Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
127 lines (104 loc) · 5.22 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

127 lines (104 loc) · 5.22 KB

authX509toSAML

The authX509toSAML module provides X509 authentication and attribute translation from certifate attributes to SAML attributes.

Using the authX509toSAML authentication source with SimpleSAMLphp

Configuring Apache

This module assumes that the server requests a client certificate, and stores it in the environment variable SSL_CLIENT_CERT. This can be achieved with such a configuration:

    SSLEngine on
    # Configure the Server part of TLS
    SSLCertificateFile /etc/openssl/certs/server.crt
    SSLCertificateKeyFile /etc/openssl/private/server.key
    SSLCACertificateFile /etc/openssl/certs/ca.crt
    # Configure Client certificate authentication
    SSLVerifyClient require
    SSLVerifyDepth 1
    # Configure which CAs the server will trust for signing client certificates
    SSLCACertificatePath "/usr/share/igtf-policy/classic"
    SSLOptions +ExportCertData

Note that SSLVerifyClient can be set to optional if you want to support both certificate and plain login authentication. Alternatively SSLVerifyClient can be set explicitly on

    <Location "/simplesaml/saml2/idp/SSOService.php">

Install authX509toSAML module

   git clone https://github.com/jkakavas/authX509toSAML.git
   cp -r authX509toSAML /var/simplesamlphp/modules/

Setting up the authX509toSAML module

The first thing you need to do is to enable the module:

    touch /var/simplesamlphp/modules/authX509toSAML/enable

Then you must add it as an authentication source in /var/simplesamlphp/config/authsources.php . Here is an example authsources.php entry:

    'x509' => array(
        'authX509toSAML:X509userCert',
        'authX509toSAML:cert_name_attribute': 'CN',
        'authX509toSAML:assertion_name_attribute': 'displayName',
        'authX509toSAML:assertion_dn_attribute': 'distinguishedName',
        'authX509toSAML:assertion_o_attribute': 'o',
        'authX509toSAML:assetion_assurance_attribute': 'eduPersonAssurance',
        'authX509toSAML:parse_san_emails': TRUE
        'authX509toSAML:parse_policy': TRUE,
        'authX509toSAML:export_eppn': FALSE,
    ),

The configuration options are as following

  • cert_name_attribute is the name of the attribute in the certificate where the name of the certificate subject is to be found

  • assertion_name_attribute is the attribute in the SAML assertion that the name of the certificate subject will be mapped to

  • assertion_dn_attribute is the attribute in the SAML assertion where the DN of the certificate subject will be mapped to

  • assertion_o_attribute is the attribute in the SAML assertion where the organisation name (if present) in the certificate subject will be mapped to. Defaults to 'o'. If set to null, the module will not attempt to extract the value from the certificate subject.

  • assertion_dn_attribute is the attribute in the SAML assertion where the certificatePolicy attribute of the certificate will be mapped to

  • parse_san_emails controls whether the module will attempt to parse Subject Alternate Names to find possible email addresses for the certificate subject

  • parse_policy controls whether the module will attempt to parse Certificate Policy

  • export_eppn controls whether the module will attempt to parse an eduPersonPrincipalName value from the certificate subject value (i.e. for Grid Robot certificates)

All the above parameters are optional, since the code contains sane defaults for all of them (the values shown in the example above)

Setting up attribute-based authorisation

You can use the authorize module in order to control access based on the attributes returned by the authX509toSAML module after certificate authentication. First, you need to make sure that the authorize module is enabled. The presence of the default-enable file indicates that the module is enabled by default, so you should remove disable if present:

    rm /var/simplesamlphp/modules/authorize/disable

Then you must add the module as an authentication processing (authproc) filter, either in config.php or in saml20-idp-hosted.php. Here is an example authproc configuration in saml20-idp-hosted.php:

    'authproc' => array(

        92 => array(
            'class' => 'authorize:Authorize',
            'regex' => false,
            'eduPersonAssurance' => array(
                '1.2.840.113612.5.2.2.1',
                '1.2.840.113612.5.2.2.5',
            ),
        ),

    ),

The configuration above only allows access to certificates including either IGTF Classic (1.2.840.113612.5.2.2.1) or MICS (1.2.840.113612.5.2.2.5) in their policies (assuming the authX509toSAML module has been configured to map certificate policies to the eduPersonAssurance attribute).