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Merge pull request #41950 from rolfedh/cp-41938-to-3.8
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[3.8] Update content for support of quarkus-oidc-token-propagation-(reactive) extensions
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rsvoboda authored Jul 18, 2024
2 parents 4507a63 + 9b60c8d commit aa05b4d
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Expand Up @@ -362,14 +362,12 @@ For example, it can be a public endpoint or be protected with mTLS.
In this scenario, you do not need to protect your Quarkus endpoint by using the Quarkus OpenID Connect adapter.
====

ifndef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]
The `quarkus-oidc-token-propagation` extension requires the `quarkus-oidc` extension.
It provides Jakarta REST `TokenCredentialRequestFilter`, which sets the OpenID Connect Bearer token or Authorization Code Flow access token as the `Bearer` scheme value of the HTTP `Authorization` header.
This filter can be registered with MicroProfile REST client implementations injected into the current Quarkus endpoint, which must be protected by using the Quarkus OIDC adapter.
This filter can propagate the access token to the downstream services.

For more information, see the xref:security-openid-connect-client.adoc[OpenID Connect client and token propagation quickstart] and xref:security-openid-connect-client-reference.adoc[OpenID Connect (OIDC) and OAuth2 client and filters reference] guides.
endif::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]


[[smallrye-jwt-authentication]]
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Expand Up @@ -16,10 +16,7 @@ This includes the following:

- Using `quarkus-oidc-client`, `quarkus-oidc-client-reactive-filter` and `quarkus-oidc-client-filter` extensions to acquire and refresh access tokens from OpenID Connect and OAuth 2.0 compliant Authorization Servers such as link:https://www.keycloak.org[Keycloak].

ifndef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]

- Using `quarkus-oidc-token-propagation-reactive` and `quarkus-oidc-token-propagation` extensions to propagate the current `Bearer` or `Authorization Code Flow` access tokens.
endif::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]

The access tokens managed by these extensions can be used as HTTP Authorization Bearer tokens to access the remote services.

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -917,7 +914,6 @@ public class OidcRequestCustomizer implements OidcRequestFilter {
}
----

ifndef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation-reactive[]
[[token-propagation-reactive]]
== Token Propagation Reactive

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -993,9 +989,7 @@ quarkus.oidc-token-propagation-reactive.exchange-token=true
----

`AccessTokenRequestReactiveFilter` uses a default `OidcClient` by default. A named `OidcClient` can be selected with a `quarkus.oidc-token-propagation-reactive.client-name` configuration property or with the `io.quarkus.oidc.token.propagation.AccessToken#exchangeTokenClient` annotation attribute.
endif::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation-reactive[]

ifndef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]
[[token-propagation]]
== Token Propagation

Expand All @@ -1010,7 +1004,6 @@ However, the direct end-to-end Bearer token propagation should be avoided. For e
Additionally, a complex application might need to exchange or update the tokens before propagating them. For example, the access context might be different when `Service A` is accessing `Service B`. In this case, `Service A` might be granted a narrow or completely different set of scopes to access `Service B`.

The following sections show how `AccessTokenRequestFilter` and `JsonWebTokenRequestFilter` can help.
endif::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]

=== RestClient AccessTokenRequestFilter

Expand Down Expand Up @@ -1152,7 +1145,6 @@ As mentioned, use `AccessTokenRequestFilter` if you work with Keycloak or an Ope
You can generate the tokens as described in xref:security-oidc-bearer-token-authentication.adoc#integration-testing[OpenID Connect Bearer Token Integration testing] section.
Prepare the REST test endpoints. You can have the test front-end endpoint, which uses the injected MP REST client with a registered token propagation filter, call the downstream endpoint. For example, see the `integration-tests/oidc-token-propagation` in the `main` Quarkus repository.

ifndef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]
[[reactive-token-propagation]]
== Token Propagation Reactive

Expand All @@ -1170,7 +1162,6 @@ The `quarkus-oidc-token-propagation-reactive` extension provides `io.quarkus.oid

The `quarkus-oidc-token-propagation-reactive` extension (as opposed to the non-reactive `quarkus-oidc-token-propagation` extension) does not currently support the exchanging or resigning of the tokens before the propagation.
However, these features might be added in the future.
endif::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]

ifndef::no-quarkus-oidc-client-graphql[]
[[quarkus-oidc-client-graphql]]
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42 changes: 0 additions & 42 deletions docs/src/main/asciidoc/security-openid-connect-client.adoc
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Expand Up @@ -64,7 +64,6 @@ The solution is in the `security-openid-connect-client-quickstart` link:{quickst
First, you need a new project.
Create a new project with the following command:

ifndef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]
:create-app-artifact-id: security-openid-connect-client-quickstart
:create-app-extensions: oidc,oidc-client-reactive-filter,oidc-token-propagation-reactive,resteasy-reactive
include::{includes}/devtools/create-app.adoc[]
Expand All @@ -75,25 +74,9 @@ If you already have your Quarkus project configured, you can add these extension

:add-extension-extensions: oidc,oidc-client-reactive-filter,oidc-token-propagation-reactive,resteasy-reactive
include::{includes}/devtools/extension-add.adoc[]
endif::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]

ifdef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]
:create-app-artifact-id: security-openid-connect-client-quickstart
:create-app-extensions: oidc,oidc-client-reactive-filter,resteasy-reactive

include::{includes}/devtools/create-app.adoc[]

It generates a Maven project, importing the `oidc`, `oidc-client-reactive-filter`, and `resteasy-reactive` extensions.

If you already have your Quarkus project configured, you can add these extensions to your project by running the following command in your project base directory:

:add-extension-extensions: oidc,oidc-client-reactive-filter,resteasy-reactive
include::{includes}/devtools/extension-add.adoc[]
endif::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]

This command adds the following extensions to your build file:

ifndef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]
[source,xml,role="primary asciidoc-tabs-target-sync-cli asciidoc-tabs-target-sync-maven"]
.pom.xml
----
Expand All @@ -120,31 +103,6 @@ ifndef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]
----
implementation("io.quarkus:quarkus-oidc,oidc-client-reactive-filter,oidc-token-propagation-reactive,resteasy-reactive")
----
endif::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]
ifdef::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]
[source,xml,role="primary asciidoc-tabs-target-sync-cli asciidoc-tabs-target-sync-maven"]
.pom.xml
----
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-oidc</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-oidc-client-reactive-filter</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-resteasy-reactive</artifactId>
</dependency>
----

[source,gradle,role="secondary asciidoc-tabs-target-sync-gradle"]
.build.gradle
----
implementation("io.quarkus:quarkus-oidc,oidc-client-reactive-filter,resteasy-reactive")
----
endif::no-quarkus-oidc-token-propagation[]

== Writing the application

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