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Strimzi Kafka OAuth

Kafka comes with basic OAuth2 support in the form of SASL based authentication module which provides client-server retrieval, exchange and validation of access token used as credentials. For real world usage, extensions have to be provided in the form of JAAS callback handlers which is what Strimzi Kafka OAuth does.

Strimzi Kafka OAuth modules provide support for OAuth2 as authentication mechanism when establishing a session with Kafka broker.

OAuth2 for Authentication

One of the advantages of OAuth2 compared to direct client-server authentication is that client credentials are never shared with the server. Rather, there exists a separate OAuth2 authorization server that application clients and application servers communicate with. This way user management, authentication, and authorization is 'outsourced' to a third party - authorization server.

User authentication is then an outside step which user manually performs to obtain an access token or a refresh token, which grants a limited set of permissions to a specific client app.

In the simplest case, the client application can authenticate in its own name using client credentials - client id and secret. While the client secret is in this case packaged with application client, the benefit is still that it is not shared with application server (Kafka broker in our case) - the client first performs authentication against OAuth2 authorization server in exchange for an access token, which it then sends to the application server instead of its secret. Access tokens can be independently tracked and revoked at will, and represent a limited access to resources on application server.

In a more advanced case, user authenticates and authorizes the application client in exchange for a token. The client application is then packaged with only a long lived access token or a long lived refresh token. User's username and password are never packaged with application client. If access token is configured it is sent directly to Kafka broker during session initialisation. But if refresh token is configured, it is first used to ask authorization server for a new access token, which is then sent to Kafka broker to start a new authenticated session.

When using refresh tokens for authentication the retrieved access tokens can be relatively short-lived which puts a time limit on potential abuse of a leaked access token. Repeated exchanges with authorization server also provide centralised tracking of authentication attempts which is something that can be desired.

A developer authorizing the client application with access to Kafka resources will access authorization server directly, using a web based or CLI based tool to sign in and generate access token or refresh token for application client.

As hinted above, OAuth2 allows for different implementations, multiple layers of security, and it is up to the developer, taking existing security policies into account, on how exactly they would implement it in their applications.

OAuth2 for Authorization

Authentication is the procedure of establishing if the user is who they claim they are. Authorization is the procedure of deciding if the user is allowed to perform some action using some resource. Kafka brokers by default allow all users full access - there is no specific authorization policy in place. Kafka comes with an implementation of ACL based authorization mechanism where access rules are saved in ZooKeeper and replicated across brokers.

Authorization in Kafka is implemented completely separately and independently of authentication. Thus, it is possible to configure Kafka brokers to use OAuth2 based authentication, and at the same time the default ACL authorization.

Since version 0.3.0 Strimzi Kafka OAuth provides token-based authorization using Keycloak as authorization server, and taking advantage of Keycloak Authorization Services. See examples authorization README for a demonstration on how to install, and use KeycloakRBACAuthorizer which implements this functionality.

Building

mvn clean install

Installing

Copy the following jars into your Kafka libs directory:

oauth-common/target/kafka-oauth-common-*.jar
oauth-server/target/kafka-oauth-server-*.jar
oauth-keycloak-authorizer/target/kafka-oauth-keycloak-authorizer-*.jar
oauth-client/target/kafka-oauth-client-*.jar
oauth-client/target/lib/keycloak-common-*.jar
oauth-client/target/lib/keycloak-core-*.jar
oauth-client/target/lib/bcprov-*.jar

Configuring the authorization server

At your authorization server, you need to configure a client for Kafka broker, and a client for each of your client applications.

Also, you may want each developer to have a user account in order to configure user based access controls.

Configuring users, clients, and authorizing clients, obtaining access tokens, and refresh tokens are steps that are specific to the authorization server that you use. Consult your authorization server's documentation.

If you use KeycloakRBACAuthorizer for authorization then you also use your authorization server (Keycloak) to use Authorization Services functionality to configure cevurity policies and permissions for users and service accounts.

Configuring the Kafka Broker

Kafka uses JAAS to bootstrap custom authentication mechanisms. Strimzi Kafka OAuth therefore needs to use JAAS configuration to activate SASL_OAUTHBEARER, and install its own implementations of the callback classes. This is true for configuring the server side of the Kafka Broker, as well as for the Kafka client side - when using OAuth 2 for inter-broker communication.

