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* docs: add prerequisites * Update docs/sources/setup-grafana/configure-security/configure-authentication/jwt/index.md
213 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
213 lines
6.7 KiB
Markdown
---
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aliases:
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- /docs/grafana/latest/auth/jwt/
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- /docs/grafana/latest/setup-grafana/configure-security/configure-authentication/jwt/
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description: Grafana JWT Authentication
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title: Configure JWT Authentication
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weight: 500
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---
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# Configure JWT authentication
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You can configure Grafana to accept a JWT token provided in the HTTP header. The token is verified using any of the following:
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- PEM-encoded key file
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- JSON Web Key Set (JWKS) in a local file
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- JWKS provided by the configured JWKS endpoint
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This method of authentication is useful for integrating with other systems that
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use JWKS but can't directly integrate with Grafana or if you want to use pass-through
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authentication in an app embedding Grafana.
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## Enable JWT
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To use JWT authentication:
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1. Enable JWT in the [main config file]({{< relref "../../../configure-grafana/" >}}).
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1. Specify the header name that contains a token.
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```ini
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[auth.jwt]
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# By default, auth.jwt is disabled.
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enabled = true
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# HTTP header to look into to get a JWT token.
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header_name = X-JWT-Assertion
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```
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## Configure login claim
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To identify the user, some of the claims needs to be selected as a login info. You could specify a claim that contains either a username or an email of the Grafana user.
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Typically, the subject claim called `"sub"` would be used as a login but it might also be set to some application specific claim.
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```ini
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# [auth.jwt]
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# ...
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# Specify a claim to use as a username to sign in.
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username_claim = sub
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# Specify a claim to use as an email to sign in.
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email_claim = sub
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# auto-create users if they are not already matched
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# auto_sign_up = true
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```
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If `auto_sign_up` is enabled, then the `sub` claim is used as the "external Auth ID". The `name` claim is used as the user's full name if it is present.
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## Iframe Embedding
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If you want to embed Grafana in an iframe while maintaning user identity and role checks,
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you can use JWT authentication to authenticate the iframe.
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> **Note**: For Grafana Cloud, or scenarios where verifying viewer identity is not required,
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> embed [public dashboards]({{< relref "../../../../dashboards/dashboard-public" >}}).
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In this scenario, you will need to configure Grafana to accept a JWT
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provided in the HTTP header and a reverse proxy should rewrite requests to the
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Grafana instance to include the JWT in the request's headers.
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> **Note**: For embedding to work, you must enable `allow_embedding` in the [security section]({{< relref "../../../configure-grafana#allow_embedding" >}}). This setting is not available in Grafana Cloud.
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In a scenario where it is not possible to rewrite the request headers you
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can use URL login instead.
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### URL login
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`url_login` allows grafana to search for a JWT in the URL query parameter
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`auth_token` and use it as the authentication token.
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**Note**: You need to have enabled JWT before setting this setting see section Enabled JWT
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> **Warning**: this can lead to JWTs being exposed in logs and possible session hijacking if the server is not
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> using HTTP over TLS.
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```ini
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# [auth.jwt]
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# ...
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url_login = true # enable JWT authentication in the URL
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```
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An example of an URL for accessing grafana with JWT URL authentication is:
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```
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http://env.grafana.local/d/RciOKLR4z/board-identifier?orgId=1&kiosk&auth_token=eyJhbxxxxxxxxxxxxx
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```
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A sample repository using this authentication method is available
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at [grafana-iframe-oauth-sample](https://github.com/grafana/grafana-iframe-oauth-sample).
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## Signature verification
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JSON web token integrity needs to be verified so cryptographic signature is used for this purpose. So we expect that every token must be signed with some known cryptographic key.
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You have a variety of options on how to specify where the keys are located.
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### Verify token using a JSON Web Key Set loaded from https endpoint
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For more information on JWKS endpoints, refer to [Auth0 docs](https://auth0.com/docs/tokens/json-web-tokens/json-web-key-sets).
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```ini
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# [auth.jwt]
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# ...
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jwk_set_url = https://your-auth-provider.example.com/.well-known/jwks.json
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# Cache TTL for data loaded from http endpoint.
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cache_ttl = 60m
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```
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### Verify token using a JSON Web Key Set loaded from JSON file
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Key set in the same format as in JWKS endpoint but located on disk.
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```ini
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jwk_set_file = /path/to/jwks.json
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```
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### Verify token using a single key loaded from PEM-encoded file
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PEM-encoded key file in PKIX, PKCS #1, PKCS #8 or SEC 1 format.
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```ini
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key_file = /path/to/key.pem
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```
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## Validate claims
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By default, only `"exp"`, `"nbf"` and `"iat"` claims are validated.
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You might also want to validate that other claims are really what you expect them to be.
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```ini
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# This can be seen as a required "subset" of a JWT Claims Set.
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expect_claims = {"iss": "https://your-token-issuer", "your-custom-claim": "foo"}
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```
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## Roles
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Grafana checks for the presence of a role using the [JMESPath](http://jmespath.org/examples.html) specified via the `role_attribute_path` configuration option. The JMESPath is applied to JWT token claims. The result after evaluation of the `role_attribute_path` JMESPath expression should be a valid Grafana role, for example, `Viewer`, `Editor` or `Admin`.
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The organization that the role is assigned to can be configured using the `X-Grafana-Org-Id` header.
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### JMESPath examples
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To ease configuration of a proper JMESPath expression, you can test/evaluate expressions with custom payloads at http://jmespath.org/.
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### Role mapping
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If the `role_attribute_path` property does not return a role, then the user is assigned the `Viewer` role by default. You can disable the role assignment by setting `role_attribute_strict = true`. It denies user access if no role or an invalid role is returned.
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**Basic example:**
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In the following example user will get `Editor` as role when authenticating. The value of the property `role` will be the resulting role if the role is a proper Grafana role, i.e. `Viewer`, `Editor` or `Admin`.
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Payload:
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```json
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{
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...
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"role": "Editor",
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...
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}
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```
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Config:
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```bash
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role_attribute_path = role
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```
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**Advanced example:**
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In the following example user will get `Admin` as role when authenticating since it has a role `admin`. If a user has a role `editor` it will get `Editor` as role, otherwise `Viewer`.
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Payload:
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```json
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{
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...
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"info": {
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...
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"roles": [
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"engineer",
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"admin",
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],
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...
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},
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...
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}
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```
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Config:
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```bash
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role_attribute_path = contains(info.roles[*], 'admin') && 'Admin' || contains(info.roles[*], 'editor') && 'Editor' || 'Viewer'
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```
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### Grafana Admin Role
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If the `role_attribute_path` property returns a `GrafanaAdmin` role, Grafana Admin is not assigned by default, instead the `Admin` role is assigned. To allow `Grafana Admin` role to be assigned set `allow_assign_grafana_admin = true`.
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