Using Multiple OAuth 2.0 Servers and/or Audiences
This guide explains how to set up OAuth 2.0 for RabbitMQ and several OAuth resources using the following flows:
- Application authentication and authorization
- Access management UI
Prerequisites
- Docker
- A local clone of a GitHub repository for branch
next
that contains all the configuration files and scripts used on this example
Single OAuth 2.0 vs Multiple OAuth 2.0 resources
All the examples demonstrated so far, except for this one, configure a single resource_server_id and therefore a single OAuth 2.0 server.
In some scenarios some management users and/or applications are registered in different OAuth 2 servers or they could be registered on the same OAuth 2 server but refer to RabbitMQ using different audience values. To support this scenario, as many OAuth 2 resources must be declared as audiences and/or authorization servers.
The following three scenarios demonstrate various configurations you may encounter:
- Scenario 1: messaging (AMQP) clients and management users are registered in same OAuth 2.0 server, keycloak, but with different audience, e.g.
rabbit_prod
andrabbit_dev
respectively. - Scenario 2: each resource is managed on a dedicated realm (i.e.
rabbit_prod
resource -> https://keycloak:8443/realms/prod realm,rabbit_dev
resource -> https://keycloak:8443/realms/dev) that all use the same OAuth 2 (IDP) server, in this example accessible atkeycloak
. - Scenario 3: each resource is managed on a dedicated OAuth 2 (IDP) server and realm (i.e.
rabbit_dev
-> https://devkeycloak:8443/realms/dev,rabbit_dev
-> https://prodkeycloak:8442/realms/prod).
Scenario 1: Messaging (AMQP) Clients and Management Users Registered in the Same OAuth 2.0 Server but with Different Audiences
RabbitMQ is configured with two OAuth2 resources one called rabbit_prod
and another rabbit_dev
. For example purposes, let's say, the production team refer to RabbitMQ with the rabbit_prod
audience. And the development team with the rabbit_dev
audience.
As both teams are registered in the same OAuth2 server you are going to configure its settings such as issuer
at the root level so that both resources share the same configuration.
Test applications accessing AMQP protocol with their own audience
This is a summary of the configuration, found in rabbitmq.scenario1.conf:
There are two OAuth2 clients (prod_producer
and dev_producer
) declared in Keycloak and configured to access their respective audience: rabbit_prod
and rabbit_dev
.
The RabbitMQ OAuth 2 plugin is configured like so:
- With two resources:
rabbit_prod
andrabbit_dev
:
auth_oauth2.resource_servers.1.id = rabbit_prod
auth_oauth2.resource_servers.2.id = rabbit_dev
- With common settings for the previous two resources:
auth_oauth2.preferred_username_claims.1 = preferred_username
auth_oauth2.preferred_username_claims.2 = user_name
auth_oauth2.preferred_username_claims.3 = email
auth_oauth2.issuer = https://keycloak:8443/realms/test
auth_oauth2.scope_prefix = rabbitmq.
