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This tutorial uses the FIWARE Wilma PEP Proxy combined with Keyrock to secure access to endpoints exposed by FIWARE generic enablers. Users (or other actors) must log-in and use a token to gain access to services. The application code created in the previous tutorial is expanded to authenticate users throughout a distributed system. The design of FIWARE Wilma - a PEP Proxy is discussed, and the parts of the Keyrock GUI and REST API relevant to authenticating other services are described in detail.

cUrl commands are used throughout to access the Keyrock and Wilma REST APIs - Postman documentation for these calls is also available.

Run in Postman

  • このチュートリアルは日本語でもご覧いただけます。

Contents

Details

Securing Microservices with a PEP Proxy

"Oh, it's quite simple. If you are a friend, you speak the password, and the doors will open."

— Gandalf (The Fellowship of the Ring by J.R.R Tolkien)

The previous tutorial demonstrated that it is possible to Permit or Deny access to resources based on an authenticated user identifying themselves within an application. It was simply a matter of the code following a different line of execution if the access_token was not found (Level 1 - Authentication Access), or confirming that a given access_token had appropriate rights (Level 2 - Basic Authorization). The same method of securing access can be applied by placing a Policy Enforcement Point (PEP) in front of other services within a FIWARE-based Smart Solution.

A PEP Proxy lies in front of a secured resource and is an endpoint found at "well-known" public location. It serves as a gatekeeper for resource access. Users or other actors must supply sufficient information to the PEP Proxy to allow their request to succeed and pass through the PEP proxy. The PEP proxy then passes the request on to the real location of the secured resource itself - the actual location of the secured resource is unknown to the outside user - it could be held in a private network behind the PEP proxy or found on a different machine altogether.

FIWARE Wilma is a simple implementation of a PEP proxy designed to work with the FIWARE Keyrock Generic Enabler. Whenever a user tries to gain access to the resource behind the PEP proxy, the PEP will describe the user's attributes to the Policy Decision Point (PDP), request a security decision, and enforce the decision. (Permit or Deny). There is minimal disruption of access for authorized users - the response received is the same as if they had accessed the secured service directly. Unauthorized users are simply returned a 401 - Unauthorized response.

Standard Concepts of Identity Management

The following common objects are found with the Keyrock Identity Management database:

  • User - Any signed up user able to identify themselves with an eMail and password. Users can be assigned rights individually or as a group
  • Application - Any securable FIWARE application consisting of a series of microservices
  • Organization - A group of users who can be assigned a series of rights. Altering the rights of the organization effects the access of all users of that organization
  • OrganizationRole - Users can either be members or admins of an organization - Admins are able to add and remove users from their organization, members merely gain the roles and permissions of an organization. This allows each organization to be responsible for their members and removes the need for a super-admin to administer all rights
  • Role - A role is a descriptive bucket for a set of permissions. A role can be assigned to either a single user or an organization. A signed-in user gains all the permissions from all of their own roles plus all of the roles associated to their organization
  • Permission - An ability to do something on a resource within the system

Additionally two further non-human application objects can be secured within a FIWARE application:

  • IoTAgent - a proxy between IoT Sensors and the Context Broker
  • PEPProxy - a middleware for use between generic enablers challenging the rights of a user.

The relationship between the objects can be seen below - the entities marked in red are used directly within this tutorial:

▶️ Video : Introduction to Wilma PEP Proxy

Click on the image above to see an introductory video

Prerequisites

Docker

To keep things simple both components will be run using Docker. Docker is a container technology which allows to different components isolated into their respective environments.

  • To install Docker on Windows follow the instructions here
  • To install Docker on Mac follow the instructions here
  • To install Docker on Linux follow the instructions here

Docker Compose is a tool for defining and running multi-container Docker applications. A YAML file is used configure the required services for the application. This means all container services can be brought up in a single command. Docker Compose is installed by default as part of Docker for Windows and Docker for Mac, however Linux users will need to follow the instructions found here

Cygwin

We will start up our services using a simple bash script. Windows users should download cygwin to provide a command-line functionality similar to a Linux distribution on Windows.

Architecture

This application protects access to the existing Stock Management and Sensors-based application by adding PEP Proxy instances around the services created in previous tutorials and uses data pre-populated into the MySQL database used by Keyrock. It will make use of four FIWARE components - the Orion Context Broker, the IoT Agent for UltraLight 2.0, the Keyrock Generic enabler and adds one or two instances Wilma PEP Proxy dependent upon which interfaces are to be secured. Usage of the Orion Context Broker is sufficient for an application to qualify as “Powered by FIWARE”.

Both the Orion Context Broker and the IoT Agent rely on open source MongoDB technology to keep persistence of the information they hold. We will also be using the dummy IoT devices created in the previous tutorial. Keyrock uses its own MySQL database.

