Multiple JWT providers
Allow JWT credentials from multiple providers.
Then, users can include any valid JWT from any provider to access your secured services. You might use multiple providers when you want to extract different claims for different issuers, such as subdomains on your website. For more information about JWTs, see the JWT overview and API docs.
If you import or export resources across workspaces, your policies might not apply. For more information, see Import and export policies.
Before you begin
This guide assumes that you use the same names for components like clusters, workspaces, and namespaces as in the getting started. If you have different names, make sure to update the sample configuration files in this guide.
- Set up Gloo Mesh Gateway in a single cluster.
- Install Bookinfo and other sample apps.
Configure an HTTP listener on your gateway and set up basic routing for the sample apps.
Get the external address of your ingress gateway. The steps vary depending on the type of load balancer that backs the ingress gateway.
export INGRESS_GW_ADDRESS=$(kubectl get svc -n gloo-mesh-gateways istio-ingressgateway -o jsonpath="{.status.loadBalancer.ingress[0]['hostname','ip']}")
echo $INGRESS_GW_ADDRESS
Note: Depending on your environment, you might see <pending>
instead of an external IP address. For example, if you are testing locally in kind or minikube, or if you have insufficient permissions in your cloud platform, you can instead port-forward the service port of the ingress gateway:
kubectl -n gloo-mesh-gateways port-forward deploy/istio-ingressgateway-1-22 8081
Configure JWT policies
For multiple JWT providers, you can add the providers to the same JWT policy as shown in the following example. You can also create separate JWT policies for each provider. You can apply a JWT policy at the destination or route level, but you cannot apply multiple JWT policies to the same destination or to the same route in a route table. If you try to apply multiple policies, only the policy that you created first takes effect. In general, you apply policies to routes to protect ingress traffic through the gateway, and to destinations to protect traffic within the service mesh. For more information, see Applying policies.
The following example is for a basic JWT policy with multiple providers that use a local JWT issuer and inline public key. The policy does the following:
- Enables JWT authentication for the selected routes.
- Configures two providers for different issuing subdomains in your organization: the
dev-example
forhttps://dev.example.com
andlogin-example
forhttps://login.example.com
. - For both providers, adds the value of an
org
claim from the JWT payload to anX-Org
header in the request, if present. - For both providers, adds the value of an
email
claim from the JWT payload to anX-Email
header in the request, if present. - For only the docs provider, adds the value of a
scope
claim from the JWT payload to anX-Scope
header in the request, if present. - Checks requests by using the token found in the
X-Auth
header with the prefixBearer <token>
, or in a query parameterauth_token=<token>
. Note that if a request has both the header and query parameter, both tokens must be valid for Gloo Mesh Gateway to accept the request.
Review the following table to understand this configuration. For more information, see the API docs.
Setting | Description |
---|---|
applyToRoutes | Use labels to configure which routes to apply the policy to. This example label matches the app and route from the example route table that you apply separately. If omitted and you do not have another selector such as applyToDestinations , the policy applies to all routes in the workspace. |
phase | Set when to apply the JWT filter in the request chain, either before (preAuthz ) or after (postAuthz ) authorization to have access to the JWT token. You can also set the priority if you have multiple policies in the same phase. The lowest numbered priority is run first. For more information, see Phase considerations. This example sets no priority, so the default value of zero is used. |
providers | Set up multiple JWT providers for the policy. You can name the providers to help you map the provider when viewing logs to debug. However, the provider name does not affect the policy’s behavior and cannot be used by other resources to select the policy. In this example, two providers are set up, with the names dev-example and login-example . |
claimsToHeaders | Optionally set the claims from the JWT payload that you want to extract and add as headers to the request before the request is forwarded to the upstream destination. This example extracts the same two org and email claims and adds them as headers for both providers. The login-example also has an additional scope claim. |
claimsToHeaders.append | Enter a boolean value to add a claim’s value if the header exists in the request. Use true to append the claim’s value to the header, and false to overwrite any existing value in the header. |
claimsToHeaders.claim | Enter the name of the claim in the JWT payload to get the value for the header. |
claimsToHeaders.header | Enter the request header that the value of the claim is copied to. |
issuer | Optionally, set the JWT issuer, usually as a subdomain of a URL or email address. If set, the iss field in the JWT token must match this field, or else the request is denied. If unset, the iss field in the JWT token is not checked. In this example, the issuer is set to a unique URL per provider, dev.example.com or docs.example.com . |
keepToken | This value is set to true so that the JWT is kept in the request after verification. This way, other policies can use the JWT information as needed. |
local | Provide the PEM-formatted public key to verify the JWT token. In this example, the public key is written inline to the policy for testing purposes. For production scenarios, you can set a remote reference to your JSON Web Key Set (JWKS) server instead of this local setting. |
Try out JWT policies
For quick testing, you can use sample keys with dev-example
and login-example
JWTs. For more details about the sample JWT, see the GitHub readme.
