forked from mystiq/dex
71 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
71 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
# Custom scopes, claims and client features
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This document describes the set of OAuth2 and OpenID Connect features implemented by dex.
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## Scopes
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The following is the exhaustive list of scopes supported by dex:
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| Name | Description |
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| ---- | ------------|
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| `openid` | Required scope for all login requests. |
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| `email` | ID token claims should include the end user's email and if that email was verified by an upstream provider. |
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| `profile` | ID token claims should include the username of the end user. |
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| `groups` | ID token claims should include a list of groups the end user is a member of. |
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| `offline_access` | Token response should include a refresh token. |
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| `audience:server:client_id:( client-id )` | Dynamic scope indicating that the ID token should be issued on behalf of another client. See the _"Cross-client trust and authorized party"_ section below. |
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## Custom claims
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Beyond the [required OpenID Connect claims][core-claims], and a handful of [standard claims][standard-claims], dex implements the following non-standard claims.
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| Name | Description |
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| ---- | ------------|
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| `groups` | A list of strings representing the groups a user is a member of. |
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| `email` | The email of the user. |
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| `email_verified` | If the upstream provider has verified the email. |
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| `name` | User's display name. |
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## Cross-client trust and authorized party
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Dex has the ability to issue ID tokens to clients on behalf of other clients. In OpenID Connect terms, this means the ID token's `aud` (audience) claim being a different client ID than the client that performed the login.
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For example, this feature could be used to allow a web app to generate an ID token on behalf of a command line tool:
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```yaml
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staticClients:
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- id: web-app
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redirectURIs:
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- 'https://web-app.example.com/callback'
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name: 'Web app'
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secret: web-app-secret
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- id: cli-app
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redirectURIs:
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- 'https://cli-app.example.com/callback'
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name: 'Command line tool'
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secret: cli-app-secret
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# The command line tool lets the web app issue ID tokens on its behalf.
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trustedPeers:
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- web-app
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```
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Note that the command line tool must explicitly trust the web app using the `trustedPeers` field. The web app can then use the following scope to request an ID token that's issued for the command line tool.
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```
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audience:server:client_id:cli-app
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```
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The ID token claims will then include the following audience and authorized party:
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```
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{
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"aud": "cli-app",
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"azp": "web-app",
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"email": "foo@bar.com",
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// other claims...
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}
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```
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[core-claims]: https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html#IDToken
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[standard-claims]: https://openid.net/specs/openid-connect-core-1_0.html#StandardClaims
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