Therefore the overall architecture will consist of the following elements:

  • The FIWARE Orion Context Broker which will receive requests using NGSI-v2
  • The FIWARE IoT Agent for UltraLight 2.0 which will receive southbound requests using NGSI-v2 and convert them to UltraLight 2.0 commands for the devices
  • FIWARE Keyrock offer a complement Identity Management System including:
    • An OAuth2 authentication system for Applications and Users
    • A site graphical frontend for Identity Management Administration
    • An equivalent REST API for Identity Management via HTTP requests
  • FIWARE Wilma is a PEP Proxy securing access to the Orion and/or IoT Agent microservices
  • The underlying MongoDB database :
    • Used by the Orion Context Broker to hold context data information such as data entities, subscriptions and registrations
    • Used by the IoT Agent to hold device information such as device URLs and Keys
  • A MySQL database :
    • Used to persist user identities, applications, roles and permissions
  • The Stock Management Frontend does the following:
    • Displays store information
    • Shows which products can be bought at each store
    • Allows users to "buy" products and reduce the stock count.
    • Allows authorized users into restricted areas
  • A webserver acting as set of dummy IoT devices using the UltraLight 2.0 protocol running over HTTP - access to certain resources is restricted.

Since all interactions between the elements are initiated by HTTP requests, the entities can be containerized and run from exposed ports.

The specific architecture of each section of the tutorial is discussed below.

Start Up

To start the installation, do the following:

git clone https://github.com/FIWARE/tutorials.PEP-Proxy.git
cd tutorials.PEP-Proxy
git checkout NGSI-v2

./services create

Note The initial creation of Docker images can take up to three minutes

Thereafter, all services can be initialized from the command-line by running the services Bash script provided within the repository:

./services <command>

Where <command> will vary depending upon the exercise we wish to activate.

ℹ️ Note: If you want to clean up and start over again you can do so with the following command:

./services stop

Dramatis Personae

The following people at test.com legitimately have accounts within the Application

  • Alice, she will be the Administrator of the Keyrock Application
  • Bob, the Regional Manager of the supermarket chain - he has several store managers under him:
    • Manager1
    • Manager2
  • Charlie, the Head of Security of the supermarket chain - he has several store detectives under him:
    • Detective1
    • Detective2

The following people at example.com have signed up for accounts, but have no reason to be granted access

  • Eve - Eve the Eavesdropper
  • Mallory - Mallory the malicious attacker
  • Rob - Rob the Robber
For more details (Click to expand)
Name eMail Password
alice alice-the-admin@test.com test
bob bob-the-manager@test.com test
charlie charlie-security@test.com test
manager1 manager1@test.com test
manager2 manager2@test.com test
detective1 detective1@test.com test
detective2 detective2@test.com test
Name eMail Password
eve eve@example.com test
mallory mallory@example.com test
rob rob@example.com test

Two organizations have also been set up by Alice:

Name Description UUID
Security Security Group for Store Detectives security-team-0000-0000-000000000000
Management Management Group for Store Managers managers-team-0000-0000-000000000000

One application, with appropriate roles and permissions has also been created:

Key Value
Client ID tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp
Client Secret tutorial-dckr-site-0000-clientsecret
URL http://localhost:3000
RedirectURL http://localhost:3000/login

To save time, the data creating users and organizations from the previous tutorial has been downloaded and is automatically persisted to the MySQL database on start-up so the assigned UUIDs do not change and the data does not need to be entered again.

The Keyrock MySQL database deals with all aspects of application security including storing users, password etc.; defining access rights and dealing with OAuth2 authorization protocols. The complete database relationship diagram can be found here

To refresh your memory about how to create users and organizations and applications, you can log in at http://localhost:3005/idm using the account alice-the-admin@test.com with a password of test.

and look around.

Logging In to Keyrock using the REST API

Enter a username and password to enter the application. The default super-user has the values alice-the-admin@test.com and test. The URL https://localhost:3443/v1/auth/tokens should also work in a secure system.

Create Token with Password

The following example logs in using the Admin Super-User:

1️⃣ Request:

curl -iX POST \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/auth/tokens' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -d '{
  "name": "alice-the-admin@test.com",
  "password": "test"
}'

Response:

The response header returns an X-Subject-token which identifies who has logged on the application. This token is required in all subsequent requests to gain access

HTTP/1.1 201 Created
X-Subject-Token: d848eb12-889f-433b-9811-6a4fbf0b86ca
Content-Type: application/json; charset=utf-8
Content-Length: 138
ETag: W/"8a-TVwlWNKBsa7cskJw55uE/wZl6L8"
Date: Mon, 30 Jul 2018 12:07:54 GMT
Connection: keep-alive
{
    "token": {
        "methods": ["password"],
        "expires_at": "2018-07-30T13:02:37.116Z"
    },
    "idm_authorization_config": {
        "level": "basic",
        "authzforce": false
    }
}

Get Token Info

Once a user has logged in, the presence of a (time-limited) token is sufficient to find out more information about the user.

You can use the long-lasting X-Auth-token=aaaaaaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaaaaaaaaaa to pretend to be Alice throughout this tutorial. Both {{X-Auth-token}} and {{X-Subject-token}} can be set to the same value in the case that Alice is making an enquiry about herself.

