1.4 KiB
1.4 KiB
layout | title | parent | nav_order |
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default | Using Remote-User header for SSO with Jira | Community | 2 |
Using Remote-User header for SSO with Jira
You can make Jira auto-login to the user that is currently logged in to authelia. I say "auto-login" as I couldn't find any plugin to actually be authentication provider through HTTP headers only - LDAP though seems to have support.
So this guide is targeted to authelia users that don't use any other authentication backend.
I'm using traefik with docker as an example, but any proxy that can forward
authelia Remote-User
header is fine.
First of all, users should exist on both Authelia and Jira, and have the same username for this to work. Also you will have to pay for a plugin.
After both steps are done:
- Add
traefik.http.middlewares.authelia.forwardauth.authResponseHeaders=Remote-User
in the labels of authelia - Add
traefik.http.routers.jira.middlewares=authelia@docker
in the labels of Jira (to actually enable Authelia for the Jira instance) - Install EasySSO in Jira
- Go to EasySSO preferences and add the "Remote-User" header under HTTP and tick the "Username" checkbox.
- Save
Other Systems
While this guide is tailored for Jira, you can use a similar method with many other services like Jenkins and Grafana.