenID Connect provider (IdP). When the client returns to NGINX Plus with an authorization code, NGINX Plus exchanges that code for a set of tokens by communicating directly with the IdP.

The ID Token received from the IdP is validated. NGINX Plus then stores the ID token in the key-value store, issues a session cookie to the client using a random string, (which becomes the key to obtain the ID token from the key-value store) and redirects the client to the original URI requested prior to authentication.

Subsequent requests to protected resources are authenticated by exchanging the session cookie for the ID Token in the key-value store. JWT validation is performed on each request, as normal, so that the ID Token validity period is enforced.

For more information on OpenID Connect and JWT validation with NGINX Plus, see Authenticating Users to Existing Applications with OpenID Connect and NGINX Plus.

Client Authentication Methods

When configuring NGINX Plus as an OpenID Connect client, it supports multiple client authentication methods:

  • client_secret_basic:
    • The client_id and client_secret are sent in the Authorization header as a Base64-encoded string.
  • client_secret_post:
    • The client_id and client_secret are sent in the body of the POST request.
  • none (PKCE):
    • For public clients that cannot protect a client secret, the code_verifier is used instead of a client_secret.
    • PKCE is particularly useful for mobile and single-page applications.

Access Tokens

Access tokens are used in token-based authentication to allow OIDC client to access a protected resource on behalf of the user. NGINX Plus receives an access token after a user successfully authenticates and authorizes access, and then stores it in the key-value store. NGINX Plus can pass that token on the HTTP Authorization header as a Bearer token for every request that is sent to the downstream application.

Note: NGINX Plus does not verify the validity of the access token on each request, as we do with the ID token, so we cannot know if the access token has already expired or not. So, if access token lifetime is less than the ID token lifetime, you have to use the proxy_intercept_errors on directive, which will intercept and redirect 401 Unauthorized responses to NGINX in order to refresh the access token.

Refresh Tokens

If a refresh token was received from the IdP then it is also stored in the key-value store. When validation of the ID Token fails (typically upon expiry) then NGINX Plus sends the refresh token to the IdP. If the user's session is still valid at the IdP then a new ID token is received, validated, and updated in the key-value store. The refresh process is seamless to the client.

Logout

Requests made to the /logout location invalidate both the ID token, access token and refresh token by erasing them from the key-value store. Therefore, subsequent requests to protected resources will be treated as a first-time request and send the client to the IdP for authentication. Note that the IdP may issue cookies such that an authenticated session still exists at the IdP.

RP-Initiated OIDC Logout

RP-initiated logout is supported according to OpenID Connect RP-Initiated Logout 1.0. This behavior is controlled by the $oidc_end_session_endpoint variable.

Multiple IdPs

Where NGINX Plus is configured to proxy requests for multiple websites or applications, or user groups, these may require authentication by different IdPs. Separate IdPs can be configured, with each one matching on an attribute of the HTTP request, e.g. hostname or part of the URI path.

Note: When validating OpenID Connect tokens, NGINX Plus can be configured to read the signing key (JWKS) from disk, or a URL. When using multiple IdPs, each one must be configured to use the same method. It is not possible to use a mix of both disk and URLs for the map…$oidc_jwt_keyfile variable.

Installation

Start by installing NGINX Plus. In addition, the NGINX JavaScript module (njs) is required for handling the interaction between NGINX Plus and the OpenID Connect provider (IdP). Install the njs module after installing NGINX Plus by running one of the following:

$ sudo apt install nginx-plus-module-njs for Debian/Ubuntu

$ sudo yum install nginx-plus-module-njs for CentOS/RHEL

The njs module needs to be loaded by adding the following configuration directive near the top of nginx.conf.

load_module modules/ngx_http_js_module.so;

Finally, create a clone of the GitHub repository.

$ git clone https://github.com/nginxinc/nginx-openid-connect

Note: There is a branch for each NGINX Plus release. Switch to the correct branch to ensure compatibility with the features and syntax of each release. The main branch works with the most recent NGINX Plus and JavaScript module releases.