2️⃣ Request:

curl -X GET \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/auth/tokens' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}' \
  -H 'X-Subject-token: {{X-Subject-token}}'

Response:

The response will return the details of the associated user

{
    "access_token": "aaaaaaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaa-aaaaaaaaaaaa",
    "expires": "2036-07-30T12:04:45.000Z",
    "valid": true,
    "User": {
        "id": "aaaaaaaa-good-0000-0000-000000000000",
        "username": "alice",
        "email": "alice-the-admin@test.com",
        "date_password": "2018-07-30T11:41:14.000Z",
        "enabled": true,
        "admin": true
    }
}

Managing PEP Proxies and IoT Agents

User accounts have been created in a previous tutorial. Non-human actors such as a PEP Proxy can be set up in the same manner. The account for each PEP Proxy, IoT Agent or IoT Sensor will merely consist of a Username and password linked to an application within Keyrock. PEP Proxy and IoT Agents accounts can be created by using either the Keyrock GUI or by using the REST API.

▶️ Video : Wilma PEP Proxy Configuration

Click on the image above to see a video about configuring the Wilma PEP Proxy using the Keyrock GUI

Managing PEP Proxies and IoT Agents - Start Up

To start the system run the following command:

./services orion

This will start up Keyrock with a series of users. There are already two existing applications and an existing PEP Proxy Account associated with the application.

PEP Proxy CRUD Actions

GUI

Once signed-in, users are able to create and update PEP Proxies associated to their applications for themselves.

REST API

Alternatively, the standard CRUD actions are assigned to the appropriate HTTP verbs (POST, GET, PATCH and DELETE) under the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/pep_proxies endpoint.

Create a PEP Proxy

To create a new PEP Proxy account within an application, send a POST request to the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/pep_proxies endpoint along with the X-Auth-token header from a previously logged in administrative user.

3️⃣ Request:

curl -iX POST \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/applications/{{application-id}}/pep_proxies' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}'

Response:

Provided there is no previously existing PEP Proxy account associated with the application, a new account will be created with a unique id and password and the values will be returned in the response.

{
    "pep_proxy": {
        "id": "pep_proxy_ac80aaf8-0ac3-4bd8-8042-5e8f587679b7",
        "password": "pep_proxy_23d805e7-1b93-434a-8e69-0798dcdd6726"
    }
}

Read PEP Proxy details

Making a GET request to the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/pep_proxies endpoint will return the details of the associated PEP Proxy Account. The X-Auth-token must be supplied in the headers.

4️⃣ Request:

curl -X GET \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/applications/{{application-id}}/pep_proxies/' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}'

Response:

{
    "pep_proxy": {
        "id": "pep_proxy_f84bcba2-3300-4f13-a4bb-7bdbd358b201",
        "oauth_client_id": "tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp"
    }
}

Reset Password of a PEP Proxy

To renew the password of a PEP Proxy Account, make a PATCH request to the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/pep_proxies endpoint will return the details of the associated PEP Proxy Account. The X-Auth-token must be supplied in the headers.

5️⃣ Request:

curl -X PATCH \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/applications/{{application-id}}/pep_proxies' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}'

Response:

The response returns a new password for the PEP Proxy Account

{
    "new_password": "pep_proxy_2bc8996e-29bf-4195-ac39-d1116e429602"
}

Delete a PEP Proxy

An existing PEP Proxy Account can be deleted by making a DELETE request to the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/pep_proxies endpoint. The X-Auth-token must be supplied in the headers.

6️⃣ Request:

curl -X DELETE \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/applications/{{application-id}}/pep_proxies' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}'

IoT Agent CRUD Actions

GUI

In a similar manner to PEP Proxy creation, signed-in, users are able to create and update IoT Sensor Accounts associated to their applications.

REST API

Alternatively, the standard CRUD actions are assigned to the appropriate HTTP verbs (POST, GET, PATCH and DELETE) under the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents endpoint.

Create an IoT Agent

To create a new IoT Agent account within an application, send a POST request to the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents endpoint along with the X-Auth-token header from a previously logged in administrative user.

7️⃣ Request:

curl -X POST \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}'

Response:

A new account will be created with a unique id and password and the values will be returned in the response.

{
    "iot": {
        "id": "iot_sensor_f1d0ca9e-b519-4a8d-b6ae-1246e443dd7e",
        "password": "iot_sensor_8775b438-6e66-4a6e-87c2-45c6525351ee"
    }
}

Read IoT Agent details

Making a GET request the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents/{{iot-agent-id}} endpoint will return the details of the associated IoT Agent Account. The X-Auth-token must be supplied in the headers.

8️⃣ Request:

curl -X GET \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents/{{iot-agent-id}}' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}'

Response:

{
    "iot": {
        "id": "iot_sensor_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000",
        "oauth_client_id": "tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp"
    }
}

List IoT Agents

A list of all IoT Agents associated with an application can be obtained by making a GET request the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents endpoint. The X-Auth-token must be supplied in the headers.

