authelia/docs/configuration/access-control.md

162 lines
5.2 KiB
Markdown
Raw Normal View History

---
layout: default
title: Access Control
parent: Configuration
nav_order: 1
---
# Access Control
{: .no_toc }
## Access Control List
With **Authelia** you can define a list of rules that are going to be evaluated in
sequential order when authorization is delegated to Authelia.
The first matching rule of the list defines the policy applied to the resource, if
no rule matches the resource a customizable default policy is applied.
## Access Control Rule
A rule defines two things:
* the matching criteria of the request presented to the reverse proxy
* the policy applied when all criteria match.
The criteria are:
* domain: domain targeted by the request.
* resources: list of patterns that the path should match (one is sufficient).
* subject: the user or group of users to define the policy for.
* networks: the network addresses, ranges (CIDR notation) or groups from where the request originates.
A rule is matched when all criteria of the rule match.
## Policies
A policy represents the level of authentication the user needs to pass before
being authorized to request the resource.
There exist 4 policies:
* bypass: the resource is public as the user does not need any authentication to
get access to it.
* one_factor: the user needs to pass at least the first factor to get access to
the resource.
* two_factor: the user needs to pass two factors to get access to the resource.
* deny: the user does not have access to the resource.
## Domains
The domains defined in rules must obviously be either a subdomain of the domain
protected by Authelia or the protected domain itself. In order to match multiple
subdomains, the wildcard matcher character `*.` can be used as prefix of the domain.
For instance, to define a rule for all subdomains of *example.com*, one would use
`*.example.com` in the rule. A single rule can define multiple domains for matching.
These domains can be either listed in YAML-short form `["example1.com", "example2.com"]`
or in YAML long-form as dashed list.
## Resources
A rule can define multiple regular expressions for matching the path of the resource
similar to the list of domains. If any one of them matches, the resource criteria of
the rule matches.
Note that regular expressions can be used to match a given path. However, they do not match
the query parameters in the URL, only the path.
You might also face some escaping issues preventing Authelia to start. Please make sure that
when you are using regular expressions, you enclose them between quotes. It's optional but
it will likely save you a lot of debugging time.
## Subjects
A subject is a representation of a user or a group of user for who the rule should apply.
For a user with unique identifier `john`, the subject should be `user:john` and for a group
uniquely identified by `developers`, the subject should be `group:developers`. Similar to resources
and domains you can define multiple subjects in a single rule.
If you want a combination of subjects to be matched at once using a logical `AND`, you can
specify a nested list of subjects like `- ["group:developers", "group:admins"]`.
In summary, the first list level of subjects are evaluated using a logical `OR`, whereas the
second level by a logical `AND`. The last example below reads as: the group is `dev` AND the
username is `john` OR the group is `admins`.
## Networks
A list of network addresses, ranges (CIDR notation) or groups can be specified in a rule in order to apply different
policies when requests originate from different networks.
The main use case is when, lets say a resource should be exposed both on the Internet and from an
authenticated VPN for instance. Passing a second factor a first time to get access to the VPN and
a second time to get access to the application can sometimes be cumbersome if the endpoint is not
considered overly sensitive.
Even if Authelia provides this flexibility, you might prefer a higher level of security and avoid
this option entirely. You and only you can define your security policy and it's up to you to
configure Authelia accordingly.
## Complete example
Here is a complete example of complex access control list that can be defined in Authelia.
```yaml
access_control:
default_policy: deny
networks:
- name: internal
networks:
- 10.10.0.0/16
- 192.168.2.0/24
- name: VPN
networks: 10.9.0.0/16
rules:
- domain: public.example.com
policy: bypass
- domain: secure.example.com
policy: one_factor
networks:
- internal
- VPN
- 192.168.1.0/24
- 10.0.0.1
- domain:
- secure.example.com
- private.example.com
policy: two_factor
- domain: singlefactor.example.com
policy: one_factor
- domain: "mx2.mail.example.com"
subject: "group:admins"
policy: deny
- domain: "*.example.com"
subject:
- "group:admins"
- "group:moderators"
policy: two_factor
- domain: dev.example.com
resources:
- "^/groups/dev/.*$"
subject: "group:dev"
policy: two_factor
- domain: dev.example.com
resources:
- "^/users/john/.*$"
subject:
- ["group:dev", "user:john"]
- "group:admins"
policy: two_factor
```