All files can be copied to /etc/nginx/conf.d

Non-standard directories

The GitHub repository contains include files for NGINX configuration, and JavaScript code for token exchange and initial token validation. These files are referenced with a relative path (relative to /etc/nginx). If NGINX Plus is running from a non-standard location then copy the files from the GitHub repository to /path/to/conf/conf.d and use the -p flag to start NGINX with a prefix path that specifies the location where the configuration files are located.

$ nginx -p /path/to/conf -c /path/to/conf/nginx.conf

Running in containers

This implementation is suitable for running in a container provided that the base image includes the NGINX JavaScript module. The GitHub repository is designed to facilitate testing with a container by binding the cloned repository to a mount volume on the container.

$ cd nginx-openid-connect
$ docker run -d -p 8010:8010 -v $PWD:/etc/nginx/conf.d nginx-plus nginx -g 'daemon off; load_module modules/ngx_http_js_module.so;'

Running behind another proxy or load balancer

When NGINX Plus is deployed behind another proxy, the original protocol and port number are not available. NGINX Plus needs this information to construct the URIs it passes to the IdP and for redirects. By default NGINX Plus looks for the X-Forwarded-Proto and X-Forwarded-Port request headers to construct these URIs.

Configuring your IdP

  • Create an OpenID Connect client to represent your NGINX Plus instance

    • Choose the authorization code flow
    • Set the redirect URI to the address of your NGINX Plus instance (including the port number), with /_codexch as the path, e.g. https://my-nginx.example.com:443/_codexch
    • Ensure NGINX Plus is configured as a confidential client (with a client secret) or a public client (with PKCE S256 enabled)
    • If NGINX Plus is configured as a confidential client, choose the appropriate authentication method: client_secret_basic or client_secret_post.
    • Make a note of the client ID and client secret if set
    • Set the post logout redirect URI to the address of your NGINX Plus instance (including the port number), with /_logout as the path, e.g. https://my-nginx.example.com:443/_logout
  • If your IdP supports OpenID Connect Discovery (usually at the URI /.well-known/openid-configuration) then use the configure.sh script to complete configuration. In this case you can skip the next section. Otherwise:

    • Obtain the URL for jwks_uri or download the JWK file to your NGINX Plus instance
    • Obtain the URL for the authorization endpoint
    • Obtain the URL for the token endpoint
    • Obtain the URL for the end session endpoint

Configuring NGINX Plus

Configuration can typically be completed automatically by using the configure.sh script.

Manual configuration involves reviewing the following files so that they match your IdP(s) configuration.

  • openid_connect_configuration.conf - this contains the primary configuration for one or more IdPs in map{} blocks

    • Modify all of the map…$oidc_ blocks to match your IdP configuration
    • Modify the URI defined in map…$oidc_logout_redirect to specify an unprotected resource to be displayed after requesting the /logout location
    • Set a unique value for $oidc_hmac_key to ensure nonce values are unpredictable
    • If NGINX Plus is deployed behind another proxy or load balancer, modify the map…$redirect_base and map…$proto blocks to define how to obtain the original protocol and port number.
  • frontend.conf - this is the reverse proxy configuration

    • Modify the upstream group to match your backend site or app
    • Configure the preferred listen port and enable SSL/TLS configuration
    • Modify the severity level of the error_log directive to suit the deployment environment
    • Comment/uncomment the auth_jwt_key_file or auth_jwt_key_request directives based on whether $oidc_jwt_keyfile is a file or URI, respectively
    • Uncomment the proxy_set_header Authorization "Bearer $access_token" directive if you want to pass access/bearer token in HTTP header to the protected backend/upstream
    • Uncoment the proxy_intercept_errors on directive if the access token lifetime is less than the ID token lifetime
  • openid_connect.server_conf - this is the NGINX configuration for handling the various stages of OpenID Connect authorization code flow

    • No changes are usually required here
    • Modify the resolver directive to match a DNS server that is capable of resolving the IdP defined in $oidc_token_endpoint and $oidc_end_session_endpoint
    • If using auth_jwt_key_request to automatically fetch the JWK file from the IdP then modify the validity period and other caching options to suit your IdP
  • openid_connect.js - this is the JavaScript code for performing the authorization code exchange and nonce hashing