- With one oauth provider:
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.keycloak.issuer = https://keycloak:8443/realms/test
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.keycloak.https.cacertfile = /etc/rabbitmq/keycloak-ca_certificate.pem
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.keycloak.https.verify = verify_peer
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.keycloak.https.hostname_verification = wildcard
auth_oauth2.default_oauth_provider = keycloak
Follow these steps to deploy Keycloak and RabbitMQ:
-
Launch Keycloak. Check out Admin page with the credentials
admin:admin
:make start-keycloak
tipIt is recommended to follow the logs until keycloak is fully initialized:
docker logs keycloak -f
-
Launch RabbitMQ with rabbitmq.scenario1.conf:
MODE="multi-keycloak" CONF="rabbitmq.scenario1.conf" make start-rabbitmq
-
Launch the AMQP producer registered in Keycloak with the client_id
prod_producer
s and with the permission to access therabbit_prod
resource, and with the scopesrabbitmq.read:*/* rabbitmq.write:*/* rabbitmq.configure:*/*
:make start-perftest-producer-with-token PRODUCER=prod_producer TOKEN=$(bin/keycloak/token prod_producer PdLHb1w8RH1oD5bpppgy8OF9G6QeRpL9)
This is an access token generated for
prod_producer
.{
"exp": 1690974839,
"iat": 1690974539,
"jti": "c8edec50-5f29-4bd0-b25b-d7a46dc3474e",
"iss": "http://localhost:8081/realms/test",
"aud": "rabbit_prod",
"sub": "826065e7-bb58-4b65-bbf7-8982d6cca6c8",
"typ": "Bearer",
"azp": "prod_producer",
"acr": "1",
"realm_access": {
"roles": [
"default-roles-test",
"offline_access",
"producer",
"uma_authorization"
]
},
"resource_access": {
"account": {
"roles": [
"manage-account",
"manage-account-links",
"view-profile"
]
}
},
"scope": "profile email rabbitmq.read:*/* rabbitmq.write:*/* rabbitmq.configure:*/*",
"clientId": "prod_producer",
"clientHost": "172.18.0.1",
"email_verified": false,
"preferred_username": "service-account-prod_producer",
"clientAddress": "172.18.0.1"
} -
Similarly, launch AMQP producer
dev_producer
, registered in Keycloak too but with the permission to accessrabbit_dev
resource:make start-perftest-producer-with-token PRODUCER=dev_producer TOKEN=$(bin/keycloak/token dev_producer z1PNm47wfWyulTnAaDOf1AggTy3MxX2H)
Test Management UI accessed via two separate resources
This is a summary of the configuration to enable OAuth 2.0 in the management UI:
-
There are two users declared in Keycloak:
prod_user
anddev_user
. -
The two resources,
rabbit_prod
andrabbit_dev
are declared in the RabbitMQ management plugin with each with their own OAuth 2 client (rabbit_prod_mgt_ui
andrabbit_dev_mgt_ui
) scopes, and the label associated with each resource:management.oauth_resource_servers.1.id = rabbit_prod
management.oauth_resource_servers.1.client_id = rabbit_prod_mgt_ui
management.oauth_resource_servers.1.label = RabbitMQ Production
management.oauth_resource_servers.1.scopes = openid profile rabbitmq.tag:administrator
management.oauth_resource_servers.2.id = rabbit_dev
management.oauth_resource_servers.2.client_id = rabbit_dev_mgt_ui
management.oauth_resource_servers.2.label = RabbitMQ Development
management.oauth_resource_servers.2.scopes = openid profile rabbitmq.tag:managementnoteAs there is only one OAuth2 server, both resources share the oauth provider called keycloak.
-
Each OAuth2 client,
rabbit_prod_mgt_ui
andrabbit_dev_mgt_ui
, is declared in Keycloak so that they can only emit tokens for their respective audience, be itrabbit_prod
andrabbit_dev
respectively.
Follow the steps to the management UI flows with two OAuth resources:
- Go to the RabbitMQ Management UI.
- Select
RabbitMQ Production
resource. - Login as
prod_user
:prod_user
. - Keycloak prompts you to authorize various scopes for
prod_user
. - You should now get redirected to the Management UI as
prod_user
user.
Now, logout and repeat the same steps for dev_user
user. For this user, RabbitMQ is configured to request the rabbitmq.tag:management
scope only.
In step 3, if you login as the dev_user
, RabbitMQ will not authorize the dev_user
because RabbitMQ is configured to request the scope: rabbitmq.tag:administrator
for RabbitMQ Production
.
The dev_user
does not have the rabbitmq.tag:administrator
scope, it has the rabbitmq.tag:management
scope. In this scenario, the dev_user
gets a token which has none of the scopes RabbitMQ supports.
Scenario 2: Two OAuth 2 Resources on Dedicated Realm Under as Many OAuth Providers
This scenario uses the same OAuth 2.0 provider called keycloak, however, this time there are two realms, dev
and prod
:
- Under Realm
dev
there are users and clients with granted access to therabbit_dev
resource:dev_producer
(password:SBuw1L5a7Y2aQfWfbsgXlEKGTNaEHxO8
).rabbit_dev_admin
(password:rabbit_dev_admin
).rabbit_dev_mgt_api
.
