Huge News!Announcing our $40M Series B led by Abstract Ventures.Learn More
Socket
Sign inDemoInstall
Socket

org.cloudfoundry.identity:cloudfoundry-identity-statsd

Package Overview
Dependencies
Maintainers
1
Alerts
File Explorer

Advanced tools

Socket logo

Install Socket

Detect and block malicious and high-risk dependencies

Install

org.cloudfoundry.identity:cloudfoundry-identity-statsd

Cloud Foundry User Account and Authentication (UAA) Server

  • 4.30.0
  • Source
  • Maven
  • Socket score

Version published
Maintainers
1
Source

Slack #uaa

CloudFoundry User Account and Authentication (UAA) Server

The UAA is a multi tenant identity management service, used in Cloud Foundry, but also available as a stand alone OAuth2 server. Its primary role is as an OAuth2 provider, issuing tokens for client applications to use when they act on behalf of Cloud Foundry users. It can also authenticate users with their Cloud Foundry credentials, and can act as an SSO service using those credentials (or others). It has endpoints for managing user accounts and for registering OAuth2 clients, as well as various other management functions.

UAA Server

The authentication service is uaa. It's a plain Spring MVC webapp. Deploy as normal in Tomcat or your container of choice, or execute ./gradlew run to run it directly from uaa directory in the source tree. When running with gradle it listens on port 8080 and the URL is http://localhost:8080/uaa

The UAA Server supports the APIs defined in the UAA-APIs document. To summarise:

  1. The OAuth2 /oauth/authorize and /oauth/token endpoints

  2. A /login_info endpoint to allow querying for required login prompts

  3. A /check_token endpoint, to allow resource servers to obtain information about an access token submitted by an OAuth2 client.

  4. A /token_key endpoint, to allow resource servers to obtain the verification key to verify token signatures

  5. SCIM user provisioning endpoint

  6. OpenID connect endpoints to support authentication /userinfo. Partial OpenID support.

Authentication can be performed by command line clients by submitting credentials directly to the /oauth/authorize endpoint (as described in UAA-API doc). There is an ImplicitAccessTokenProvider in Spring Security OAuth that can do the heavy lifting if your client is Java.

Use Cases

  1. Authenticate

     GET /login
    

    A basic form login interface.

  2. Approve OAuth2 token grant

     GET /oauth/authorize?client_id=app&response_type=code...
    

    Standard OAuth2 Authorization Endpoint.

  3. Obtain access token

     POST /oauth/token
    

    Standard OAuth2 Authorization Endpoint.

Co-ordinates

Quick Start

Requirements:

  • Java 17

If this works you are in business:

$ git clone git://github.com/cloudfoundry/uaa.git
$ cd uaa
$ ./gradlew run

The apps all work together with the apps running on the same port (8080) as /uaa, /app and /api.

UAA will log to a file called uaa.log which can be found using the following command:-

$ sudo lsof | grep uaa.log

which you should find under something like:-

$TMPDIR/cargo/conf/logs/

Demo of command line usage on local server

First run the UAA server as described above:

$ ./gradlew run

From another terminal you can use curl to verify that UAA has started by requesting system information:

$ curl --silent --show-error --head localhost:8080/uaa/login | head -1
HTTP/1.1 200

For complex requests it is more convenient to interact with UAA using uaac, the UAA Command Line Client.

Debugging local server

To load JDWP agent for UAA jvm debugging, start the server as follows:

./gradlew run -Dxdebug=true

or

./gradlew -Dspring.profiles.active=default,hsqldb,debug run

You can then attach your debugger to port 5005 of the jvm process.

To suspend the server start-up until the debugger is attached (useful for debugging start-up code), start the server as follows:

./gradlew run -Dxdebugs=true

or

./gradlew -Dspring.profiles.active=default,hsqldb,debugs run

Running local UAA server with different databases

./gradlew run runs the UAA server with hsqldb database by default.

MySql

  1. Start the mysql server (e.g. a mysql docker container)
% docker run --name mysql1 -e MYSQL_ROOT_PASSWORD=changeme -d -p3306:3306 mysql
  1. Create the uaa database (e.g. in mysql interactive session)
% mysql -h 127.0.0.1 -u root -p
...
mysql> create database uaa;
  1. Run the UAA server with the mysql profile
% ./gradlew -Dspring.profiles.active=mysql,default run

PostgreSQL

  1. Start the postgresql server (e.g. a postgres docker container)
docker run --name postgres1 -p 5432:5432 -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=mysecretpassword -d postgres
  1. Create the uaa database (e.g. in psql interactive session)
% psql -h 127.0.0.1 -U postgres
create database uaa;
create user root with superuser password 'changeme';
  1. Run the UAA server with the postgresql profile
% ./gradlew -Dspring.profiles.active=postgresql,default run
  1. Once the UAA server started, you can see the tables created in the uaa database (e.g. in psql interactive session)
\c uaa
psql (14.5 (Homebrew), server 15.0 (Debian 15.0-1.pgdg110+1))
WARNING: psql major version 14, server major version 15.
         Some psql features might not work.
You are now connected to database "uaa" as user "postgres".
\d
List of relations
 Schema |             Name              |   Type   | Owner
--------+-------------------------------+----------+-------
 public | authz_approvals               | table    | root
 public | expiring_code_store           | table    | root
 public | external_group_mapping        | table    | root
 public | external_group_mapping_id_seq | sequence | root
 public | group_membership              | table    | root
 public | group_membership_id_seq       | sequence | root
 public | groups                        | table    | root
 public | identity_provider             | table    | root
 public | identity_zone                 | table    | root
 public | oauth_client_details          | table    | root
 public | oauth_code                    | table    | root
 public | oauth_code_id_seq             | sequence | root
 public | revocable_tokens              | table    | root
 public | schema_version                | table    | root
 public | sec_audit                     | table    | root
 public | sec_audit_id_seq              | sequence | root
 public | spring_session                | table    | root
 public | spring_session_attributes     | table    | root
 public | user_info                     | table    | root
 public | users                         | table    | root
(23 rows)