9️⃣ Request:

curl -X GET \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}'

Response:

{
    "iots": [
        {
            "id": "iot_sensor_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"
        },
        {
            "id": "iot_sensor_c0fa0a77-ea9e-4a82-8118-b4d3c6b230b1"
        }
    ]
}

Reset Password of an IoT Agent

1️⃣0️⃣ Request:

To renew the password of an individual IoT Agent Account, make a PATCH request to the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}//iot_agents/{{iot-agent-id}} endpoint. The X-Auth-token must be supplied in the headers.

curl -iX PATCH \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents/{{iot-agent-id}}' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}'

Response:

The response returns a new password for the IoT Agent account.

{
    "new_password": "iot_sensor_114cb79c-bf69-444a-82a1-e6e85187dacd"
}

Delete an IoT Agent

An existing IoT Agent Account can be deleted by making a DELETE request to the /v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents/{{iot-agent-id}} endpoint. The X-Auth-token must be supplied in the headers.

1️⃣1️⃣ Request:

curl -X DELETE \
  'http://localhost:3005/v1/applications/{{application-id}}/iot_agents/{{iot-agent-id}}' \
  -H 'X-Auth-token: {{X-Auth-token}}'

Securing the Orion Context Broker

Securing Orion - PEP Proxy Configuration

The orion-proxy container is an instance of FIWARE Wilma listening on port 1027, it is configured to forward traffic to orion on port 1026, which is the default port that the Orion Context Broker is listening to for NGSI Requests.

orion-proxy:
    image: fiware/pep-proxy
    container_name: fiware-orion-proxy
    hostname: orion-proxy
    networks:
        default:
            ipv4_address: 172.18.1.10
    depends_on:
        - keyrock
    ports:
        - "1027:1027"
    expose:
        - "1027"
    environment:
        - PEP_PROXY_APP_HOST=orion
        - PEP_PROXY_APP_PORT=1026
        - PEP_PROXY_PORT=1027
        - PEP_PROXY_IDM_HOST=keyrock
        - PEP_PROXY_HTTPS_ENABLED=false
        - PEP_PROXY_AUTH_ENABLED=false
        - PEP_PROXY_IDM_SSL_ENABLED=false
        - PEP_PROXY_IDM_PORT=3005
        - PEP_PROXY_APP_ID=tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp
        - PEP_PROXY_USERNAME=pep_proxy_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000
        - PEP_PASSWORD=test
        - PEP_PROXY_PDP=idm
        - PEP_PROXY_MAGIC_KEY=1234

The PEP_PROXY_APP_ID and PEP_PROXY_USERNAME would usually be obtained by adding new entries to the application in Keyrock, however, in this tutorial, they have been predefined by populating the MySQL database with data on start-up.

The orion-proxy container is listening on a single port:

  • The PEP Proxy Port - 1027 is exposed purely for tutorial access - so that cUrl or Postman can requests directly to the Wilma instance without being part of the same network.
Key Value Description
PEP_PROXY_APP_HOST orion The hostname of the service behind the PEP Proxy
PEP_PROXY_APP_PORT 1026 The port of the service behind the PEP Proxy
PEP_PROXY_PORT 1027 The port that the PEP Proxy is listening on
PEP_PROXY_IDM_HOST keyrock The hostname for the Identity Manager
PEP_PROXY_HTTPS_ENABLED false Whether the PEP Proxy itself is running under HTTPS
PEP_PROXY_AUTH_ENABLED false Whether the PEP Proxy is checking for Authorization
PEP_PROXY_IDM_SSL_ENABLED false Whether the Identity Manager is running under HTTPS
PEP_PROXY_IDM_PORT 3005 The Port for the Identity Manager instance
PEP_PROXY_APP_ID tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp
PEP_PROXY_USERNAME pep_proxy_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 The Username for the PEP Proxy
PEP_PASSWORD test The Password for the PEP Proxy
PEP_PROXY_PDP idm The Type of service offering the Policy Decision Point
PEP_PROXY_MAGIC_KEY 1234

For this example, the PEP Proxy is checking for Level 1 - Authentication Access not Level 2 - Basic Authorization or Level 3 - Advanced Authorization.

Securing Orion - Application Configuration

The tutorial application has already been registered in Keyrock, programmatically the tutorial application will be making requests to the Wilma PEP Proxy in front of the Orion Context Broker. Every request must now include an additional access_token header.

tutorial-app:
    image: fiware/tutorials.context-provider
    hostname: tutorial-app
    container_name: tutorial-app
    depends_on:
        - orion-proxy
        - iot-agent
        - keyrock
    networks:
        default:
            ipv4_address: 172.18.1.7
            aliases:
                - iot-sensors
    expose:
        - "3000"
        - "3001"
    ports:
        - "3000:3000"
        - "3001:3001"
    environment:
        - "WEB_APP_PORT=3000"
        - "SECURE_ENDPOINTS=true"
        - "CONTEXT_BROKER=http://orion-proxy:1027/v2"
        - "KEYROCK_URL=http://localhost"
        - "KEYROCK_IP_ADDRESS=http://172.18.1.5"
        - "KEYROCK_PORT=3005"
        - "KEYROCK_CLIENT_ID=tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp"
        - "KEYROCK_CLIENT_SECRET=tutorial-dckr-site-0000-clientsecret"
        - "CALLBACK_URL=http://localhost:3000/login"

