This gem provides everything needed to integrate an application with Signon. It's a wrapper around OmniAuth that adds a 'strategy' for oAuth2 integration against Signon, and the necessary controller to support that request flow.
Some of the applications that use this gem:
To use gds-sso you will need an oAuth client ID and secret for Signon or a compatible system. These can be provided by one of the team with admin access to Signon.
Then include the gem in your Gemfile:
gem 'gds-sso', '<version>'
Create a config/initializers/gds-sso.rb
that looks like:
GDS::SSO.config do |config|
config.user_model = 'User'
# set up ID and Secret in a way which doesn't require it to be checked in to source control...
config.oauth_id = ENV['OAUTH_ID']
config.oauth_secret = ENV['OAUTH_SECRET']
# optional config for location of Signon
config.oauth_root_url = "http://localhost:3001"
# Pass in a caching adapter cache bearer token requests.
config.cache = Rails.cache
end
The user model must include the GDS::SSO::User
module.
It should have the following fields:
string "name"
string "email"
string "uid"
string "organisation_slug"
string "organisation_content_id"
array "permissions"
boolean "remotely_signed_out", :default => false
boolean "disabled", :default => false
You also need to include GDS::SSO::ControllerMethods
in your ApplicationController.
For ActiveRecord, you probably want to declare permissions as "serialized" like this:
serialize :permissions, Array
GDS::SSO::ControllerMethods provides some useful methods for your application controllers.
To make sure that only people with a signon account and permission to use your app are allowed in use authenticate_user!
.
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
include GDS::SSO::ControllerMethods
before_action :authenticate_user!
# ...
end
You can refine authorisation to specific controller actions based on permissions using authorise_user!
. All permissions are assigned via Signon.
class PublicationsController < ActionController::Base
include GDS::SSO::ControllerMethods
before_action :authorise_for_editing!, except: [:show, :index]
# ...
private
def authorise_for_editing!
authorise_user!('edit_publications')
end
end
authorise_user!
can be configured to check for multiple permissions:
# fails unless the user has at least one of these permissions
authorise_user!(any_of: %w(edit create))
# fails unless the user has both of these permissions
authorise_user!(all_of: %w(edit create))
The signon application makes sure that only users who have been granted access to the application can access it (e.g. they have the signin
permission for your app).
In addition to the single-sign-on strategy, this gem also allows authorisation via a "bearer token". This is used by publishing applications to be authorised as an API user.
To authorise with a bearer token, a request has to be made with the header:
Authorization: Bearer your-token-here
This gem will then authenticate the token with the Signon application. If
valid, the API client will be authorised in the same way as a single-sign-on
user. The gds-api-adapters gem
has functionality for sending the bearer token for each request. To avoid making
these requests for each incoming request, specify a caching adapter like Rails.cache
:
GDS::SSO.config do |config|
# ...
# Pass in a caching adapter cache bearer token requests.
config.cache = Rails.cache
end
If you are using a Rails 5 app in api_only mode this gem will automatically disable the oauth layers which use session persistence. You can configure this gem to be in api_only mode (or not) with:
GDS::SSO.config do |config|
# ...
# Only support bearer token authentication and send responses in JSON
config.api_only = true
end
In development, you generally want to be able to run an application without needing to run your own SSO server to be running as well. GDS-SSO facilitates this by using a 'mock' mode in development. Mock mode loads an arbitrary user from the local application's user tables:
GDS::SSO.test_user || GDS::SSO::Config.user_klass.first
To make it use a real strategy (e.g. if you're testing an app against the signon server), you will need to ensure that your Signon database has got OAuth config that matches what the apps use in development mode. To do this, run this in Signon:
bundle exec ./script/make_oauth_work_in_dev
Once that's done, set an environment variable when you run your app. e.g.:
GDS_SSO_STRATEGY=real bundle exec rails s
By default the mock strategies will create a user with signin
permission.
If your application needs different or extra permissions for access, you can specify this by adding the following to your config:
GDS::SSO.config do |config|
# other config here
config.additional_mock_permissions_required = ["array", "of", "permissions"]
end
The mock bearer token will then ensure that the dummy api user has the required permission.
If your app is using test-unit
or minitest
, there is a linting test that can verify your User
model is compatible with GDS:SSO::User
:
require 'gds-sso/lint/user_test'
class GDS::SSO::Lint::UserTest
def user_class
::User
end
end
Or if your app is using rspec
, there is a shared examples spec:
require 'gds-sso/lint/user_spec'
describe User do
it_behaves_like "a gds-sso user class"
end
Run the tests with:
bundle exec rake
By default, the tests use the master of Signon for running integration tests. If you want to use a branch (or commit, or tag), you can run it like this:
SIGNON_COMMITISH=my_branch_name bundle exec rake