The authentication configuration specific to the Strimzi Kafka OAuth can be specified as part of JAAS configuration in the form of JAAS parameter values. The authorization configuration for KeycloakRBACAuthorizer is specified as server.properties key-value pairs. Both authentication and authorization configuration specific to Strimzi Kafka OAuth can also be set as ENV vars, or as Java system properties. The limitation here is that authentication configuration specified in this manner can not be listener-scoped.

Configuring the Kafka Broker authentication

Note: Strimzi Kafka OAuth can not be used for Kafka Broker to Zookeeper authentication. It only supports Kafka Client to Kafka Broker authentication (including inter-broker communication).

There are several steps to configuring the Kafka Broker:

Configuring the listeners

In order to configure Strimzi Kafka OAuth for the listener, you first need to enable SASL security for the listener, and enable SASL_OAUTHBEARER mechanism.

For example, let's have two listeners, one for inter-broker communication (REPLICATION), and one for Kafka clients to connect (CLIENT):

listeners=REPLICATION://kafka:9991,CLIENT://kafka:9092
listener.security.protocol.map=REPLICATION:PLAINTEXT,CLIENT:SASL_PLAINTEXT

Here we have configured the REPLICATION listener to not use any authentication, and we have configured the CLIENT listener to use SASL authentication over insecure connection. Note that these are examples, for production you should almost certainly not use PLAINTEXT, or SASL_PLAINTEXT.

Having these two listeners, the one called CLIENT fulfils the precondition for Strimzi Kafka OAuth in that it is configured to use SASL based authentication.

The next thing to do is to enable SASL_OAUTHBEARER mechanism:

sasl.enabled.mechanisms=OAUTHBEARER

Configuring the JAAS login module

In JAAS configuration we do two things:

  • we activate a specific JAAS login module - for Strimzi Kafka OAuth that is always the org.apache.kafka.common.security.oauthbearer.OAuthBearerLoginModule class which implements Kafka's SASL_OAUTHBEARER authentication mechanism.
  • we specify configurations used by the login module, and by our custom extensions - the server callback handler and / or the login callback handler (which we will install in the next step).

JAAS configuration can be specified inside server.properties file using the listener-scoped sasl.jaas.config key. Assuming there is the CLIENT listener configured as shown above, we can specify configuration specifically for that listener:

listener.name.client.oauthbearer.sasl.jaas.config=org.apache.kafka.common.security.oauthbearer.OAuthBearerLoginModule required \
    oauth.jwks.endpoint.uri="https://server/keys" ;

Note the listener.name.client.oauthbearer. prefix for the key. The word client in the key refers to the CLIENT listener. In this case we are configuring the validator with fast local signature check that uses the JWKS endpoint provided by authorization server.

Here we specified the oauth.jwks.endpoint.uri configuration key and its value as a JAAS configuration parameter. Any Strimzi Kafka OAuth keys that begin with oauth. can be specified this way - scoped to the individual listener.

A value of the scoped sasl.jaas.config always starts with: org.apache.kafka.common.security.oauthbearer.OAuthBearerLoginModule required

Followed by zero or more configuration parameters, separated by a whitespace, and ended with a semicolon - ; Inside server.properties this has to be a single line, or if multi-line, each non-final line has to be ended with a backslash \.

Enabling the custom callbacks

The custom callbacks are enabled per listener in server.properties using the listener-scoped configuration: On the Kafka Broker we need to install two callback handlers - the validator callback handler, and the login callback handler:

listener.name.client.oauthbearer.sasl.server.callback.handler.class=io.strimzi.kafka.oauth.server.JaasServerOauthValidatorCallbackHandler
listener.name.client.oauthbearer.sasl.login.callback.handler.class=io.strimzi.kafka.oauth.client.JaasClientOauthLoginCallbackHandler

While the second one is only used if you configure inter-broker communication, it needs to be installed in order to prevent the default behaviour by OAuthBearerLoginModule which would require essentially unnecessary additional JAAS config parameters.

Configuring the OAuth2

Strimzi Kafka OAuth library uses properties that start with oauth.* to configure authentication, and properties that start with strimzi.* to configure authorization.

Authentication properties are best specified as JAAS config parameters as part of the value of listener-scoped sasl.jaas.config property in server.properties. See Configuring the JAAS login module. At this time the authentication properties (oauth.*) can't be specified as server.properties property keys - they will not have any effect.

