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RDAP-ODF

Verisign Labs’ RDAP client POC based on - OAuth 2.0 Device Flow for Browserless and Input Constrained Devices

Introduction

This software demonstrates how the OAuth device flow can be used for Registration Data Access Protocol (RDAP) clients that have limited user interfaces, such as with a command line client. Google is used as the authorization provider for demonstration purposes.

Build and Installation

Setup

To support the ODF device flow, the client must first be registered with Google. Detailed registration documentation can be found at https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/OAuth2ForDevices.

Steps to register an RDAP ODF Client
  1. Navigate to https://console.developers.google.com/apis/credentials/ and sign in with a gmail.com account that will manage the client credentials.
  2. Select credentials under the APIs & Services menu on the left
  3. Click Create credentials to generate new client credentials
  4. Select OAuth client Id from the dropdown to start the Create OAuth client ID workflow
  5. Select Other for Application Type
  6. A name field appears, enter the application client name (e.g. RDAP ODF Client)
  7. Click create to generate the credentials

A dialog will appear with the client ID and client secret for copy/pasting. Credentials are also available on the google credentials page under OAuth 2.0 client IDs. Click on the client name to view/edit the credentials for that client.

Post client registration

After registration, the RDAP server URL and client credentials need to be registered in the RDAP ODF client.

Alternative 1: Update com.rdap.odf.google.clientId, com.rdap.odf.google.clientSecret, and com.rdap.odf.rdapBaseUrl properties in src/main/resources/application.properties. The Client ID and Client secret can be copied from the steps above.

# fill in your client id and secret 
com.rdap.odf.google.clientId=${google_client_id}
com.rdap.odf.google.clientSecret=${google_client_secret}

# rdap service endpoint, e.g., https://rdap.verisignlabs.com/rdap/v1
com.rdap.odf.rdapBaseUrl=${rdap_url}

or Alternative 2: Leave the application properties as is and set google_client_id, google_client_secret, and rdap_url environment variables before running the client.

# Example Dynamic Enviroment Variable Setup in Bash on Redhat 7
export google_client_id=abc1234567
export google_client_secret=98765
export rdap_url=https://rdap.verisignlabs.com/rdap/v1

Prerequisites

  • java-1.8.0-openjdk or higher version

  • maven

  • rpm-build

Note that rpm-build is only needed if your operating system uses the RPM package management system. For systems that do not support RPM, rpm-build is not needed and the following section should be removed from the pom.xml so that only a jar file will be produced.

<plugin>
  <groupId>org.codehaus.mojo</groupId>
  <artifactId>rpm-maven-plugin</artifactId>
  ....
</plugin>

Build

Get the source

git clone https://github.com/verisign/rdap-odf.git
cd rdap-odf

Update client based on Post client registration section above

Build the project

mvn clean install -DskipTests

After the build is completed, target/rdap-odf-1.0.jar will be created and can be used directly. Alternatively, target/rpm/rdap-odf/RPMS/noarch/rdap-odf-1.0-1.noarch.rpm is also produced and can be installed via the package manager.

Usage

Run with jar

java -jar ./target/rdap-odf-1.0.jar

The current directory will be used as your working directory where the client data and logs are stored.

Install RPM

You can also choose to install the rpm, which is located at target/rpm/rdap-odf/RPMS/noarch.

Run

sudo rpm -i rdap-odf-1.0-1.noarch.rpm

After installation, you will have /usr/local/bin/rdap-odf as the executable and /app/rdap-odf/ as the working directory for the client.

Build and Run with Docker

Docker version 18.03.1 is used in our test.

docker build -t "rdap-odf-docker" .
docker run -it rdap-odf-docker

Example Execution Flow

When the rdap-odf client is started for the first time it will be in an Unauthenticated mode. If the user has logged in before and the token data is still valid, then the client will start in an Authenticated mode. A typical execution flow is shown below:

Unauthenticated> domain -n nic.cc
{"objectClassName":"domain", ...}

Unauthenticated> domain --type auth --name test.cc
Start oauth device flow. Getting user code...
Please visit https://www.google.com/device on your second device and authorize with code ...

