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SAML

Build Status

Package saml contains a partial implementation of the SAML standard in golang. SAML is a standard for identity federation, i.e. either allowing a third party to authenticate your users or allowing third parties to rely on us to authenticate their users.

Introduction

In SAML parlance an Identity Provider (IDP) is a service that knows how to authenticate users. A Service Provider (SP) is a service that delegates authentication to an IDP. If you are building a service where users log in with someone else's credentials, then you are a Service Provider. This package supports implementing both service providers and identity providers.

The core package contains the implementation of SAML. The package samlsp provides helper middleware suitable for use in Service Provider applications. The package samlidp provides a rudimentary IDP service that is useful for testing or as a starting point for other integrations.

Breaking Changes

Version 0.4.0 introduces a few breaking changes to the samlsp package in order to make the package more extensible, and to clean up the interfaces a bit. The default behavior remains the same, but you can now provide interface implementations of RequestTracker (which tracks pending requests), Session (which handles maintaining a session) and OnError which handles reporting errors.

Public fields of samlsp.Middleware have changed, so some usages may require adjustment. See issue 231 for details.

The option to provide an IDP metadata URL has been deprecated. Instead, we recommend that you use the FetchMetadata() function, or fetch the metadata yourself and use the new ParseMetadata() function, and pass the metadata in samlsp.Options.IDPMetadata.

Similarly, the HTTPClient field is now deprecated because it was only used for fetching metdata, which is no longer directly implemented.

The fields that manage how cookies are set are deprecated as well. To customize how cookies are managed, provide custom implementation of RequestTracker and/or Session, perhaps by extending the default implementations.

The deprecated fields have not been removed from the Options structure, but will be in future.

In particular we have deprecated the following fields in samlsp.Options:

  • Logger - This was used to emit errors while validating, which is an anti-pattern.
  • IDPMetadataURL - Instead use FetchMetadata()
  • HTTPClient - Instead pass httpClient to FetchMetadata
  • CookieMaxAge - Instead assign a custom CookieRequestTracker or CookieSessionProvider
  • CookieName - Instead assign a custom CookieRequestTracker or CookieSessionProvider
  • CookieDomain - Instead assign a custom CookieRequestTracker or CookieSessionProvider
  • CookieDomain - Instead assign a custom CookieRequestTracker or CookieSessionProvider

Getting Started as a Service Provider

Let us assume we have a simple web application to protect. We'll modify this application so it uses SAML to authenticate users.

package main

import (
    "fmt"
    "net/http"
)

func hello(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
    fmt.Fprintf(w, "Hello, World!")
}

func main() {
    app := http.HandlerFunc(hello)
    http.Handle("/hello", app)
    http.ListenAndServe(":8000", nil)
}

Each service provider must have an self-signed X.509 key pair established. You can generate your own with something like this:

openssl req -x509 -newkey rsa:2048 -keyout myservice.key -out myservice.cert -days 365 -nodes -subj "/CN=myservice.example.com"

We will use samlsp.Middleware to wrap the endpoint we want to protect. Middleware provides both an http.Handler to serve the SAML specific URLs and a set of wrappers to require the user to be logged in. We also provide the URL where the service provider can fetch the metadata from the IDP at startup. In our case, we'll use samltest.id, an identity provider designed for testing.

package main

import (
	"crypto/rsa"
	"crypto/tls"
	"crypto/x509"
	"fmt"
	"net/http"
	"net/url"

	"github.com/crewjam/saml/samlsp"
)

func hello(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
	fmt.Fprintf(w, "Hello, %s!", samlsp.AttributeFromContext(r.Context(), "cn"))
}

func main() {
	keyPair, err := tls.LoadX509KeyPair("myservice.cert", "myservice.key")
	if err != nil {
		panic(err) // TODO handle error
	}
	keyPair.Leaf, err = x509.ParseCertificate(keyPair.Certificate[0])
	if err != nil {
		panic(err) // TODO handle error
	}

	idpMetadataURL, err := url.Parse("https://samltest.id/saml/idp")
	if err != nil {
		panic(err) // TODO handle error
	}

	rootURL, err := url.Parse("http://localhost:8000")
	if err != nil {
		panic(err) // TODO handle error
	}

	samlSP, _ := samlsp.New(samlsp.Options{
		URL:            *rootURL,
		Key:            keyPair.PrivateKey.(*rsa.PrivateKey),
		Certificate:    keyPair.Leaf,
		IDPMetadataURL: idpMetadataURL,
	})
	app := http.HandlerFunc(hello)
	http.Handle("/hello", samlSP.RequireAccount(app))
	http.Handle("/saml/", samlSP)
	http.ListenAndServe(":8000", nil)
}

Next we'll have to register our service provider with the identity provider to establish trust from the service provider to the IDP. For samltest.id, you can do something like:

mdpath=saml-test-$USER-$HOST.xml
curl localhost:8000/saml/metadata > $mdpath

Navigate to https://samltest.id/upload.php and upload the file you fetched.

Now you should be able to authenticate. The flow should look like this:

  1. You browse to localhost:8000/hello

  2. The middleware redirects you to https://samltest.id/idp/profile/SAML2/Redirect/SSO

  3. samltest.id prompts you for a username and password.

  4. samltest.id returns you an HTML document which contains an HTML form setup to POST to localhost:8000/saml/acs. The form is automatically submitted if you have javascript enabled.

  5. The local service validates the response, issues a session cookie, and redirects you to the original URL, localhost:8000/hello.

  6. This time when localhost:8000/hello is requested there is a valid session and so the main content is served.

Getting Started as an Identity Provider

Please see example/idp/ for a substantially complete example of how to use the library and helpers to be an identity provider.

Support

The SAML standard is huge and complex with many dark corners and strange, unused features. This package implements the most commonly used subset of these features required to provide a single sign on experience. The package supports at least the subset of SAML known as interoperable SAML.

This package supports the Web SSO profile. Message flows from the service provider to the IDP are supported using the HTTP Redirect binding and the HTTP POST binding. Message flows from the IDP to the service provider are supported via the HTTP POST binding.

The package can produce signed SAML assertions, and can validate both signed and encrypted SAML assertions. It does not support signed or encrypted requests.

RelayState

The RelayState parameter allows you to pass user state information across the authentication flow. The most common use for this is to allow a user to request a deep link into your site, be redirected through the SAML login flow, and upon successful completion, be directed to the originally requested link, rather than the root.

Unfortunately, RelayState is less useful than it could be. Firstly, it is not authenticated, so anything you supply must be signed to avoid XSS or CSRF. Secondly, it is limited to 80 bytes in length, which precludes signing. (See section 3.6.3.1 of SAMLProfiles.)

References

The SAML specification is a collection of PDFs (sadly):

SAMLtest is a testing ground for SAML service and identity providers.

Security Issues

Please do not report security issues in the issue tracker. Rather, please contact me directly at [email protected] (PGP Key 78B6038B3B9DFB88).