authelia/docs/content/en/integration/proxies/haproxy.md

13 KiB

title description lead date draft images menu weight toc aliases
HAProxy An integration guide for Authelia and the HAProxy reverse proxy A guide on integrating Authelia with the HAProxy reverse proxy. 2020-02-29T01:43:59+01:00 false
integration
parent
proxies
340 true
/i/haproxy
/docs/deployment/supported-proxies/haproxy.html

HAProxy is a reverse proxy supported by Authelia.

Important: When using these guides it's important to recognize that we cannot provide a guide for every possible method of deploying a proxy. These guides show a suggested setup only and you need to understand the proxy configuration and customize it to your needs. To-that-end we include links to the official proxy documentation throughout this documentation and in the See Also section.

Get Started

It's strongly recommended that users setting up Authelia for the first time take a look at our Get Started guide. This takes you through various steps which are essential to bootstrapping Authelia.

Requirements

You need the following to run Authelia with HAProxy:

  • HAProxy 1.8.4+ (2.2.0+ recommended) -USE_LUA=1 set at compile time
    • haproxy-lua-http must be available within the Lua path
      • A json library within the Lua path (dependency of haproxy-lua-http, usually found as OS package lua-json)
      • With HAProxy 2.1.3+ you can use the lua-prepend-path configuration option to specify the search path
    • haproxy-auth-request

Trusted Proxies

Important: You should read the Forwarded Headers section and this section as part of any proxy configuration. Especially if you have never read it before.

Important: The included example is NOT meant for production use. It's used expressly as an example to showcase how you can configure multiple IP ranges. You should customize this example to fit your specific architecture and needs. You should only include the specific IP address ranges of the trusted proxies within your architecture and should not trust entire subnets unless that subnet only has trusted proxies and no other services.

With HAProxy the most convenient method to configure trusted proxies is to create a src ACL from the contents of a file. The example utilizes this method and trusted proxies can then easily be added or removed from the ACL file.

HAProxy implicitly trusts all external proxies by default so it's important you configure this for a trusted environment.

HAProxy by default does trust all other proxies. This means it's essential that you configure this correctly.

In the example we have a trusted_proxies.src.acl file which is used by one http-request del-header X-Forwarded-For line in the main configuration which shows an example of not trusting any proxies or alternatively an example on adding the following networks to the trusted proxy list in HAProxy:

  • 10.0.0.0/8
  • 172.16.0.0/12
  • 192.168.0.0/16
  • fc00::/7

Assumptions and Adaptation

This guide makes a few assumptions. These assumptions may require adaptation in more advanced and complex scenarios. We can not reasonably have examples for every advanced configuration option that exists. The following are the assumptions we make:

  • Deployment Scenario:
    • Single Host
    • Authelia is deployed as a Container with the container name authelia on port 9091
    • Proxy is deployed as a Container on a network shared with Authelia
  • The above assumption means that AUthelia should be accesible to the proxy on http://authelia:9091 and as such:
    • You will have to adapt all instances of the above URL to be https:// if Authelia configuration has a TLS key and certificate defined
    • You will have to adapt all instances of authelia in the URL if:
      • you're using a different container name
      • you deployed the proxy to a different location
    • You will have to adapt all instances of 9091 in the URL if:
      • you have adjusted the default port in the configuration
    • You will have to adapt the entire URL if:
      • Authelia is on a different host to the proxy
  • All services are part of the example.com domain:
    • This domain and the subdomains will have to be adapted in all examples to match your specific domains unless you're just testing or you want ot use that specific domain

Implementation

HAProxy utilizes the ForwardAuth Authz implementation. The associated Metadata should be considered required.

