OpenID Connect with Okta
For information about configuring OIDC using Okta as an Identity provider in conjunction with the Application Registration plugin, see .
Because OpenID Connect deals with user credentials, all transactions should take place over HTTPS. Although user passwords for third party identity providers are only submitted to those providers and not Kong, authentication tokens grant access to a subset of user account data and protected APIs, and should be secured. As such, you should make Kong’s proxy available via a fully-qualified domain name and add a certificate for it.
If you have not yet , go ahead and do so. Again, note that you should be able to secure this route with HTTPS, so use a hostname you have a certificate for. Add a location handled by your route as an authorized redirect URI in Okta (under the Authentication section of your app registration).
Select Web as the platform.
Fill out the Application’s Settings.
After submitting the Application configuration, the client credentials will display on the General page.
Define and configure an Authorization server. Select the API page and add an Authorization Server if you don’t have an existing one to use.
Click Save and view your Authorization Server Settings.
Some of the configurations above must use values specific to your environment:
- The URL can be found from your Authorization Server settings.
- The
redirect_uri
should be the URI you specified earlier when configuring your app. You can view and edit this from the General page for your application. - For
client_id
andclient_secret
, replaceYOUR_CLIENT_ID
andYOUR_CLIENT_SECRET
with the client ID and secret shown in your Okta application’s General page.
Visiting a URL matched by that route in a browser will now redirect to Okta’s authentication site and return you to the redirect URI after authenticating.
Additional plugin parameter to consider:
Access Restrictions
The configuration above allows users to authenticate and access the Route even though no Consumer was created for them: any user with a valid account in the directory will have access to the Route. The OIDC plugin allows this as the simplest authentication option, but you may wish to restrict access further. There are several options for this:
- Consumer Mapping
- Pseudo-Consumer Mapping
Consumer Mapping
If you need to interact with other Kong plugins using consumer information, you can add configuration that maps account data received from the identity provider to a Kong consumer. For this example, the user’s Okta’s AD account GUID is mapped to a Consumer by setting it as the on their consumer:
$ curl -i -X POST http://admin.kong.example/consumers/ \
--data username="Yoda" \
--data custom_id="e5634b31-d67f-4661-a6fb-b6cb77849bcf"
$ curl -i -X PATCH http://admin.kong.example/plugins/OIDC_PLUGIN_ID \
--data config.consumer_by="custom_id" \
Now, if a user logs into an Okta account with the GUID e5634b31-d67f-4661-a6fb-b6cb77849bcf
, Kong will apply configuration associated with the Consumer Yoda
to their requests.
This also requires that clients login using an account mapped to some Consumer, which might not be desirable (e.g., you apply OpenID Connect to a service, but only use plugins requiring a Consumer on some Routes). To deal with this, you can set the anonymous
parameter in your OIDC plugin configuration to the ID of a generic Consumer, which will then be used for all authenticated users that cannot be mapped to some other Consumer. You can alternately set consumer_optional
to true
to allow similar logins without mapping an anonymous Consumer.
Pseudo-consumers
For plugins that typically require consumers, the OIDC plugin can provide a consumer ID based on the value of a claim without mapping to an actual Consumer. Setting credential_claim
to a claim in your plugin configuration will extract the value of that claim and use it where Kong would normally use a consumer ID. Note that this may not work with all consumer-related functionality.