dacdce6c50
This timeout will prevent an attacker from using a session that has been inactive for too long. This inactivity timeout combined with the timeout before expiration makes a good combination of security mechanisms to prevent session theft. If no activity timeout is provided, then the feature is disabled and only session expiration remains as a protection. |
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doc | ||
example | ||
images | ||
scripts | ||
server | ||
shared | ||
test/features | ||
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CONTRIBUTORS.md | ||
Dockerfile | ||
Gruntfile.js | ||
LICENSE | ||
README.md | ||
config.template.yml | ||
docker-compose.base.yml | ||
docker-compose.dev.yml | ||
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package.json |
README.md
Authelia
Authelia is a complete HTTP 2-factor authentication server for proxies like nginx. It has been made to work with nginx auth_request module and is currently used in production to secure internal services in a small docker swarm cluster.
Table of Contents
- Features summary
- Deployment
- Getting started
- Features in details
- Security
- Documentation
- Contributing to Authelia
- License
Features summary
- Two-factor authentication using either TOTP - Time-Base One Time password - or U2F - Universal 2-Factor - as 2nd factor.
- Password reset with identity verification by sending links to user email address.
- Two-factor and basic authentication methods available.
- Access restriction after too many authentication attempts.
- Session management using Redis key/value store.
- User-defined access control per subdomain and resource.
Deployment
If you don't have any LDAP and/or nginx setup yet, I advise you to follow the Getting Started section. That way, you can test it right away without even configuring anything.
Otherwise, here are the available steps to deploy Authelia on your machine given your configuration file is /path/to/your/config.yml. Note that you can create your own the configuration file from config.template.yml at the root of the repo.
With NPM
npm install -g authelia
authelia /path/to/your/config.yml
With Docker
docker pull clems4ever/authelia
docker run -v /path/to/your/config.yml:/etc/authelia/config.yml -v /path/to/data/dir:/var/lib/authelia clems4ever/authelia
where /path/to/data/dir is the directory where all user data will be stored.
Getting started
The provided example is docker-based so that you can deploy and test it very quickly.
Pre-requisites
npm
Make sure you have npm and node installed on your computer.
Docker
Make sure you have docker and docker-compose installed on your machine. For your information, here are the versions that have been used for testing:
docker --version
gave Docker version 17.03.1-ce, build c6d412e.
docker-compose --version
gave docker-compose version 1.14.0, build c7bdf9e.
Available port
Make sure you don't have anything listening on port 8080 (webserver) and 8085 (webmail).
Subdomain aliases
Add the following lines to your /etc/hosts to alias multiple subdomains so that nginx can redirect request to the correct virtual host.
127.0.0.1 home.test.local
127.0.0.1 public.test.local
127.0.0.1 dev.test.local
127.0.0.1 admin.test.local
127.0.0.1 mx1.mail.test.local
127.0.0.1 mx2.mail.test.local
127.0.0.1 auth.test.local
Run it!
Deploy the Authelia example with one of the following commands:
Build Docker container from current commit:
npm install --only=dev
./node_modules/.bin/grunt build-dist
./scripts/example-commit/deploy-example.sh
Use provided container on DockerHub:
./scripts/example-dockerhub/deploy-example.sh
After few seconds the services should be running and you should be able to visit https://home.test.local:8080/.
When accessing the login page, a self-signed certificate exception should appear, it has to be trusted before you can get to the target page. The certificate must also be trusted for each subdomain, therefore it is normal to see the exception several times.
Below is what the login page looks like:
Features in details
First factor using an LDAP server
Authelia uses an LDAP server as the backend for storing credentials. When authentication is needed, the user is redirected to the login page which corresponds to the first factor. Authelia tries to bind the username and password against the configured LDAP backend.
You can find an example of the configuration of the LDAP backend in config.template.yml.
Second factor with TOTP
In Authelia, you can register a per user TOTP (Time-Based One Time Password) secret before authenticating. To do that, you need to click on the register button. It will send a link to the user email address stored in LDAP. Since this is an example, the email is sent to a fake email address you can access from the webmail at http://localhost:8085. Click on Continue and you'll get your secret in QRCode and Base32 formats. You can use Google Authenticator to store them and get the generated tokens with the app.
Note: If you're testing with npm, you will not have access to the fake webmail. You can use the filesystem notifier (option available config.template.yml) that will create a file containing the validation URL instead of sending an email. Please only use it for testing.
Second factor with U2F security keys
Authelia also offers authentication using U2F (Universal 2-Factor) devices like Yubikey USB security keys. U2F is one of the most secure authentication protocol and is already available for Google, Facebook, Github accounts and more.
Like TOTP, U2F requires you register your security key before authenticating. To do so, click on the register button. This will send a link to the user email address. Since this is an example, the email is sent to a fake email address you can access from the webmail at http://localhost:8085. Click on Continue and you'll be asking to touch the token of your device to register. Upon successful registration, you can authenticate using your U2F device by simply touching the token. Easy, right?!
Note: If you're testing with npm, you will not have access to the fake webmail. You can use the filesystem notifier (option available config.template.yml) that will create a file containing the validation URL instead of sending an email. Please only use it for testing.
Password reset
With Authelia, you can also reset your password in no time. Click on the Forgot password? link in the login page, provide the username of the user requiring a password reset and Authelia will send an email with an link to the user email address. For the sake of the example, the email is delivered in a fake webmail deployed for you and accessible at http://localhost:8085. Paste the link in your browser and you should be able to reset the password.
Note: If you're testing with npm, you will not have access to the fake webmail. You can use the filesystem notifier (option available config.template.yml) that will create a file containing the validation URL instead of sending an email. Please only use it for testing.
Access Control
With Authelia, you can define your own access control rules for finely restricting user access to some resources and subdomains. Those rules are defined and fully documented in the configuration file. They can apply to users, groups or everyone. Check out config.template.yml to see how they are defined.
Basic Authentication
Authelia allows you to customize the authentication method to use for each sub-domain. The supported methods are either "basic_auth" and "two_factor". Please see config.template.yml to see an example of configuration.
Session management with Redis
When your users authenticate against Authelia, sessions are stored in a Redis key/value store. You can specify your own Redis instance in config.template.yml.
Security
Protection against cookie theft
Authelia uses two mechanism to protect against cookie theft:
- session attribute
httpOnly
set to true make client-side code unable to read the cookie. - session attribute
secure
ensure the cookie will never be sent over an unsecure HTTP connections.
Protection against multi-domain cookie attacks
Since Authelia uses multi-domain cookies to perform single sign-on, an attacker who poisonned a user's DNS cache can easily retrieve the user's cookies by making the user send a request to one of the attacker's IPs.
To mitigate this risk, it's advisable to only use HTTPS connections with valid certificates and enforce it with HTTP Strict Transport Security (HSTS) so that the attacker must also require the certificate to retrieve the cookies.
Note that using HSTS has consequences. That's why you should read the blog post nginx has written on HSTS.
Documentation
Authelia configuration
The configuration of the server is defined in the file config.template.yml. All the details are documented there. You can specify another configuration file by giving it as first argument of Authelia.
authelia config.custom.yml
API documentation
There is a complete API documentation generated with apiDoc and embedded in the repo under the doc/ directory. Simply open index.html locally to watch it.
Contributing to Authelia
Follow contributing file.
License
Authelia is licensed under the MIT License. The terms of the license are as follows:
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2016 - Clement Michaud
Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy
of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal
in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights
to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell
copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is
furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:
The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in
all copies or substantial portions of the Software.
THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR
IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY,
FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE
AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY,
WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN
CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.