    • No changes are required unless modifying the code exchange or validation process

Configuring the Key-Value Store

The key-value store is used to maintain persistent storage for ID tokens and refresh tokens. The default configuration should be reviewed so that it suits the environment. This is part of the advanced configuration in openid_connect_configuration.conf.

keyval_zone zone=oidc_id_tokens:1M     state=/var/lib/nginx/state/oidc_id_tokens.json     timeout=1h;
keyval_zone zone=oidc_access_tokens:1M state=/var/lib/nginx/state/oidc_access_tokens.json timeout=1h;
keyval_zone zone=refresh_tokens:1M     state=/var/lib/nginx/state/refresh_tokens.json     timeout=8h;
keyval_zone zone=oidc_pkce:128K timeout=90s;

Each of the keyval_zone parameters are described below.

  • zone - Specifies the name of the key-value store and how much memory to allocate for it. Each session will typically occupy 1-2KB, depending on the size of the tokens, so scale this value to exceed the number of unique users that may authenticate.

  • state (optional) - Specifies where all of the ID Tokens in the key-value store are saved, so that sessions will persist across restart or reboot of the NGINX host. The NGINX Plus user account, typically nginx, must have write permission to the directory where the state file is stored. Consider creating a dedicated directory for this purpose.

  • timeout - Expired tokens are removed from the key-value store after the timeout value. This should be set to value slightly longer than the JWT validity period. JWT validation occurs on each request, and will fail when the expiry date (exp claim) has elapsed. If JWTs are issued without an exp claim then set timeout to the desired session duration. If JWTs are issued with a range of validity periods then set timeout to exceed the longest period.

  • sync (optional) - If deployed in a cluster, the key-value store may be synchronized across all instances in the cluster, so that all instances are able to create and validate authenticated sessions. Each instance must be configured to participate in state sharing with the zone_sync module and by adding the sync parameter to the keyval_zone directives above. If deployed in NGINXaaS for Azure, sync is a must configuration. Check NGINXaaS OIDC for more details.

Session Management

The NGINX Plus API is enabled in openid_connect.server_conf so that sessions can be monitored. The API can also be used to manage the current set of active sessions.

To query the current sessions in the key-value store:

$ curl localhost:8010/api/6/http/keyvals/oidc_id_tokens

To delete a single session:

$ curl -iX PATCH -d '{"<session ID>":null}' localhost:8010/api/6/http/keyvals/oidc_id_tokens
$ curl -iX PATCH -d '{"<session ID>":null}' localhost:8010/api/6/http/keyvals/oidc_access_tokens
$ curl -iX PATCH -d '{"<session ID>":null}' localhost:8010/api/6/http/keyvals/refresh_tokens

To delete all sessions:

$ curl -iX DELETE localhost:8010/api/6/http/keyvals/oidc_id_tokens
$ curl -iX DELETE localhost:8010/api/6/http/keyvals/oidc_access_tokens
$ curl -iX DELETE localhost:8010/api/6/http/keyvals/refresh_tokens

Real time monitoring

The openid_connect.server_conf file defines several status_zone directives to collect metrics about OpenID Connect activity and errors. Separate metrics counters are recorded for:

  • OIDC start - New sessions are counted here. See step 2 in Figure 2, above. Success is recorded as a 3xx response.

  • OIDC code exchange - Counters are incremented here when the browser returns to NGINX Plus after authentication. See steps 6-10 in Figure 2, above. Success is recorded as a 3xx response.

  • OIDC logout - Requests to the /logout URI are counted here. Success is recorded as a 3xx response.

  • OIDC error - Counters are incremented here when errors in the code exchange process are actively detected. Typically there will be a corresponding error_log entry.

To obtain the current set of metrics:

$ curl localhost:8010/api/6/http/location_zones

In addition, the NGINX Plus Dashboard can be configured to visualize the monitoring metrics in a GUI.