They can be specified as ENV variables, or as Java system properties in which case they override any JAAS config parameter values. For environment variables the oauth.* and strimzi.* property keys can be uppercased with . replaced by _. For example, to specify oauth.client.id as the ENV var, you can use OAUTH_CLIENT_ID.

In terms of precedence the order of looking for a configuration is the following:

  • System property oauth.client.id
  • ENV var OAUTH_CLIENT_ID
  • ENV var oauth.client.id
  • JAAS config property oauth.client.id

Whichever is found first is the one that is used.

Similarly for authorization the strimzi.* properties follow a similar lookup mechanism except that they don't use JAAS config, but are specified as server.properties keys. For example, the order of looking for configuration for strimzi.client.id would be the following:

  • System property strimzi.client.id
  • ENV var STRIMZI_CLIENT_ID
  • ENV var strimzi.client.id
  • server.properties property strimzi.client.id
Configuring the token validation

The most essential OAuth2 configuration on the Kafka Broker is the configuration related to validation of the access tokens passed from Kafka clients to the Kafka broker during SASL based authentication mechanism.

There are two options for token validation:

  • Using the JWKS endpoint in combination with signed JWT formatted access tokens
  • Using the introspection endpoint
Validation using the JWKS endpoint

If your authorization server generates JWT tokens, and exposes the JWKS Endpoint then using JWKS endpoint is most efficient, since it does not require contacting the authorization server whenever a new Kafka client connects to the Kafka Broker.

Specify the following oauth.* properties:

Some authorization servers don't provide the iss claim. In that case you would not set oauth.valid.issuer.uri, and you would explicitly turn off issuer checking by setting the following option to false:

  • oauth.check.issuer (e.g. "false")

JWT tokens contain unique user identification in sub claim. However, this is often a long number or a UUID, but we usually prefer to use human readable usernames, which may also be present in JWT token. Use oauth.username.claim to map the claim (attribute) where the value you want to use as user id is stored:

  • oauth.username.claim (e.g.: "preferred_username")

If oauth.username.claim is specified the value of that claim is used instead, but if not set, the automatic fallback claim is the sub claim.

You can specify the secondary claim to fallback to, which allows you to map multiple account types into the same principal namespace:

  • oauth.fallback.username.claim (e.g.: "client_id")
  • oauth.fallback.username.prefix (e.g.: "client-account-")

If oauth.username.claim is specified but value does not exist in the token, then oauth.fallback.username.claim is used. If value for that doesn't exist either, the exception is thrown. When oauth.fallback.username.prefix is specified and the claim specified by oauth.fallback.username.claim contains a non-null value the resulting user id will be equal to concatenation of the prefix, and the value.

For example, if the following configuration is set:

oauth.username.claim="username"
oauth.fallback.username.claim="client_id"
oauth.fallback.username.prefix="client-account-"

Then, if the token contains "username": "alice" claim then the principal will be User:alice. Otherwise, if the token contains "client_id": "my-producer" claim then the principal will be User:client-account-my-producer.

If your authorization server uses ECDSA encryption then you need to enable the BouncyCastle JCE crypto provider:

  • oauth.crypto.provider.bouncycastle (e.g.: "true")

Depending on your authorization server you may need to relax some checks:

  • oauth.check.access.token.type (e.g.: "false" - do not require "typ": "Bearer" in JWT token)

You can control how often the keys used for signature checks are refreshed and when they expire:

  • oauth.jwks.refresh.seconds (e.g.: "300" - that's the default value - keys are refreshed every 5 minutes)
  • oauth.jwks.expiry.seconds (e.g.: "360" - that's the default value - keys expire 6 minutes after they are loaded)

All access tokens can be invalidated by rotating the keys on authorization server and expiring old keys.

Validation using the introspection endpoint

When your authorization server is configured to use opaque tokens (not JWT) or if it does not expose JWKS endpoint, you have no other option but to use the introspection endpoint. This will result in Kafka Broker making a request to authorization server every time a new Kafka client connection is established.

Specify the following oauth.* properties:

Introspection endpoint should be protected. The oauth.client.id and oauth.client.secret specify Kafka Broker credentials for authenticating to access the introspection endpoint.