- Under Realm
prod
there are users and clients with granted access to therabbit_prod
resource:prod_producer
with the audiencerabbit_prod
(password:PdLHb1w8RH1oD5bpppgy8OF9G6QeRpL9
).rabbit_prod_admin
(password:rabbit_prod_admin
).
Despite there is only one physical OAuth provider, you need to configure RabbitMQ with two OAuth 2.0 providers. Each tenant has its own issuer
url. This is the configuration file used for this scenario is rabbitmq.scenario2.conf. For convenience here is the relevant part:
...
## Oauth providers
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.devkeycloak.issuer = https://keycloak:8443/realms/dev
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.devkeycloak.https.cacertfile = /etc/rabbitmq/keycloak-ca_certificate.pem
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.devkeycloak.https.verify = verify_peer
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.devkeycloak.https.hostname_verification = wildcard
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.prodkeycloak.issuer = https://keycloak:8443/realms/prod
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.prodkeycloak.https.cacertfile = /etc/rabbitmq/keycloak-ca_certificate.pem
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.prodkeycloak.https.verify = verify_peer
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.prodkeycloak.https.hostname_verification = wildcard
...
Follow these steps to deploy Keycloak and RabbitMQ:
- Launch Keycloak.
make start-keycloak
Run docker ps | grep keycloak
to check when the instance has started.
It is recommended to follow the logs until both instances are fully initialized: docker logs keycloak -f
- Launch RabbitMQ.
MODE=multi-keycloak OAUTH_PROVIDER=keycloak CONF=rabbitmq.scenario2.conf make start-rabbitmq
- Launch AMQP producer registered in Keycloak with the client_id
prod_producer
and with the permission to accessrabbit_prod
resource and with the scopesrabbitmq.read:*/* rabbitmq.write:*/* rabbitmq.configure:*/*
:
make start-perftest-producer-with-token PRODUCER=prod_producer TOKEN=$(bin/keycloak/token prod_producer sIqZ5flmSz3r6uKXMSz8CWGeScdTpqq0 prod)
- Launch AMQP producer registered in Keycloak with the client_id
dev_producer
and with the permission to accessrabbit_dev
resource and with the scopesrabbitmq.read:*/* rabbitmq.write:*/* rabbitmq.configure:*/*
:
make start-perftest-producer-with-token PRODUCER=dev_producer TOKEN=$(bin/keycloak/token dev_producer SBuw1L5a7Y2aQfWfbsgXlEKGTNaEHxO8 dev)
- Stop both producers:
make stop-perftest-producer PRODUCER=dev_producer
make stop-perftest-producer PRODUCER=prod_producer
- Verify
rabbit_dev_mgt_api
can access Management API because its token grants access torabbit_dev
:
make curl-keycloak url=http://localhost:15672/api/overview client_id=rabbit_dev_mgt_api secret=La1Mvj7Qvt8iAqHisZyAguEE8rUpg014 realm=dev
You should see in the standard output the json blob corresponding to the endpoint /overview
in RabbitMQ's management api.
- Verify
mgt_api_client
cannot access Management API because its token does not grant access torabbit_dev
orrabbit_prod
:
make curl-keycloak url=http://localhost:15672/api/overview client_id=mgt_api_client secret=La1Mvj7Qvt8iAqHisZyAguEE8rUpg014 realm=test
You should see in the standard output the following:
{"error":"not_authorized","reason":"Not_Authorized"}
-
Verify Management UI access:
- Go to http://localhost:15672.
- Select RabbitMQ Development OAuth 2.0 resource.
- Click on "Click here to login".
- Authenticate with Keycloak using
rabbit_dev_admin
/rabbit_dev_admin
. - Verify that user is redirected by to Management UI.
- Click on Logout.
- Repeat with RabbitMQ Production and user
rabbit_prod_admin
/rabbit_prod_admin
.