All of the tutorial container settings have been described in previous tutorials. One important change is necessary however, rather than accessing Orion directly on the default port 1026 as shown in all previous tutorials, all context broker traffic is now sent to orion-proxy on port 1027. As a reminder, the relevant settings are detailed below:

Key Value Description
WEB_APP_PORT 3000 Port used by web-app which displays the login screen & etc.
KEYROCK_URL http://localhost This is URL of the Keyrock Web frontend itself, used for redirection when forwarding users
KEYROCK_IP_ADDRESS http://172.18.1.5 This is URL of the Keyrock OAuth Communications
KEYROCK_PORT 3005 This is the port that Keyrock is listening on.
KEYROCK_CLIENT_ID tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp The Client ID defined by Keyrock for this application
KEYROCK_CLIENT_SECRET tutorial-dckr-site-0000-clientsecret The Client Secret defined by Keyrock for this application
CALLBACK_URL http://localhost:3000/login The callback URL used by Keyrock when a challenge has succeeded.

Securing Orion - Start up

To start the system with a PEP Proxy protecting access to Orion, run the following command:

./services orion

▶️ Video : Securing A REST API

Click on the image above to see a video about securing a REST API using the Wilma PEP Proxy

User Logs In to the Application using the REST API

PEP Proxy - No Access to Orion without an Access Token

Secured Access can be ensured by requiring all requests to the secured service are made indirectly via a PEP Proxy (in this case the PEP Proxy is found in front of the Context Broker). Requests must include an X-Auth-Token, failure to present a valid token results in a denial of access.

1️⃣2️⃣ Request:

If a request to the PEP Proxy is made without any access token as shown:

curl -X GET \
  http://localhost:1027/v2/entities/urn:ngsi-ld:Store:001?options=keyValues

Response:

The response is a 401 Unauthorized error code, with the following explanation:

Auth-token not found in request header

Keyrock - User Obtains an Access Token

1️⃣3️⃣ Request:

To log in to the application using the user-credentials flow send a POST request to Keyrock using the oauth2/token endpoint with the grant_type=password. For example to log-in as Alice the Admin:

curl -iX POST \
  'http://localhost:3005/oauth2/token' \
  -H 'Accept: application/json' \
  -H 'Authorization: Basic dHV0b3JpYWwtZGNrci1zaXRlLTAwMDAteHByZXNzd2ViYXBwOnR1dG9yaWFsLWRja3Itc2l0ZS0wMDAwLWNsaWVudHNlY3JldA==' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded' \
  --data "username=alice-the-admin@test.com&password=test&grant_type=password"

Response:

The response returns an access code to identify the user:

{
    "access_token": "a7e22dfe2bd7d883c8621b9eb50797a7f126eeab",
    "token_type": "Bearer",
    "expires_in": 3599,
    "refresh_token": "05e386edd9f95ed0e599c5004db8573e86dff874"
}

This can also be done by entering the Tutorial Application on http:/localhost and logging in using any of the OAuth2 grants on the page. A successful log-in will return an access token.

PEP Proxy - Accessing Orion with an Access Token

If a request to the PEP Proxy is made including a valid access token in the X-Auth-Token header as shown, the request is permitted and the service behind the PEP Proxy (in this case the Orion Context Broker) will return the data as expected.

1️⃣4️⃣ Request:

curl -X GET \
  http://localhost:1027/v2/entities/urn:ngsi-ld:Store:001?options=keyValues \
  -H 'X-Auth-Token: {{X-Access-token}}'

PEP Proxy - Accessing Orion with an Authorization: Bearer

The standard Authorization: Bearer header can also be used to identity the user, the request from an authorized user is permitted and the service behind the PEP Proxy (in this case the Orion Context Broker) will return the data as expected.

1️⃣5️⃣ Request:

curl -X GET \
  http://localhost:1027/v2/entities/urn:ngsi-ld:Store:001?options=keyValues \
  -H 'Authorization: Bearer {{X-Access-token}}'

Response:

{
    "id": "urn:ngsi-ld:Store:001",
    "type": "Store",
    "address": {
        "streetAddress": "Bornholmer Straße 65",
        "addressRegion": "Berlin",
        "addressLocality": "Prenzlauer Berg",
        "postalCode": "10439"
    },
    "location": {
        "type": "Point",
        "coordinates": [13.3986, 52.5547]
    },
    "name": "Bösebrücke Einkauf"
}

Securing Orion - Sample Code

When a User logs in to the application using the User Credentials Grant, an access_token is obtained which identifies the User. The access_token is stored in session:

function userCredentialGrant(req, res) {
    debug("userCredentialGrant");

    const email = req.body.email;
    const password = req.body.password;

    oa.getOAuthPasswordCredentials(email, password).then((results) => {
        req.session.access_token = results.access_token;
        return;
    });
}

For each subsequent request, the access_token is supplied in the X-Auth-Token Header

function setAuthHeaders(req) {
    const headers = {};
    if (req.session.access_token) {
        headers["X-Auth-Token"] = req.session.access_token;
    }
    return headers;
}