Some authorization servers don't provide the iss claim. In that case you would not set oauth.valid.issuer.uri, and you would explicitly turn off issuer checking by setting the following option to false:

  • oauth.check.issuer (e.g.: "false")

By default, if the Introspection Endpoint response contains token_type claim, there is no checking performed on it. Some authorization servers use a non-standard token_type value. To give the most flexibility, you can specify the valid token_type for your authorization server:

  • oauth.valid.token.type (e.g.: "access_token")

When this is specified the Introspection Endpoint response has to contain token_type, and its value has to be equal to the value specified by oauth.valid.token.type.

Introspection Endpoint may or may not return identifying information which we could use as user id to construct a principal for the user.

If the information is available we attempt to extract the user id from Introspection Endpoint response.

Use oauth.username.claim to map the attribute where the user id is stored:

  • oauth.username.claim (e.g.: "preferred_username")

You can fallback to a secondary attribute, which allows you to map multiple account types into the same user id namespace:

  • oauth.fallback.username.claim (e.g.: "client_id")
  • oauth.fallback.username.prefix (e.g.: "client-account-")

If oauth.username.claim is specified but value does not exist in the Introspection Endpoint response, then oauth.fallback.username.claim is used. If value for that doesn't exist either, the exception is thrown. When oauth.fallback.username.prefix is specified and the attribute specified by oauth.fallback.username.claim contains a non-null value the resulting user id will be equal to concatenation of the prefix, and the value.

If none of the oauth.*.username.* attributes is specified, sub claim will be used automatically.

For example, if the following configuration is set:

oauth.username.claim="username"
oauth.fallback.username.claim="client_id"
oauth.fallback.username.prefix="client-account-"

It means that if the response contains "username": "alice" then the principal will be User:alice. Otherwise, if the response contains "client_id": "my-producer" then the principal will be User:client-account-my-producer.

Sometimes the Introspection Endpoint does not provide any useful identifying information that we can use for the user id. In that case you can configure User Info Endpoint:

If the user id could not be extracted from Introspection Endpoint response, then the same rules (oauth.username.claim, oauth.fallback.username.claim, oauth.fallback.username.prefix) will be used to try extract the user id from User Info Endpoint response.

When you have a DEBUG logging configured for the io.strimzi category you may need to specify the following to prevent warnings about access token not being JWT:

  • oauth.access.token.is.jwt (e.g.: "false")
Configuring the client side of inter-broker communication

All the Kafka Brokers in the cluster should be configured with the same clientId and clientSecret, and the corresponding user should be added to super.users since inter-broker client requires super-user permissions.

Specify the following oauth.* properties:

Also specify the principal corresponding to the client account identified by oauth.client.id in super.users property in server.properties file:

  • super.users (e.g.: "User:service-account-kafka")

This is not a full set of available oauth.* properties. All the oauth.* properties described in the next chapter about configuring the Kafka clients also apply to configuring the client side of inter-broker communication.

Configuring the Kafka Broker authorization

Strimzi Kafka OAuth provides support to centrally manage not only users and clients, but also permissions to Kafka broker resources - topics, consumer groups, configurations ...

Support for this works specifically with Keycloak Authorization Services.

By default, authorization is not enabled on Kafka Broker. There is kafka.security.auth.SimpleAclAuthorizer that comes with Kafka out-of-the-box, and is well documented in Kafka Documentation.

Strimzi Kafka OAuth provides an alternative authorizer - io.strimzi.kafka.oauth.server.authorizer.KeycloakRBACAuthorizer. KeycloakRBACAuthorizer uses the access token and the Token Endpoint of the same Keycloak realm used for OAuth2 authentication as a source of permission grants for the authenticated session.

Enabling the KeycloakRBACAuthorizer

Add the following to server.properties file:

authorizer.class.name=io.strimzi.kafka.oauth.server.authorizer.KeycloakRBACAuthorizer
principal.builder.class=io.strimzi.kafka.oauth.server.authorizer.JwtKafkaPrincipalBuilder

Configuring the KeycloakRBACAuthorizer

All the configuration properties for KeycloakRBACAuthorizer begin with a strimzi.authorization. prefix.