Apply the JWT policy. For more information about this policy, see the configuration example.
https://gist.githubusercontent.com/artberger/be2ceeac3f1c794946246a3d777a024c/raw/fb949d71295ca755fb6f4bb9f4d5c9839b14eaf3/jwt-policy-multi.yaml
Send a request to the
httpbin
app without any authentication. Notice that your request is denied with a401
error.- HTTP:
curl -vik -H "X-httpbin: true" --resolve www.example.com:80:${INGRESS_GW_ADDRESS} http://www.example.com:80/get
- HTTPS:
curl -vik -H "X-httpbin: true" --resolve www.example.com:443:${INGRESS_GW_ADDRESS} https://www.example.com:443/get
Example output:
HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized www-authenticate: Bearer realm="http://www.example.com/get" ... Jwt is missing
- HTTP:
Get a sample JWT that is preconfigured to meet the validation requirements that you set in the JWT policy for the
dev-example
provider.TOKEN=$(curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/solo-io/gloo-mesh-use-cases/main/gloo-gateway/jwt/dev-example.jwt -s) && echo "$TOKEN" | cut -d '.' -f2 - | base64 --decode
Example output:
{"iss":"https://dev.example.com","exp":4804324736,"iat":1648651136,"org":"internal","email":"dev1@solo.io","group":"engineering","scope":"is:developer%
Try the request to the
httpbin
app again, this time with yourdev-example
token. Notice that your request is now accepted!- HTTP:
curl -vik -H "X-Auth: Bearer ${TOKEN}" -H "X-httpbin: true" --resolve www.example.com:80:${INGRESS_GW_ADDRESS} http://www.example.com:80/get
- HTTPS:
curl -vik -H "X-Auth: Bearer ${TOKEN}" -H "X-httpbin: true" --resolve www.example.com:443:${INGRESS_GW_ADDRESS} https://www.example.com:443/get
In the example output you get back a
200
response. You also can see theX-Email
andX-Org
headers that you appended in theclaimsToHeaders
section of the policy.HTTP/1.1 200 OK ... { "args": {}, "headers": { "Accept": "*/*", "Host": "www.example.com", "X-Email": "dev1@solo.io", "X-Envoy-Attempt-Count": "1", "X-Envoy-Decorator-Operation": "httpbin.default.svc.cluster.local:8000/*", "X-Envoy-Internal": "true", "X-Httpbin": "true", "X-Org": "internal" },
- HTTP:
Get another sample JWT that is preconfigured to meet the validation requirements that you set in the JWT policy for the
login-example
provider.TOKEN_LOGIN=$(curl https://raw.githubusercontent.com/solo-io/gloo-mesh-use-cases/main/gloo-gateway/jwt/login-example.jwt -s) && echo "$TOKEN_LOGIN" | cut -d '.' -f2 - | base64 --decode -
Example output:
{"iss":"https://login.example.com","exp":4804324736,"iat":1648651136,"org":"external","email":"user2@example.com","group":"user","scope":"is:reader%
Try the request to the
httpbin
app again, this time with yourlogin-example
token. This request is also accepted, but the output differs from the request that used thedev-example
token.- HTTP:
curl -vik -H "X-Auth: Bearer ${TOKEN_LOGIN}" -H "X-httpbin: true" --resolve www.example.com:80:${INGRESS_GW_ADDRESS} http://www.example.com:80/get
- HTTPS:
curl -vik -H "X-Auth: Bearer ${TOKEN_LOGIN}" -H "X-httpbin: true" --resolve www.example.com:443:${INGRESS_GW_ADDRESS} https://www.example.com:443/get
In the example output you get back a
200
response. You also can see theX-Email
,X-Org
, andX-Scope
headers that you appended in theclaimsToHeaders
section of the policy.HTTP/1.1 200 OK ... { "args": {}, "headers": { "Accept": "*/*", "Host": "www.example.com", "X-Email": "user2@example.com", "X-Envoy-Attempt-Count": "1", "X-Envoy-Decorator-Operation": "httpbin.default.svc.cluster.local:8000/*", "X-Envoy-Internal": "true", "X-Httpbin": "true", "X-Org": "external", "X-Scope": "is:reader" },
- HTTP:
Cleanup
You can optionally remove the resources that you set up as part of this guide.
kubectl delete jwtpolicy -n httpbin jwt-policy