2.1.0 • Published 1 year ago

@programow/nest-keycloak v2.1.0

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License
MIT
Repository
bitbucket
Last release
1 year ago

Keycloak Admin Client for NestJs

A couple observations since this is not super well documented:

Enforce resource def function will receive as parameter the request when working with rest apis or the GqlExecutionContext when on GraphQL. When param is specified on that decorator, that we will try to find a resource with keycloak where 'param' = def(request) or 'param' = def(gqlcontext)

As per my tests, params doesn't seem reliable and could result in authorizing routes that shouldn't so we will avoid using it.

Fetch Resources will fetch absolutely all resources the user has access to on keycloak and attatch it to request.resources

Initialize KeycloakModule

Then on your app.module.ts

import { Module } from '@nestjs/common';
import { AppController } from './app.controller';
import KeycloakModule, { AuthGuard, ResourceGuard, RoleGuard } from 'nestjs-keycloak-admin'
import { APP_GUARD } from '@nestjs/core';

@Module({
  imports: [
    KeycloakModule.register({
      baseUrl: '',
      realmName: ''
      clientSecret: '',
      clientId: ''
    })
  ],
  controllers: [AppController],
  providers: [
    {
      provide: APP_GUARD,
      useClass: AuthGuard
    },
    {provide: APP_GUARD, useClass: ResourceGuard},
    {
      provide: APP_GUARD,
      useClass: RoleGuard,
    },
  ],
})
export class AppModule {}

Resource Management using User Managed Access (UMA)

By default nestjs-keycloak-admin supports User Managed Access for managing your resources.

import { Controller, Get, Request, ExecutionContext, Post } from '@nestjs/common'
import {
  DefineResource,
  Public,
  KeycloakService,
  FetchResources,
  Resource,
  DefineScope,
  DefineResourceEnforcer,
  UMAResource,
  Scope,
} from 'nestjs-keycloak-admin'

@Controller('/organization')
@DefineResource('organization')
export class AppController {
  constructor(private readonly keycloak: KeycloakService) {}

  @Get('/hello')
  @Public()
  sayHello(): string {
    return 'life is short.'
  }

  @Get('/')
  @FetchResources()
  findAll(@Request() req: any): Resource[] {
    return req.resources as Resource[]
  }

  @Get('/:slug')
  @DefineScope('read')
  @EnforceResource({
    def: ({ params }) => params.slug,
    param: 'slug',
  })
  findBySlug(@Request() req: any): Resource {
    return req.resource as Resource
  }

  @Post('/')
  @DefineScope('create')
  async create(@Request() req: any): Promise<Resource> {
    let resource = new Resource({
      name: 'resource',
      displayName: 'My Resource',
    } as UMAResource)
      .setOwner(req.user._id)
      .setScopes([new Scope('organization:read'), new Scope('organization:write')])
      .setType('urn:resource-server:type:organization')
      .setUris(['/organization/123'])
      .setAttributes({
        valid: true,
        types: ['customer', 'any'],
      })

    resource = await this.keycloak.resourceManager.create(resource)

    // create organization on your resource server and add link to resource.id, to access it later.

    return resource
  }
}

Decorators

Here is the decorators you can use in your controllers.

DecoratorDescription
@UserRetrieves the current Keycloak logged-in user. (must be per method, unless controller is request scoped.)
@AccessTokenRetrieves the current access token. (must be per method, unless controller is request scoped.)
@DefineResourceDefine the keycloak application resource name.
@DefineScopeDefine the keycloak resource scope (ex: 'create', 'read', 'update', 'delete')
@EnforceResource
@FetchResources
@PublicAllow any user to use the route.
@RolesKeycloak realm/application roles. Prefix any realm-level roles with "realm:" (i.e realm:admin)
  @Get('/hello')
  @Roles({roles: ['realm:admin'], mode: RoleMatchingMode.ANY})
  sayHello(@User() user: KeycloakUser, @AccessToken() accessToken): string {
    return `life is short. -${user.email}/${accessToken}`
  }

Role guard must be used with auth guard Role guard also works for clients and client roles Resource/scope guards also work with clients and their credentials. e.g. if there's some policy that only requesters with client role x are allowed.

For resource guard, scope must be specified otherwise it will be infered through the request method

To develop: Set path to the root of this repository on the dependencies of other module