README.md

Ipsilon - Identity Provider

The Ipsilon project implements an Identity Provider that is easy to use and configure. And it aims at providing installation scripts for applications that can use an Apache fronted to perform user authentication.

An IdP server allows users to authenticate against any identity provider whether that is a corporate LDAP server or even just local files or custom pluggable modules and allows applications to authenticate users while being completely agnostic of what authentication infrastructure is being used.

Applications can currently use the SAML2 protocol to talk to the Ipsilon identity provider, an application that uses SAML is called a Service Provider.

Ipsilon uses the LASSO libraries and Python bindings to implement SAML support.

Quick test instance

You can run a test instance of Ipsilson from a Git clone, using the quickrun.py script:

$ ./quickrun.py

This will start an instance which you can access at http://localhost:8080. You can log with any username and password 'ipsilon'. Log in with the special username 'admin' to get access to the administration console; you can then visit http://localhost:8080/admin and configure the various identity providers and more.

The local state is stored in the ./qrun subdirectory, and will be re-loaded from that directory the next time that the quickrun.py script is run.

Ipsilon Server Installation

The Ipsilon server can be easily installed by simply running the ipsilon-server-install command.

Prerequisites: - An Apache server with SSL configured - A keytab if Kerberos authentication is desired - An unprivileged user to run the Ipsilon code (defaults to 'ipsilon')

Currently there are only two available authentication modules, GSSAPI and PAM. The Kerberos module uses mod_auth_gssapi (which it will configure for you at install time), the Pam module simply uses the PAM stack with a default service name set to ipsilon.

NOTE The PAM module is invoked as an unprivileged user so if you are using the pam_unix plugin to authenticate users you'll find out that authentication does not work properly. Please use a different PAM module, like pam_sss, pam_ldap, etc..

Before you run the install script make sure to create an administrative user that can be authenticated either via PAM or GSSAPI. The default name the installation script expects is admin but that can be changed with the command line option named --admin-user

The hostname used is the system host name, if you can't set the system hostname to a fully qualified name, used the --hostname option to pass the desired fully qualified name for the IdP. It is important to use the correct name as this name is referenced and resolved by remote clients.

Other options are available by running ipsilon-server-install --help

To install a server that allow both GSSAPI (Kerberos) and PAM authentication use:

$ ipsilon-server-install --gssapi=yes --pam=yes

This command will generate a default instance called idp (you can change the default name using the --instance switch). Multiple instance can be installed in parallel, each wit a different name.

Instances are configured to be available at https://hostname/instance

So for a server called ipsilon.example.com, using the default installation options the IdP will be available at https://ipsilon.example.com/idp/

The install script expects to find the keytab in /etc/httpd/conf/http.keytab

NOTE: If you are installing Ipsilon in a FreeIPA environment you can use the --ipa switch to simplify the deployment. Using the --ipa switch will allow the use of your IPA Kerberos administrative credentials to automatically provision a keytab for the HTTP service if one is not available yet. You will likely want to use the --admin-user option to specify the full principal of the user who will administer Ipsilon. For example to use the FreeIPA admin user for the EXAMPLE.COM realm, you would use:

$ ipsilon-server-install --ipa --admin-user admin@EXAMPLE.COM

Once the script has successfully completed the installation, restart the Apache HTTPD server to activate it.

Use your admin user to connect to the Web UI and perform additional administration tasks.

Ipsilon Clients configuration

Ipsilon clients can be quickly configured running the provided ipsilon-client-install command.

Prerequisites: - An Apache server with SSL configured - The mod_mellon authentication module for Apache - A previously installed SAML IdP server (like Ipsilon itself)

The default configuration for the client will install a configuration in Apache that will authenticate via the IdP any attempt to connect to the location named '/protected', a test file is returned at that location.

In order to successfully install a client 2 steps are necessary:

  1. Prepare the client configuration and SAML metadata file.

To generate a valid metadata file and configuration it is necessary to provide the IdP metadata file to the installer, it is also useful to decide upfront where the application to be protected is located.

Let's assume the IdP is a standard install of the Ipsilon server on the server name ipsilon.example.com, and the client to be installed is called media.exmple.com with a wiki application located under /wiki

The following command will configure the server and generate the metadata file:

 $ ipsilon-client-install \
 --saml-idp-metadata http://ipsilon.example.com/idp/saml2/metadata \
 --saml-auth /wiki

Use --help to explore all the possible options.

  1. Upload the generated metadata file to the IdP.

Once the script has successfully completed installation it will create a few files in /etc/httpd/saml2/hostname. There you will find a (self-signed) certificate and a private key used to authenticate with the IdP and 2 metadata files, one of which is called 'metadata.xml'

Log in with the 'admin' account to the Ipsilon server and go to: Administration -> Identity Providers -> saml2 -> Administer Click the 'Add New' button and add a new entry uploading the metadata.xml file just generated.

Once this is done, test that the authentication is working by going to the application server url: https://media.example.com/wiki The SP should redirect you to the IdP server, perform authentication, and then redirect you automatically back to the application server where you should find yourself authenticated.

NOTE: read modmellon's documentation to find out how to pass additional authorization data to the application. For simple authentication the application should expect a user have been authenticate if it finds a non empty 'REMOTE_USER' environment variable in the incoming requests.

ALSO NOTE: If your application is already SAML aware you can simply run the install script with the --saml-no-httpd option. This will generate the certificates and the metadata.xml file you need to provide to the application and the IdP in the current directory.

Development with Vagrant

A Vagrant setup is available if you prefer developing on Vagrant VMs. You'll need the following packages: - vagrant - vagrant-libvirt - vagrant-hostmanager - vagrant-sshfs

Then just run vagrant up and it will build a FreeIPA VM and an Ipsilon VM for you. The Ipsilon VM comes with the test-auth application to test authentication methods. Open your browser to http://ipsilon.test/ and you should see the links.

You can create users in FreeIPA, the admin user has the username admin and the password password. For example, you can do:

$ echo password | kinit admin
$ ipa user-add --first Foo --last Bar --password foobar
Password:
Enter Password again to verify:
Added user "foobar"

You can now login in test-auth with the username foobar and the password you chose.