Running tests

You can run the integration tests with docker

$ run-integration-tests.sh <dbtype>

will create a docker container running uaa + ldap + database whereby integration tests are run against.

Using Gradle to test with postgresql or mysql

The default uaa unit tests (./gradlew test integrationTest) use hsqldb.

To run the unit tests with docker:

$ run-unit-tests.sh <dbtype>

To run a single test

The default uaa unit tests (./gradlew test) use hsqldb.

Start by finding out which gradle project your test belongs to. You can find all project by running

$ ./gradlew projects

To run a specific test class, you can specify the module and the test class.

$ ./gradlew :<project name>:test --tests <TestClass>.<MethodName>

In this example, it's running only the JdbcScimGroupMembershipManagerTests tests in the cloudfoundry-identity-server module:

$ ./gradlew :cloudfoundry-identity-server:test \
--tests "org.cloudfoundry.identity.uaa.scim.jdbc.JdbcScimGroupMembershipManagerTests"

or to run all tests in a Class

$ ./gradlew :<project name>:test --tests <TestClass>

You might want to use the full gradle command found at the bottom of the scripts/unit-tests.sh script by prepending the project name to the test command and adding the --tests option.

Building war file

$ ./gradlew :clean :assemble -Pversion=${UAA_VERSION}

Inventory

There are actually several projects here, the main uaa server application, a client library and some samples:

  1. uaa a WAR project for easy deployment

  2. server a JAR project containing the implementation of UAA's REST API (including SCIM) and UI

  3. model a JAR project used by both the client library and server

  4. api (sample) is an OAuth2 resource service which returns a mock list of deployed apps

  5. app (sample) is a user application that uses both of the above

In CloudFoundry terms

  • uaa provides an authentication service plus authorized delegation for back-end services and apps (by issuing OAuth2 access tokens).

  • api is a service that provides resources that other applications may wish to access on behalf of the resource owner (the end user).

  • app is a webapp that needs single sign on and access to the api service on behalf of users.

Running the UAA on Kubernetes

Prerequisites

The Kubernetes deployment is in active development. You should expect frequent (and possibly breaking) changes. This section will be updated as progress is made on this feature set. As of now:

The K8s directory contains ytt templates that can be rendered and applied to a K8s cluster.

In development, this Makefile can be used for common rendering and deployment activities.

In production, you'll most likely want to use ytt directly. Something like this should get you going:

$ ytt -f templates -f values/default-values.yml | kubectl apply -f -

If you'd like to overide some of those values, you can do so by taking advantage of YTT's overlay functionality.

$ ytt -f templates -f values/default-values.yml -f your-dir/production-values.yml | kubectl apply -f -

Of course, you can always abandon the default values altogether and provide your own values file.

Contributing to the UAA

Here are some ways for you to get involved in the community:

  • Join uaa on slack #uaa
  • Create github tickets for bugs and new features and comment and vote on the ones that you are interested in.
  • Github is for social coding: if you want to write code, we encourage contributions through pull requests from forks of this repository. If you want to contribute code this way, please reference an existing issue if there is one as well covering the specific issue you are addressing. Always submit pull requests to the "develop" branch. We strictly adhere to test driven development. We kindly ask that pull requests are accompanied with test cases that would be failing if ran separately from the pull request.
  • After you create the pull request, you can check the code metrics yourself
    in Github Actions and on Sonar. The goal for new code should be close to 100% tested and clean code: Quality Gate Status

Connecting UAA to local LDAP Server

Requirements:

To debug UAA and LDAP integrations, we use an OpenLdap docker image from VMWare's Bitnami project

  1. Modify file uaa/src/main/resources/uaa.yml and enable LDAP by uncommenting line 7, spring_profiles: ldap,default,hsqldb
  2. run docker-compose up from directory scripts/ldap
  3. From scripts/ldap verify connectivity to running OpenLdap container by running docker-confirm-ldapquery.sh
  4. Start UAA with ./gradlew run
  5. Navigate to /uaa and log in with LDAP user user01 and password password1

Use below command to clean-up container and volume:

  • docker-compose down --volumes

FAQs

Package last updated on 30 Apr 2019

Did you know?

Socket

Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.

Install

Related posts

SocketSocket SOC 2 Logo

Product

  • Package Alerts
  • Integrations
  • Docs
  • Pricing
  • FAQ
  • Roadmap
  • Changelog

Packages

npm

Stay in touch

Get open source security insights delivered straight into your inbox.


  • Terms
  • Privacy
  • Security

Made with ⚡️ by Socket Inc