Pending Authentication> client is authenticated
{"objectClassName":"domain", ...}

Authenticated> nameservers --ip 1.2.3.*
{"nameserverSearchResults":[{"objectClassName": ...}

Authenticated> domain --type unauth --name nic.cc
{"objectClassName":"domain", ...}

Authenticated> quit

From the above, you will notice that there are 2 types of queries: authenticated and unauthenticated. The default behavior is to submit queries with privilege corresponding to the client's current state; i.e. an unauthenticated query is sent in Unauthenticated mode. If authenticated, the ODF client uses the id_token and access_token obtained from the OAuth device flow to obtain a more detailed RDAP response -- if the RDAP service supports access control using OpenID Connect.

Commands

To view all of the commands supported by this client, type "help" in the console prompt:

Unauthenticated> help 
AVAILABLE COMMANDS

Built-In Commands
        clear: Clear the shell screen.
        help: Display help about available commands.
        script: Read and execute commands from a file.
        stacktrace: Display the full stacktrace of the last error.

Exit Cmd
        quit: Quit the client.

Main Commands
        auth: OAuth related functionalities, including start oauth device flow, refresh token, and drop authed state.
        show: Show client information such as status and tokens.
        test: Test batch RDAP queries in authenticated / unauthenticated mode.

Query Commands
        domain: Send a domain lookup query to an RDAP service and show response.
        domains: Send a domain search query to an RDAP service and show response.
        entities: Send an entity search query to an RDAP service and show response.
        entity: Send an entity lookup query to an RDAP service and show response.
        nameserver: Send a nameserver lookup query to an RDAP service and show response.
        nameservers: Send a nameserver search query to an RDAP service and show response.

Typing "help command" will provide an explanation of the options a command supports:

Unauthenticated> help nameservers

NAME
	nameservers - Send a nameserver search query to an RDAP service and show response.

SYNOPSYS
	nameservers [[-n] string]  [[-i] string]  [[-t] string]  [[-o] string]  [-p]  

OPTIONS
	-n or --name  string
		Nameservers search by name, e.g., k4.ns*.com
		[Optional, default = DEFAULT_QUERY_TAG_VALUE_NOT_USE]

	-i or --ip  string
		Nameservers search by IP, e.g., 209.112.114.*
		[Optional, default = DEFAULT_QUERY_TAG_VALUE_NOT_USE]

	-t or --type  string
		Type of the query. The available options are:
		auth: query with authentication information for advanced access to the RDAP service
		unauth: query without authentication information for basic access to the RDAP service
		[Optional, default = DEFAULT_TYPE]

	-o or --output  string
		The file where the rdap query response is stored. The result is appended to the file
		[Optional, default = DEFAULT_NOT_SAVE]

	-p or --pretty
		Json response in pretty format
		[Optional, default = false]

Syntax

This tool uses Spring Shell, refer to that documentation to learn more: https://docs.spring.io/spring-shell/docs/2.0.0.RELEASE/reference/htmlsingle

Spring Shell processes commands and arguments first by tag value then by order. For domain queries that order would be

domain [-n] string  [[-t] string]  [[-o] string]  [-p] 

By Spring Shell priorities, the following are all equivalent.

domain test.cc auth

domain --name test.cc --type auth

domain --type auth --name test.cc

It is recommended to use the tags with the commands in order to ensure that the command is not order specific and make it easier to catch errors.

Error Example:

The following command is invalid (-type should be --type). This command will query the server with name=-type, type=auth, and output=test.cc and return an unpredictable result.

Unauthenticated> domain -type auth test.cc
{"notices":...}

However, providing a command with the tag parameters results in catching the error due to no depedency on the order of parameters.

Unauthenticated> domain -type auth --name test.cc
Unsupported command.

Batch Execution

The script command allows support for batch-style execution of RDAP queries. In this mode, you must specify a single query per line, where each query supports the same format as it does when executed individually in the console.

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Verisign Labs’ RDAP client POC based on - OAuth 2.0 Device Flow for Browserless and Input Constrained Devices

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