This is a SAML Authenticator for JupyterHub. With this code (and a little elbow grease), you can integrate your JupyterHub instance with a previously setup SAML Single Sign-on system!
This set up section assumes that python 3.6+, pip, and JupyterHub are already set up on the target machine.
If the jupyterhub_config.py
file has not been generated, this would be a good time to generate it. For a primer on generating the config file, read here.
Currently, this Authenticator relies on the IdP being set up beforehand. This Authenticator ONLY supports HTTP-POST based authentication, and ONLY receives SAML Responses at the /login
and /hub/login
urls. There are currently no plans to support HTTP-Redirect based authentication or SOAP-based services.
In the context in which JupyterHub will be run, install the SAML Authenticator.
pip install jupyterhub-samlauthenticator
Open the jupyterhub_config.py
file in an available text editor.
Change the configured value of the authenticator_class
to be samlauthenticator.SAMLAuthenticator
.
Configure one of the accepted metadata sources. The SAMLAuthenticator can get metadata from three sources:
- The most preferable option is to configure the SAMLAuthenticator to use a metadata file. This can be done by setting the
metadata_filepath
field of theSAMLAuthenticator
class to the fully justified filepath of the metadata file. - Another option is to dump the full metadata xml into the JupyterHub configuration file. This is not great because it clutters up the configuration file with a lot of extraneous data. This can be done by setting the
metadata_content
field of the SAMLAuthenticator class. - Finally, the least preferable option of the three is to get the metadata from a web request each time a user attempts to log into the server. This is not recommended because DNS poisoning attacks could let a malicious actor impersonate the IdP and gain access to any user private files on the server. However, if this is the configuration that is required, set the
metadata_url
field and the metadata will be refreshed every time a user attempts to log in to the JupyterHub server.
This is all the configuration the Authenticator usually requires, but there are more configuration options to go through.
If the user that should be created and logged in from a given SAML Response is not specified by the NameID element in the SAML Assertion, an alternate field can be specified. Replace the xpath_username_location
field in the SAMLAuthenticator
with an XPath that points to the desired field in the SAML Assertion. Note that this value must be able to be compiled to an XPath by Python's lxml
module. The namespaces that will be present for this XPath are as follows:
{
'ds' : 'http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#',
'saml' : 'urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:assertion',
'samlp': 'urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:protocol'
}
The SAMLAuthenticator expects the SAML Response to be in the SAMLResponse
field of the POST request that the user makes to authenticate themselves. If this expectation does not hold for a given environment, then the login_post_field
property of the SAMLAuthenticator should be set to the correct field.
A SAML Audience and Recipient can be defined on the IdP to prevent a malicious service from using a SAML Response to inappropriately authenticate to non-malicious services. If either of these values is set by the IdP, they can be checked by setting the audience
and recipient
fields on the SAMLAuthenticator.
By default, the SAMLAuthenticator expects the NotOnOrAfter
and NotBefore
fields to be of the format {four-digit-year}-{two-digit-month}-{two-digit-day}T{two-digit-24-hour-hour-value}:{two-digit-minute}:{two-digit-second}Z
where T and Z are character literals. If this is not a good assumption, an alternate time string can be provided by setting the time_format_string
value of the SAMLAuthenticator. This string will be consumed by Python's datetime.strptime()
, so it might be helpful to read up on the strftime()
and strptime()
behavior.
If the timezone being passed in by the NotOnOrAfter
and NotBefore
fields cannot be read by strptime()
, don't fear! So long as the timezone that the IdP resides in is known, it's possible to set the IdP's timezone. Set the idp_timezone
field to a string that uniquely designates a timezone that can be looked up by pytz
, and login should be able to continue.
If an IdP MUST be configured to use a SAML entity id other than the protocol, url, and port number of the JupyterHub install, the entity_id
field of the SAML Authenticator should be set. This should be a unique string that uniquely identifies the Service Provider in the SAML Architecture.
If the JupyterHub instance is sitting behind a proxy or if the entity_id
provided above is not a url that refers to where the JupyterHub instance is listening, the acs_endpoint_url
MUST be set. This is where a user should POST data to complete a SAML Login procedure.
The organization_name
, organization_display_name
, and organization_url
are populated directly from the SAML Authenticator into the SAML SP metadata. If ANY of these values are present, there WILL BE an organization subsection in the SP metadata, and the organization subsection will have an element for each value that is populated. The organization will not have an element for any of the values that are not populated.
The following two configurations are usually on logout handlers, but because SAML is a special login method, we put these on the Authenticator.
If the user's servers should be shut down when they logout, set shutdown_on_logout
to True
. This stops all servers that the user was running as part of their session. It is a somewhat dangerous to set this option to True
because a user may not be done with computations that they are running on those servers.
The SAMLAuthenticator usually attempts to forward users to the SLO URI set in the SAML Metadata. If this is not the desired behavior for whatever reason, set slo_forward_on_logout
to False
. This will change the page the user is forwarded to on logout from the page specified in the xml metadata to the standard jupyterhub logout page.
The SAMLAuthenticator creates system users by default on successful authentication. If you are running JupyterHub as a non-root user, you may need to turn off this functionality by setting create_system_users
to False
.
