We want to create a new user in a marketing system to create a dedicated
onboarding for each of them. The marketing service is implemented in the
django-lasuite library and it is possible to pick the backend we want
or implement a new one following the documentation on this library.
When creating a document on behalf of a user via the server-to-server
API, a special edge case was broken that should should never happen
but happens in our OIDC federation because one of the provider modifies
the users "sub" each time they login.
We end-up with existing users for who the email matches but not the sub.
They were not correctly handled.
I made a few additional fixes and improvements to the endpoint.
We had doubts that the user was correctly updated in the case where
its identity was matched on the email and not on the sub. I added
a test and confirmed that it was working correctly. I still modified
the backend to update the user based on its "id" instead of its "sub"
because it was confusing, but both actually work the same.
It was pointed by @lebaudantoine that the OIDC specification uses
the term "essential claims" for what we called required claims.
Further more, the Mozilla OIDC library that we use, validates claims
in a method called "verify_claims". Let's override this method.
We want trusted external applications to be able to create documents
via the API on behalf of any user. The user may or may not pre-exist
in our database and should be notified of the document creation by
email.
When a user is disabled and tries to login, we
don't want the user to be duplicated,
the user should not be able to login.
Fixes#324
Work initially contributed by @qbey on:
https://github.com/numerique-gouv/people/pull/456
Some OIDC identity providers may provide a random value in the "sub"
field instead of an identifying ID. In this case, it may be a good
idea to fallback to matching the user on its email field.
The userinfo endpoint can return 2 content types:
- application/json
- application/jwt
Gitlab oidc returns a json object, while
Agent Connect oidc returns a jwt token.
We are adapting the authentication to handle both cases.
The default Logout view provided by Mozilla Django OIDC is not suitable
for the Agent Connect Logout flow.
Previously, when a user was logging-out, only its Django session was ended.
However, its session in the OIDC provider was still active.
Agent Connect implements a 'session/end' endpoint, that allows services to
end user session when they logout.
Agent Connect logout triggers cannot work with the default views implemented
by the dependency Mozilla Django OIDC. In their implementation, they decided
to end Django Session before redirecting to the OIDC provider.
The Django session needs to be retained during the logout process.
An OIDC state is saved to the request session, pass to Agent Connect Logout
endpoint, and verified when the backend receives the Logout callback from Agent
Connect. It seems to follow OIDC specifications.
If for any reason, the Logout flow cannot be initiated with Agent Connect,
(missing ID token in cache, unauthenticated user, etc), the user is redirected
to the final URL, without interacting with Agent Connect.
Prepare adding advanced authentication features. Create a dedicated
authentication Python package within the core app.
This code organization will be more extensible.