-
Shutdown RabbitMQ and Keycloak
make stop-keycloak
make stop-rabbitmq
Scenario 3: Two OAuth 2 Resources on Dedicated OAuth 2 Providers
This scenario uses two separate OAuth 2.0 providers called devkeycloak
and prodkeycloak
, with the following setup:
devkeycloak
has the following setup under thedev
Realm and grants access torabbit_dev
resource:dev_producer
with the audiencerabbit_dev
(password:SBuw1L5a7Y2aQfWfbsgXlEKGTNaEHxO8
).rabbit_dev_admin
(password:rabbit_dev_admin
).rabbit_dev_mgt_api
.
prodkeycloak
has the following setup under theprod
Realm and grants access torabbit_prod
resource:prod_producer
with the audiencerabbit_prod
(password:PdLHb1w8RH1oD5bpppgy8OF9G6QeRpL9
).rabbit_prod_admin
(password:rabbit_prod_admin
).
Check out the section oauth_providers
in the configuration file rabbitmq.scenario3.conf used by this scenario. Like in the scenario 2, there are two OAuth providers however this time the URL refers to two different hostnames. For convenience here is the relevant part:
...
## Oauth providers
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.devkeycloak.issuer = https://devkeycloak:8443/realms/dev
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.devkeycloak.https.cacertfile = /etc/rabbitmq/keycloak-ca_certificate.pem
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.devkeycloak.https.verify = verify_peer
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.devkeycloak.https.hostname_verification = wildcard
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.prodkeycloak.issuer = https://prodkeycloak:8442/realms/prod
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.prodkeycloak.https.cacertfile = /etc/rabbitmq/keycloak-ca_certificate.pem
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.prodkeycloak.https.verify = verify_peer
auth_oauth2.oauth_providers.prodkeycloak.https.hostname_verification = wildcard
...
Follow these steps to deploy two Keycloaks and RabbitMQ:
- Launch Keycloak.
make start-dev-keycloak
make start-prod-keycloak
Run docker ps | grep keycloak
to see two instances have started.
- Launch RabbitMQ.
MODE=multi-keycloak CONF=rabbitmq.scenario3.conf make start-rabbitmq
- Launch AMQP producer registered in Keycloak with the client_id
prod_producer
and with the permission to accessrabbit_prod
resource and with the scopesrabbitmq.read:*/* rabbitmq.write:*/* rabbitmq.configure:*/*
:
make start-perftest-producer-with-token PRODUCER=prod_producer TOKEN=$(bin/prodkeycloak/token prod_producer PdLHb1w8RH1oD5bpppgy8OF9G6QeRpL9)
- Launch AMQP producer registered in Keycloak with the client_id
dev_producer
and with the permission to accessrabbit_dev
resource and with the scopesrabbitmq.read:*/* rabbitmq.write:*/* rabbitmq.configure:*/*
:
make start-perftest-producer-with-token PRODUCER=dev_producer TOKEN=$(bin/devkeycloak/token dev_producer z1PNm47wfWyulTnAaDOf1AggTy3MxX2H)
- Stop both producers:
make stop-perftest-producer PRODUCER=dev_producer
make stop-perftest-producer PRODUCER=prod_producer
- Verify
rabbit_dev_mgt_api
can access Management API because its token grants access torabbit_dev
:
make curl-dev-keycloak url=http://localhost:15672/api/overview client_id=rabbit_dev_mgt_api secret=p7v6DksWkcb6TUYK6payswovC0LqhU6A
You should see in the standard output the json blob corresponding to the endpoint /overview
in RabbitMQ's management api.
- Verify
mgt_api_client
cannot access Management API because its token does not grant access torabbit_dev
orrabbit_prod
:
make curl-keycloak url=http://localhost:15672/api/overview client_id=mgt_api_client secret=La1Mvj7Qvt8iAqHisZyAguEE8rUpg014 realm=test
You should see in the standard output the following:
{"error":"not_authorized","reason":"Not_Authorized"}
-
Verify Management UI access:
- Go to http://localhost:15672.
- Select RabbitMQ Development OAuth 2.0 resource.
- Click on "Click here to login".
- Authenticate with Keycloak using
rabbit_dev_admin
/rabbit_dev_admin
. - Verify that user is redirected by to Management UI.
- Click on Logout.
- Repeat with RabbitMQ Production and user
rabbit_prod_admin
/rabbit_prod_admin
.
-
Shutdown RabbitMQ and the two Keycloaks:
make stop-dev-keycloak
make stop-prod-keycloak
make stop-rabbitmq