The token endpoint used by KeycloakRBACAuthorizer has to be the same as the one used for authentication:

You may also want to configure some other things. You may want to set a logical cluster name so you can target it with authorization rules:

  • strimzi.authorization.kafka.cluster.name (e.g.: "dev-cluster" - a logical name of the cluster which can be targeted with authorization services resource definitions, and permission policies)

You can integrate KeycloakRBACAuthorizer with SimpleAclAuthorizer:

  • strimzi.authorization.delegate.to.kafka.acl (e.g.: "true" - if enabled, then when action is not granted based on Keycloak Authorization Services grant it is delegated to SimpleACLAuthorizer which can still grant it.)

If you turn on authorization support in Kafka brokers, you need to properly set super.users property. By default, access token's sub claim is used as user id. You may want to use another claim provided in access token as an alternative user id (username, email ...).

For example, to add the account representing Kafka Broker in Keycloak to super.users add the following to your server.properties file:

super.users=User:service-account-kafka

This assumes that you configured alternative user id extraction from the token by adding to JAAS configuration the parameter:

oauth.username.claim="preferred_username"

When using TLS to connect to Keycloak (which you always should in the production environment) you may need to configure the truststore. You can see how to configure that in Configuring the TLS truststore chapter. Use analogous properties except that they should start with strimzi.authorization. rather than oauth.

For a more in-depth guide to using Keycloak Authorization Services see the tutorial.

Configuring the Kafka client

Configuring the Kafka client is very similar to configuring the Kafka broker. Clients don't have multiple listeners so there is one authentication configuration, which makes things slightly simpler. It is more common on the client to compose configuration properties programmatically rather than reading in a properties file (like server.properties).

Enabling SASL_OAUTHBEARER mechanism

In order to use insecure connectivity set the following property:

security.protocol=SASL_PLAINTEXT

If you want to use secure connectivity (using TLS) set:

security.protocol=SASL_SSL

Then enable OAUTHBEARER mechanism:

sasl.mechanism=OAUTHBEARER

Configuring the JAAS login module

Set the sasl.jaas.config property with JAAS configuration value that provides OAUTHBEARER handling, and configures Strimzi Kafka OAuth:

sasl.jaas.config=org.apache.kafka.common.security.oauthbearer.OAuthBearerLoginModule required \
  oauth.token.endpoint.uri="https://server/token-endpoint" ;

Here we specified the oauth.token.endpoint.uri configuration key and its value as a JAAS configuration parameter.

A value of the sasl.jaas.config property always starts with: org.apache.kafka.common.security.oauthbearer.OAuthBearerLoginModule required

Followed by zero or more configuration parameters, separated by a whitespace, and ended with a semicolon - ;

Enabling the custom callbacks

Install the Strimzi Kafka OAuth login callback:

sasl.login.callback.handler.class=io.strimzi.kafka.oauth.client.JaasClientOauthLoginCallbackHandler

Configuring the OAuth2

The oauth.token.endpoint.uri property always has to be specified. Its value points to OAuth2 Token Endpoint provided by authorization server.

Strimzi Kafka OAuth supports three ways to configure authentication on the client. The first is to specify the clientId and clientSecret configured on the authorization server specifically for the individual client deployment.

This is achieved by specifying the following:

  • oauth.client.id (e.g.: "my-client")
  • oauth.client.secret (e.g.: "my-client-secret")

When client starts to establish the connection with the Kafka Broker it will first obtain an access token from the configured Token Endpoint, authenticating with the configured clientId and clientSecret using client_credentials grant type.

The second way is to manually obtain and set a refresh token:

  • oauth.refresh.token

When using this approach you are not limited to OAuth2 client_credentials grant type for obtaining a token. You can use a password grant type and authenticate as an individual user, rather than a client application. There is a simple CLI tool you can use to obtain the refresh token or an access token.

When client starts to establish the connection with the Kafka Broker it will first obtain an access token from the configured Token Endpoint, using refresh_token grant type for authentication.

The third way is to manually obtain and set an access token:

  • oauth.access.token

Access tokens are supposed to be short-lived in order to prevent unauthorized access if the token leaks. It is up to you, your environment, and how you plan to run your Kafka client application to consider if using long-lived access tokens is appropriate.

Some authorization servers require that scope is specified:

  • oauth.scope

Scope is sent to the Token Endpoint when obtaining the access token.