For example, when buying an item, two requests are made, the same X-Auth-Token Header must be added to each request - therefore the User can be identified and access granted.

async function buyItem(req, res) {
    const inventory = await retrieveEntity(
        req.params.inventoryId,
        {
            options: "keyValues",
            type: "InventoryItem"
        },
        setAuthHeaders(req)
    );
    const count = inventory.shelfCount - 1;

    await updateExistingEntityAttributes(
        req.params.inventoryId,
        { shelfCount: { type: "Integer", value: count } },
        {
            type: "InventoryItem"
        },
        setAuthHeaders(req)
    );
    res.redirect(`/app/store/${inventory.refStore}/till`);
}

Securing an IoT Agent South Port

Securing an IoT Agent South Port - PEP Proxy Configuration

The iot-agent-proxy container is an instance of FIWARE Wilma listening on port 7897, it is configured to forward traffic to iot-agent on port 7896, which is the default port that the Ultralight agent is listening to for HTTP Requests.

iot-agent-proxy:
    image: fiware/pep-proxy
    container_name: fiware-iot-agent-proxy
    hostname: iot-agent-proxy
    networks:
        default:
            ipv4_address: 172.18.1.11
    depends_on:
        - keyrock
    ports:
        - "7897:7897"
    expose:
        - "7897"
    environment:
        - PEP_PROXY_APP_HOST=iot-agent
        - PEP_PROXY_APP_PORT=7896
        - PEP_PROXY_PORT=7897
        - PEP_PROXY_IDM_HOST=keyrock
        - PEP_PROXY_HTTPS_ENABLED=false
        - PEP_PROXY_AUTH_ENABLED=false
        - PEP_PROXY_IDM_SSL_ENABLED=false
        - PEP_PROXY_IDM_PORT=3005
        - PEP_PROXY_APP_ID=tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp
        - PEP_PROXY_USERNAME=pep_proxy_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000
        - PEP_PASSWORD=test
        - PEP_PROXY_PDP=idm
        - PEP_PROXY_MAGIC_KEY=1234

The PEP_PROXY_APP_ID and PEP_PROXY_USERNAME would usually be obtained by adding new entries to the application in Keyrock, however, in this tutorial, they have been predefined by populating the MySQL database with data on start-up.

The iot-agent-proxy container is listening on a single port:

  • The PEP Proxy Port - 7897 is exposed purely for tutorial access - so that cUrl or Postman can requests directly to this Wilma instance without being part of the same network.
Key Value Description
PEP_PROXY_APP_HOST iot-agent The hostname of the service behind the PEP Proxy
PEP_PROXY_APP_PORT 7896 The port of the service behind the PEP Proxy
PEP_PROXY_PORT 7897 The port that the PEP Proxy is listening on
PEP_PROXY_IDM_HOST keyrock The hostname for the Identity Manager
PEP_PROXY_HTTPS_ENABLED false Whether the PEP Proxy is running under HTTPS
PEP_PROXY_AUTH_ENABLED false Whether the PEP Proxy is checking for Authorization
PEP_PROXY_IDM_SSL_ENABLED false Whether the Identity Manager is running under HTTPS
PEP_PROXY_IDM_PORT 3005 The Port for the Identity Manager instance
PEP_PROXY_APP_ID tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp
PEP_PROXY_USERNAME pep_proxy_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 The Username for the PEP Proxy
PEP_PASSWORD test The Password for the PEP Proxy
PEP_PROXY_PDP idm The Type of service offering the Policy Decision Point
PEP_PROXY_MAGIC_KEY 1234

For this example, the PEP Proxy is checking for Level 1 - Authentication Access not Level 2 - Basic Authorization or Level 3 - Advanced Authorization.

Securing an IoT Agent South Port - Application Configuration

The tutorial application also plays the role of providing data from our dummy IoT Sensors. The IoT Sensors are making HTTP request containing commands and measurements in Ultralight syntax. An IoT Sensor username and password have already been registered in Keyrock, programmatically each sensor must obtain an OAuth2 access token and will then make requests to a second Wilma PEP Proxy in front of the IoT Agent.

tutorial-app:
    image: fiware/tutorials.context-provider
    hostname: tutorial-app
    container_name: tutorial-app
    depends_on:
        - orion-proxy
        - iot-agent-proxy
        - keyrock
    networks:
        default:
            ipv4_address: 172.18.1.7
            aliases:
                - iot-sensors
    expose:
        - "3000"
        - "3001"
    ports:
        - "3000:3000"
        - "3001:3001"
    environment:
        - "IOTA_HTTP_HOST=iot-agent-proxy"
        - "IOTA_HTTP_PORT=7897"
        - "DUMMY_DEVICES_PORT=3001" # Port used by the dummy IoT devices to receive commands
        - "DUMMY_DEVICES_TRANSPORT=HTTP" # Default transport used by dummy IoT devices
        - "DUMMY_DEVICES_API_KEY=4jggokgpepnvsb2uv4s40d59ov"
        - "DUMMY_DEVICES_USER=iot_sensor_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000"
        - "DUMMY_DEVICES_PASSWORD=test"

The tutorial container hosts the dummy Ultralight sensors. Rather than accessing the IoT Agent directly on port 7896 as shown in all previous tutorials, all traffic is forwarded to iot-agent-proxy on port 7897. Most of the relevant tutorial container settings have been described in previous tutorials, the DUMMY_DEVICES_USER and DUMMY_DEVICES_PASSWORD are new additions.