The examples below assume you are using the default Authz Endpoints Configuration or one similar to the following minimal configuration:

server:
  endpoints:
    authz:
      forward-auth:
        implementation: ForwardAuth

Configuration

Below you will find commented examples of the following configuration:

  • Authelia Portal
  • Protected Endpoints (Nextcloud)

With this configuration you can protect your virtual hosts with Authelia, by following the steps below:

  1. Add host(s) to the protected-frontends ACLs to support protection with Authelia. You can separate each subdomain with a | in the regex, for example:

    acl protected-frontends hdr(host) -m reg -i ^(?i)(jenkins|nextcloud|phpmyadmin)\.example\.com
    
  2. Add host ACL(s) in the form of host-service, this will be utilised to route to the correct backend upon successful authentication, for example:

    acl host-jenkins hdr(host) -i jenkins.example.com
    acl host-nextcloud hdr(host) -i nextcloud.example.com
    acl host-phpmyadmin hdr(host) -i phpmyadmin.example.com
    acl host-heimdall hdr(host) -i heimdall.example.com
    
  3. Add backend route for your service(s), for example:

    use_backend be_jenkins if host-jenkins
    use_backend be_nextcloud if host-nextcloud
    use_backend be_phpmyadmin if host-phpmyadmin
    use_backend be_heimdall if host-heimdall
    
  4. Add backend definitions for your service(s), for example:

    backend be_jenkins
        server jenkins jenkins:8080
    backend be_nextcloud
        server nextcloud nextcloud:443 ssl verify none
    backend be_phpmyadmin
        server phpmyadmin phpmyadmin:80
    backend be_heimdall
        server heimdall heimdall:443 ssl verify none
    

Secure Authelia with TLS

There is a known limitation with haproxy-auth-request with regard to TLS-enabled backends. If you want to run Authelia TLS enabled the recommended workaround utilises HAProxy itself to proxy the requests. This comes at a cost of two additional TCP connections, but allows the full HAProxy configuration flexibility with regard to TLS verification as well as header rewriting. An example of this configuration is also be provided below.

Configuration

trusted_proxies.src.acl
10.0.0.0/8
172.16.0.0/12
192.168.0.0/16
fc00::/7
haproxy.cfg
global
    # Path to haproxy-lua-http, below example assumes /usr/local/etc/haproxy/haproxy-lua-http/http.lua
    lua-prepend-path /usr/local/etc/haproxy/?/http.lua
    # Path to haproxy-auth-request
    lua-load /usr/local/etc/haproxy/auth-request.lua
    log stdout format raw local0 debug

defaults
    mode http
    log global
    option httplog

frontend fe_http
    bind *:443 ssl crt example.com.pem

    ## Trusted Proxies.
    http-request del-header X-Forwarded-For

    ## Comment the above directive and the two directives below to enable the trusted proxies ACL.
    # acl src-trusted_proxies src -f trusted_proxies.src.acl
    # http-request del-header X-Forwarded-For if !src-trusted_proxies

    ## Ensure X-Forwarded-For is set for the auth request.
    acl hdr-xff_exists req.hdr(X-Forwarded-For) -m found
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-For %[src] if !hdr-xff_exists
    option forwardfor

    # Host ACLs
    acl protected-frontends hdr(Host) -m reg -i ^(?i)(nextcloud|heimdall)\.example\.com
    acl host-authelia hdr(Host) -i auth.example.com
    acl host-nextcloud hdr(Host) -i nextcloud.example.com
    acl host-heimdall hdr(Host) -i heimdall.example.com

    http-request set-var(req.scheme) str(https) if { ssl_fc }
    http-request set-var(req.scheme) str(http) if !{ ssl_fc }
    http-request set-var(req.questionmark) str(?) if { query -m found }

    # Required Headers
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Method %[method]
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Proto  %[var(req.scheme)]
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Host   %[req.hdr(Host)]
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-URI    %[path]%[var(req.questionmark)]%[query]

    # Protect endpoints with haproxy-auth-request and Authelia
    http-request lua.auth-intercept be_authelia /api/authz/forward-auth HEAD * authorization,proxy-authorization,remote_user,remote-user,remote-groups,remote-name,remote-email - if protected-frontends
    http-request redirect location %[var(txn.auth_response_location)] if protected-frontends !{ var(txn.auth_response_successful) -m bool }