For debug purposes you may want to properly configure which JWT token attribute contains the user id of the account used to obtain the access token:

  • oauth.username.claim (e.g.: "preferred_username")

This does not affect how Kafka client is presented to the Kafka Broker. The broker performs user id extraction from the token once again or it uses the Introspection Endpoint or the User Info Endpoint to get the user id.

By default the user id on the Kafka client is obtained from sub claim in the token - only if token is JWT. Client side user id extraction is not possible when token is an opaque token - not JWT.

You may want to explicitly specify the period the access token is considered valid. This allows you to shorten the token's lifespan.

On the client the access token is reused for multiple connections with the Kafka Broker. Before it expires the token is refreshed in the background so that a valid token is always available for all the connections. You can make the token refresh more often than strictly necessary by shortening its lifespan:

  • oauth.max.token.expiry.seconds (e.g.: "600" - set token expiry to 10 minutes)

If expiry is set to more that actual token expiry, this setting will have no effect. Note that this does not make any change to the token itself - the original token is still passed to the server.

There are a few other settings that control the access token refresh behaviour. You can read about them in Kafka Documentation. The properties of interest are:

  • sasl.login.refresh.buffer.seconds
  • sasl.login.refresh.min.period.seconds
  • sasl.login.refresh.window.factor
  • sasl.login.refresh.window.jitter

If you have DEBUG logging turned on for io.strimzi, and are using opaque (non JWT) tokens, you can avoid parsing error warnings in the logs by specifying:

  • oauth.access.token.is.jwt (e.g.: "false")

When setting this to false the client library will not attempt to parse and introspect the token as if it was JWT.

Client config example

Here's an example of a complete my.properties file which you can load in your client as java.util.Properties object, and pass to KafkaProducer or KafkaConsumer.

security.protocol=SASL_PLAINTEXT
sasl.mechanism=OAUTHBEARER
sasl.jaas.config=org.apache.kafka.common.security.oauthbearer.OAuthBearerLoginModule required \
  oauth.client.id="team-a-client" \
  oauth.client.secret="team-a-client-secret" \
  oauth.token.endpoint.uri="http://keycloak:8080/auth/realms/kafka-authz/protocol/openid-connect/token" ;
sasl.login.callback.handler.class=io.strimzi.kafka.oauth.client.JaasClientOauthLoginCallbackHandler

When you have a Kafka Client connecting to a single Kafka cluster it only needs one set of credentials - in such a situation it is sometimes more convenient to just use ENV vars. In that case you could simplify my.properties file:

security.protocol=SASL_PLAINTEXT
sasl.mechanism=OAUTHBEARER
sasl.jaas.config=org.apache.kafka.common.security.oauthbearer.OAuthBearerLoginModule required ;
sasl.login.callback.handler.class=io.strimzi.kafka.oauth.client.JaasClientOauthLoginCallbackHandler

And pass the configuration as ENV vars:

export OAUTH_CLIENT_ID="team-a-client"
export OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET="team-a-client-secret"
export OAUTH_TOKEN_ENDPOINT_URI="http://keycloak:8080/auth/realms/kafka-authz/protocol/openid-connect/token"

Note that if you have JAAS config parameters with the same names (lowercase with dots) they would not take effect - ENV vars will override them.

Configuring the TLS truststore

When your application connects to your authorization server, it should always use a secure connection - https://. That goes for the Kafka Brokers, as well as for the Kafka clients.

You may need to provide a custom truststore for connecting to your authorization server or may need to turn off certificate hostname verification.

Use the following configuration properties to configure a truststore:

  • oauth.ssl.truststore.location (e.g.: "/path/to/truststore.p12")
  • oauth.ssl.truststore.password (e.g.: "changeit")
  • oauth.ssl.truststore.type (e.g.: "pkcs12")

You may want to explicitly set the random number implementation provider to use a non-default one:

  • oauth.ssl.secure.random.implementation (e.g.: "SHA1PRNG")

If you need to turn off certificate hostname verification set the following property to empty string:

  • oauth.ssl.endpoint.identification.algorithm (e.g. "")

These configuration properties can be used to configure truststore for KeycloakRBACAuthorizer as well, but they have to be prefixed with strimzi.authorization. instead of oauth. (e.g.: strimzi.authorization.ssl.truststore.location).

Demo

For a demo / tutorial covering OAuth2 authentication see examples README.

For another demo / tutorial covering token based authorization using Keycloak Authorization Services see authorization README

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