Key Value Description
IOTA_HTTP_HOST iot-agent-proxy The hostname of the Wilma PEP Proxy protecting the IoT Agent for UltraLight 2.0
IOTA_HTTP_PORT 7896 The port that the Wilma PEP Proxy protecting the IoT Agent is listening on
DUMMY_DEVICES_PORT 3001 Port used by the dummy IoT devices to receive commands
DUMMY_DEVICES_TRANSPORT HTTP Default transport used by dummy IoT devices
DUMMY_DEVICES_API_KEY 4jggokgpepnvsb2uv4s40d59ov Random security key used for UltraLight interactions - ensures the integrity of interactions between the devices and the IoT Agent
DUMMY_DEVICES_USER iot_sensor_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 Username assigned to the device(s) in Keyrock
DUMMY_DEVICES_PASSWORD test Password assigned to the device(s) in Keyrock

The DUMMY_DEVICES_USER and DUMMY_DEVICES_PASSWORD would usually be obtained by adding new entries to the application in Keyrock, however, in this tutorial, they have been predefined by populating the MySQL database with data on start-up.

Securing South Port Traffic - Start up

To start the system with a PEP Proxies protecting access to both Orion and the IoT Agent South Port run the following command:

./services southport

IoT Sensor Logs In to the Application using the REST API

Keyrock - IoT Sensor Obtains an Access Token

Logging in as an IoT Sensor follows the same user-credentials flow as for a User. To log in and identify the sensor iot_sensor_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 with password test send a POST request to Keyrock using the oauth2/token endpoint with the grant_type=password:

1️⃣5️⃣ Request:

curl -iX POST \
  'http://localhost:3005/oauth2/token' \
  -H 'Accept: application/json' \
  -H 'Authorization: Basic dHV0b3JpYWwtZGNrci1zaXRlLTAwMDAteHByZXNzd2ViYXBwOnR1dG9yaWFsLWRja3Itc2l0ZS0wMDAwLWNsaWVudHNlY3JldA==' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded' \
  --data "username=iot_sensor_00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000&password=test&grant_type=password"

Response:

The response returns an access code to identify the device:

{
    "access_token": "a7e22dfe2bd7d883c8621b9eb50797a7f126eeab",
    "token_type": "Bearer",
    "expires_in": 3599,
    "refresh_token": "05e386edd9f95ed0e599c5004db8573e86dff874"
}

PEP Proxy - Accessing IoT Agent with an Access Token

This example simulates a secured request coming from the device motion001

The POST request to a PEP Proxy in front to the Ultralight IoT Agent identifies a previously provisioned resource iot/d endpoint and passes a measurement for device motion001. The addition of the X-Auth-Token Header identifies the source of the request as being registered in Keyrock, and therefore the measurement will be successfully passed on to the IoT Agent itself.

1️⃣6️⃣ Request:

curl -X POST \
  'http://localhost:7897/iot/d?k=1068318794&i=motion001' \
  -H 'X-Auth-Token: {{X-Access-token}}' \
  -H 'Content-Type: text/plain' \
  -d 'c|1'

Securing South Port Traffic - Sample Code

When an IoT Sensor starts up, it must log-in like any other user to obtain an access token:

const DUMMY_DEVICE_HTTP_HEADERS = { "Content-Type": "text/plain" };
function initSecureDevices() {
    Security.oa
        .getOAuthPasswordCredentials(process.env.DUMMY_DEVICES_USER, process.env.DUMMY_DEVICES_PASSWORD)
        .then((results) => {
            DUMMY_DEVICE_HTTP_HEADERS["X-Auth-Token"] = results.access_token;
            return;
        })
        .catch((error) => {
            debug(error);
            return;
        });
}

Each HTTP request thereafter includes the X-Auth-Token Header in the request identifying the IoT Sensor:

const options = {
    method: "POST",
    url: UL_URL,
    qs: { k: UL_API_KEY, i: deviceId },
    headers: DUMMY_DEVICE_HTTP_HEADERS,
    body: state
};

request(options, (error) => {
    if (error) {
        debug(debugText + " " + error.code);
    }
});

Securing an IoT Agent North Port

Securing an IoT Agent North Port - IoT Agent Configuration

The iot-agent container is listening on port 4041, it is configured to forward traffic to orion-proxy on port 1027.