Troubleshooting

Any errors generated by the OpenID Connect flow are logged to the error log, /var/log/nginx/error.log. Check the contents of this file as it may include error responses received by the IdP. The level of detail recorded can be modified by adjusting the severity level of the error_log directive.

  • 400 error from IdP

    • This is typically caused by incorrect configuration related to the client ID and client secret.
    • Check the values of the map…$oidc_client and map…$oidc_client_secret variables against the IdP configuration.
  • 500 error from nginx after successful authentication

    • Check for could not be resolved and empty JWK set while sending to client messages in the error log. This is common when NGINX Plus cannot reach the IdP's jwks_uri endpoint.
    • Check the map…$oidc_jwt_keyfile variable is correct.
    • Check the resolver directive in openid_connect.server_conf is reachable from the NGINX Plus host.
    • Check for OIDC authorization code sent but token response is not JSON. messages in the error log. This is common when NGINX Plus cannot decompress the IdP's response. Add the following configuration snippet to the /_jwks_uri and /_token locations to openid_connect.server_conf:
    proxy_set_header Accept-Encoding "gzip";
  • Authentication is successful but browser shows too many redirects

    • This is typically because the JWT sent to the browser cannot be validated, resulting in 'authorization required' 401 response and starting the authentication process again. But the user is already authenticated so is redirected back to NGINX, hence the redirect loop.
    • Avoid using auth_jwt_require directives in your configuration because this can also return a 401 which is indistinguishable from missing/expired JWT.
    • Check the error log /var/log/nginx/error.log for JWT/JWK errors.
    • Ensure that the JWK file (map…$oidc_jwt_keyfile variable) is correct and that the nginx user has permission to read it.
  • Logged out but next request does not require authentication

    • This is typically caused by the IdP issuing its own session cookie(s) to the client. NGINX Plus sends the request to the IdP for authentication and the IdP immediately sends back a new authorization code because the session is still valid.
    • Check your IdP configuration if this behavior is not desired.
  • Failed SSL/TLS handshake to IdP

    • Indicated by error log messages including peer closed connection in SSL handshake (104: Connection reset by peer) while SSL handshaking to upstream.
    • This can occur when the IdP requires Server Name Indication (SNI) information as part of the TLS handshake. Additional configuration is required to satisfy this requirement.
    • Edit openid_connect.server_conf and for each of the /_jwks_uri, /_token, and /_refresh locations, add the following configuration snippet:
proxy_set_header Host <IdP hostname>;
proxy_ssl_name        <IdP hostname>;
  • Invalid access token Users may receive a 401 response with an optional "Invalid token" message despite successful authentication. There are several reasons why an OIDC access token might not be accepted by the upstream server, even if it has not expired:
    • Incorrect backend server configuration. NGINX Plus sends the bearer token in the HTTP Authorization header, but the backend application expects it in a specific cookie.
    • The token has been tampered with. OIDC access tokens are digitally signed by the authorization server to ensure their authenticity. If the token has been modified in any way, the signature will no longer be valid, and the token will be considered invalid.

    Note: The scope of an OIDC access token is independent of its validity. Even if an OIDC access token is not expired and has not been revoked, it may still be considered invalid if it does not have the necessary scope for the requested action. Please check the $oidc_scopes variable in the openid_connect_configuration.conf file.

Support

This reference implementation for OpenID Connect is supported for NGINX Plus subscribers.

Changelog

  • R15 Initial release of OpenID Connect reference implementation
  • R16 Added support for opaque session tokens using key-value store
  • R17 Configuration now supports JSON Web Key (JWK) set to be obtained by URI
  • R18 Opaque session tokens now used by default. Added support for refresh tokens. Added /logout location.
  • R19 Minor bug fixes
  • R22 Separate configuration file, supports multiple IdPs. Configurable scopes and cookie flags. JavaScript is imported as an indepedent module with js_import. Container-friendly logging. Additional metrics for OIDC activity.
  • R23 PKCE support. Added support for deployments behind another proxy or load balancer.
  • R28 Access token support. Added support for access token to authorize NGINX to access protected backend.
  • R32 Added support for client_secret_basic client authentication method.