3.9 KiB
ORY Hydra configuration for CAcert
This repository contains instructions how to setup ORY Hydra for the OAuth2 / OpenID Connect operations required for the CAcert IDP and client registration applications.
The documentation in this repository is licensed under the terms of the Apache License Version 2.0.
Copyright © 2020-2023 Jan Dittberner
The setup and configuration has been tested on Debian testing on 2023-08-07 using the following versions software versions:
- mkcert v1.4.4
- openssl 3.0.9
- PostgreSQL 15.3
- ORY Hydra v2.1.2
On Debian 12 Bookworm you can install mkcert
, openssl
and PostgreSQL via apt:
sudo apt install mkcert openssl postgresql
Create certificate for Hydra
You need a set of certificates for the Hydra. I recommend to use the mkcert
utility by Filippo Valsorda:
-
Setup local CA
mkcert -install
-
Create a key pair and certificate
mkcert hydra.cacert.localhost auth.cacert.localhost
Setup Hydra
We use the ORY Hydra OAuth2 / OpenID Connect implementation. Install Hydra according to their documentation. The setup has been tested with the Linux binary installation.
Preconditions:
- generate certificate + key (see above)
- generate a database password (
openssl rand -base64 16
might be a good idea) - generate a secret key for your instance (
openssl rand -base64 32
might be a good idea)
Perform the Hydra database setup:
sudo -i -u postgres psql
> CREATE DATABASE hydra_local ENCODING 'utf-8';
> CREATE USER hydra_local WITH PASSWORD '${YOUR_POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD}';
> GRANT CONNECT, CREATE ON DATABASE hydra_local TO hydra_local;
hydra migrate sql "postgres://hydra_local:${YOUR_POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD}@localhost:5432/hydra_local"
Note: replace ${YOUR_POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD}
with the password generated above
Create a configuration file for Hydra i.e. hydra.yaml
:
serve:
admin:
host: hydra.cacert.localhost
tls:
enabled: true
cert:
path: hydra.cacert.localhost+1.pem
key:
path: hydra.cacert.localhost+1.key.pem
public:
host: auth.cacert.localhost
tls:
enabled: true
cert:
path: hydra.cacert.localhost+1.pem
key:
path: hydra.cacert.localhost+1.key.pem
dsn: 'postgres://hydra_local:${YOUR_POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD}@localhost:5432/hydra_local'
webfinger:
oidc_discovery:
supported_claims:
- email
- email_verified
- name
supported_scope:
- profile
- email
oauth2:
expose_internal_errors: false
urls:
login: https://login.cacert.localhost:3000/login
consent: https://login.cacert.localhost:3000/consent
logout: https://login.cacert.localhost:3000/logout
error: https://login.cacert.localhost:3000/error
post_logout_redirect: https://login.cacert.localhost:3000/logout-successful
self:
public: https://auth.cacert.localhost:4444/
issuer: https://auth.cacert.localhost:4444/
secrets:
system:
- "${YOUR_SECRET_FOR_HYDRA}"
Note: Replace ${YOUR_POSTGRESQL_PASSWORD}
and ${YOUR_SECRET_FOR_HYDRA}
with the values generated above.
The available configuration options are described in the Hydra configuration documentation.
Start
Now you can start Hydra:
hydra serve all --config hydra.yaml
Add OpenID Connect configuration for a client
Create an OpenID Connect (OIDC) client configuration for the demo application
hydra create oauth2-client --endpoint https://hydra.cacert.localhost:4445/ \
--name "OIDC Demo App with Logo" \
--scope openid --scope profile --scope groups --scope email \
--post-logout-callback https://app.cacert.localhost:4000/after-logout \
--redirect-uri https://app.cacert.localhost:4000/callback
The command returns a client id and a client secret, that you need for the demo application configuration.