The default nameid format that the SAMLAuthenticator expects is defined by the SAML Spec as urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:nameid-format:transient
. This can be changed by setting the nameid_format
field on the SAMLAuthenticator in the JupyterHub Config file.
If the server administrator wants to create local users for each JupyterHub user but doesn't want to use the useradd
utility, a user can be added with any binary on the host system Set the create_system_user_binary
field to either a) a full path to the binary or b) the name of a binary on the host's path. Please note, if the binary exits with code 0, the Authenticator will assume that the user add succeeded, and if the binary exits with any code other than 0, it will be assumed that creating the user failed.
Access is given to all users who successfully authenticate regardless of their role or group membership by default. Set the allowed_roles
field to restrict access to JupyterHub to specific roles. Users with any of the specified roles will be authorized to access JupyterHub. The xpath_role_location
field can be configured to set the location of the users roles in the SAML response.
# A simple example configuration.
## Class for authenticating users.
c.JupyterHub.authenticator_class = 'samlauthenticator.SAMLAuthenticator'
# Where the SAML IdP's metadata is stored.
c.SAMLAuthenticator.metadata_filepath = '/etc/jupyterhub/metadata.xml'
# A complex example configuration.
## Class for authenticating users.
c.JupyterHub.authenticator_class = 'samlauthenticator.SAMLAuthenticator'
# Where the SAML IdP's metadata is stored.
c.SAMLAuthenticator.metadata_filepath = '/etc/jupyterhub/metadata.xml'
# A field was placed in the SAML Response that contains the user's first name and last name separated by a period.
# Let's use that for the username.
c.SAMLAuthenticator.xpath_username_location = '//saml:Attribute[@Name="DottedName"]/saml:AttributeValue/text()'
# Path to the group/role membership in the SAML response.
c.SAMLAuthenticator.xpath_role_location = '//saml:Attribute[@Name="Roles"]/saml:AttributeValue/text()'
# Comma-separated list of authorized roles. Allows all if not specified.
c.SAMLAuthenticator.allowed_roles = 'group1,group2'
# The IdP is sending the SAML Response in a field named 'R'
c.SAMLAuthenticator.login_post_field = 'R'
# We want to make sure that we're the only one receiving this SAML Response
c.SAMLAuthenticator.audience = 'jupyterhub.myorg.com'
c.SAMLAuthenticator.recipient = 'https://jupyterhub.myorg.com/hub/login'
# The IdP is sending dates in the form 'Tue July 20, 2020 18:30:21'
c.SAMLAuthenticator.time_format_string = '%a %B %d, %Y %H:%M%S'
# Looks like we can't get the timezone from the previous string - we need to set it
c.SAMLAuthenticator.idp_timezone = 'US/Eastern'
# Shutdown all servers when the user logs out
c.SAMLAuthenticator.shutdown_on_logout = True
# Don't send the user to the SLO address on logout
c.SAMLAuthenticator.slo_forward_on_logout = False
# A corporate entity has specified a new entity id for this JupyterHub instance
c.SAMLAuthenticator.entity_id = '6d112afe-0544-4e8e-8b7e-21e6f57763f9'
# Because the entity id isn't a url, we need to set the acs endpoint url
c.SAMLAuthenticator.acs_endpoint_url = 'https://10.0.31.2:8000/hub/login'
# We need these organization values too.
c.SAMLAuthenticator.organization_name = 'My Org'
c.SAMLAuthenticator.organization_display_name = '''My Org's Display Name'''
c.SAMLAuthenticator.organization_url = 'https://myorg.com'
# Turn off system user creation on authentication
# This feature added by GitHub user @mwilbz
c.SAMLAuthenticator.create_system_users = False
# Change nameid format to something else
# This feature added by GitHub user @killerwhile
c.SAMLAuthenticator.nameid_format = 'urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:nameid-format:persistent'
# Change the binary called to create users
# This feature added by GitHub user @killerwhile
# If the new_useradd binary isn't on the path, a full path can be provided
c.SAMLAuthenticator.create_system_user_binary = '/full/path/to/new_useradd'
# If the new_useradd binary is on the path, we can use the first-found instance
c.SAMLAuthenticator.create_system_user_binary = 'new_useradd'
Get the code and create a virtual environment.
git clone {git@git-source}
cd samlauthenticator
virtualenv --python=python3.6 venv
Start the virtual environment and install dependencies
source venv/bin/activate
pip install -r requirements.txt
pip install -r test_requirements.txt
Make sure that unit tests run on your system and complete successfully.
pytest --cov=samlauthenticator --cov-report term-missing
The output should be something like this:
============================= test session starts ==============================
collected 59 items
tests/test_authenticator.py ............................................ [ 97%]
. [100%]
Name Stmts Miss Cover Missing
----------------------------------------------------------------------
samlauthenticator/__init__.py 1 0 100%
samlauthenticator/samlauthenticator.py 241 2 99% 332, 440
----------------------------------------------------------------------
TOTAL 242 2 99%
========================== 59 passed in 1.13 seconds ===========================
Make your change, write your unit tests, then send a pull request. The Pull Request text MUST contain the Developer Certificate of Origin, which should be prepopulated in the pull request text. Please note that the developer MUST sign off on the Pull Request and the developer MUST provide their full legal name and email address.