iot-agent:
    image: fiware/iotagent-ul:${ULTRALIGHT_VERSION}
    hostname: iot-agent
    container_name: fiware-iot-agent
    depends_on:
        - mongo-db
        - orion
    networks:
        - default
    ports:
        - "4041:4041"
        - "7896:7896"
    environment:
        - IOTA_CB_HOST=orion-proxy
        - IOTA_CB_PORT=1027
        - IOTA_NORTH_PORT=4041
        - IOTA_REGISTRY_TYPE=mongodb
        - IOTA_LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG
        - IOTA_TIMESTAMP=true
        - IOTA_CB_NGSI_VERSION=v2
        - IOTA_AUTOCAST=true
        - IOTA_MONGO_HOST=mongo-db
        - IOTA_MONGO_PORT=27017
        - IOTA_MONGO_DB=iotagentul
        - IOTA_HTTP_PORT=7896
        - IOTA_PROVIDER_URL=http://iot-agent:4041
        - IOTA_AUTH_ENABLED=true
        - IOTA_AUTH_TYPE=oauth2
        - IOTA_AUTH_HEADER=Authorization
        - IOTA_AUTH_HOST=keyrock
        - IOTA_AUTH_PORT=3005
        - IOTA_AUTH_URL=http://keyrock:3005
        - IOTA_AUTH_TOKEN_PATH=/oauth2/token
        - IOTA_AUTH_PERMANENT_TOKEN=true
        - IOTA_AUTH_CLIENT_ID=tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp
        - IOTA_AUTH_CLIENT_SECRET=tutorial-dckr-host-0000-clientsecret
Key Value Description
IOTA_AUTH_ENABLED true Whether to use authorization on the north port
IOTA_AUTH_TYPE oauth2 The type of authorization to be used (Keyrock uses OAuth2)
IOTA_AUTH_HEADER Authorization The name of the header to be added to requests
IOTA_AUTH_HOST keyrock The Identity Manager holding the application
IOTA_AUTH_PORT 3005 The port the Identity Manager is listening on
IOTA_AUTH_URL http://keyrock:3005 The URL for authentication requests
IOTA_AUTH_CLIENT_ID tutorial-dckr-site-0000-xpresswebapp the ID of the applicantion within Keyrock
IOTA_AUTH_CLIENT_SECRET tutorial-dckr-host-0000-clientsecret The client secret of the application within Keyrock
IOTA_AUTH_PERMANENT_TOKEN true Whether to use permanent tokens
IOTA_AUTH_TOKEN_PATH /oauth2/token the path to be used when requesting tokens

Securing an IoT Agent North Port - Start up

To start the system with a PEP Proxy protecting access to between Orion and the IoT Agent North Port run the following command:

./services northport

Keyrock - Obtaining a permanent token

The Keyrock application has been configured to offer permanent tokens

The standard Authorization: Basic header holds the base 64 concatentation of the client ID and secret. The parameter scope=permanent is added to retrieve permanent tokens when available. The response contains an access_token which can be used for device provisioning.

1️⃣7️⃣ Request:

curl -X POST \
  http://localhost:3005/oauth2/token \
  -H 'Accept: application/json' \
  -H 'Authorization: Basic dHV0b3JpYWwtZGNrci1zaXRlLTAwMDAteHByZXNzd2ViYXBwOnR1dG9yaWFsLWRja3Itc2l0ZS0wMDAwLWNsaWVudHNlY3JldA==' \
  -d 'username=alice-the-admin@test.com&password=test&grant_type=password&scope=permanent'

Response:

{
    "access_token": "e37aeef5d48c9c1a3d4adf72626a8745918d4355",
    "token_type": "Bearer",
    "scope": ["permanent"]
}

IoT Agent - provisioning a trusted service group

The Access token (also known as a Trust Token) must be added to the service group. The resource and apikey correspond to the values set-up within the service group provisioning stage. In this case the Motion sensor group had been provisioned as shown:

{
    "apikey": "1068318794",
    "cbroker": "http://orion:1026",
    "entity_type": "Motion",
    "resource": "/iot/d"
}

1️⃣8️⃣ Request:

curl -iX PUT \
  'http://localhost:4041/iot/services?resource=/iot/d&apikey=1068318794' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'fiware-service: openiot' \
  -H 'fiware-servicepath: /' \
  -d '{
     "cbroker": "http://orion-proxy:1027",
     "trust": "30a5ce4c71e416bd199dcdcb7f8bcd8d70e8bb5e"
}'

The Motion sensor requests are now sent via the orion-proxy and identify themselves using the generated trust token.

IoT Agent - provisioning a sensor

Once a trusted service group has been created, a device can be provisioned in the usual manner

1️⃣9️⃣ Request:

curl -iX POST \
  'http://localhost:4041/iot/devices' \
  -H 'Content-Type: application/json' \
  -H 'fiware-service: openiot' \
  -H 'fiware-servicepath: /' \
  -d '{
 "devices": [
   {
     "device_id":   "motion001",
     "entity_name": "urn:ngsi-ld:Motion:001",
     "entity_type": "Motion",
     "timezone":    "Europe/Berlin",
     "attributes": [
       { "object_id": "c", "name": "count", "type": "Integer" }
     ],
     "static_attributes": [
       { "name":"refStore", "type": "Relationship", "value": "urn:ngsi-ld:Store:001"}
     ]
   }
 ]
}
'

License

MIT © 2018-2020 FIWARE Foundation e.V.

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📕 FIWARE 404: Securing Microservices and IoT Devices with a PEP Proxy

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