    # Authelia backend route
    use_backend be_authelia if host-authelia

    # Service backend route(s)
    use_backend be_nextcloud if host-nextcloud
    use_backend be_heimdall if host-heimdall

backend be_authelia
    server authelia authelia:9091

backend be_nextcloud
    ## Pass the Set-Cookie response headers to the user.
    acl set_cookie_exist var(req.auth_response_header.set_cookie) -m found
    http-response set-header Set-Cookie %[var(req.auth_response_header.set_cookie)] if set_cookie_exist

    server nextcloud nextcloud:443 ssl verify none

backend be_heimdall
    ## Pass the Set-Cookie response headers to the user.
    acl set_cookie_exist var(req.auth_response_header.set_cookie) -m found
    http-response set-header Set-Cookie %[var(req.auth_response_header.set_cookie)] if set_cookie_exist

    server heimdall heimdall:443 ssl verify none
haproxy.cfg (TLS enabled Authelia)
global
    # Path to haproxy-lua-http, below example assumes /usr/local/etc/haproxy/haproxy-lua-http/http.lua
    lua-prepend-path /usr/local/etc/haproxy/?/http.lua
    # Path to haproxy-auth-request
    lua-load /usr/local/etc/haproxy/auth-request.lua
    log stdout format raw local0 debug

defaults
    mode http
    log global
    option httplog
    option forwardfor

frontend fe_http
    bind *:443 ssl crt /usr/local/etc/haproxy/haproxy.pem

    ## Trusted Proxies.
    http-request del-header X-Forwarded-For

    ## Comment the above directive and the two directives below to enable the trusted proxies ACL.
    # acl src-trusted_proxies src -f trusted_proxies.src.acl
    # http-request del-header X-Forwarded-For if !src-trusted_proxies

    ## Ensure X-Forwarded-For is set for the auth request.
    acl hdr-xff_exists req.hdr(X-Forwarded-For) -m found
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-For %[src] if !hdr-xff_exists
    option forwardfor

    # Host ACLs
    acl protected-frontends hdr(Host) -m reg -i ^(?i)(nextcloud|heimdall)\.example\.com
    acl host-authelia hdr(Host) -i auth.example.com
    acl host-nextcloud hdr(Host) -i nextcloud.example.com
    acl host-heimdall hdr(Host) -i heimdall.example.com

    http-request set-var(req.scheme) str(https) if { ssl_fc }
    http-request set-var(req.scheme) str(http) if !{ ssl_fc }
    http-request set-var(req.questionmark) str(?) if { query -m found }

    # Required Headers
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Method %[method]
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Proto  %[var(req.scheme)]
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-Host   %[req.hdr(Host)]
    http-request set-header X-Forwarded-URI    %[path]%[var(req.questionmark)]%[query]

    # Protect endpoints with haproxy-auth-request and Authelia
    http-request lua.auth-intercept be_authelia_proxy /api/authz/forward-auth HEAD * authorization,proxy-authorization,remote_user,remote-user,remote-groups,remote-name,remote-email - if protected-frontends
    http-request redirect location %[var(txn.auth_response_location)] if protected-frontends !{ var(txn.auth_response_successful) -m bool }

    # Authelia backend route
    use_backend be_authelia if host-authelia

    # Service backend route(s)
    use_backend be_nextcloud if host-nextcloud
    use_backend be_heimdall if host-heimdall

backend be_authelia
    server authelia authelia:9091

backend be_authelia_proxy
    mode http
    server proxy 127.0.0.1:9092

listen authelia_proxy
    mode http
    bind 127.0.0.1:9092
    server authelia authelia:9091 ssl verify none

backend be_nextcloud
    ## Pass the Set-Cookie response headers to the user.
    acl set_cookie_exist var(req.auth_response_header.set_cookie) -m found
    http-response set-header Set-Cookie %[var(req.auth_response_header.set_cookie)] if set_cookie_exist

    server nextcloud nextcloud:443 ssl verify none

backend be_heimdall
    ## Pass the Set-Cookie response headers to the user.
    acl set_cookie_exist var(req.auth_response_header.set_cookie) -m found
    http-response set-header Set-Cookie %[var(req.auth_response_header.set_cookie)] if set_cookie_exist

    server heimdall heimdall:443 ssl verify none

See Also