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Django3 Auth SAML2 Integration

As a developer of Django3 applications I need to integrate a SAML2 based Single-Sign-On (SSO) User authentication system, for example with Okta. I know there are a number of existing packages out there, but I want something super-simple that does not require a lot of configuration in my settings.py file. I also need this integration to work with exsitng Django solutions that do not allow me to modify settings.py directly, as is the case with Netbox.

This django3_auth_saml2 package was inspired by the existing django-saml2-auth.

Notable Changes:

  1. Django3 / Python3 code base
  2. Provides two Views: one for the login redirect to the SSO and the other for the SSO signin
  3. Uses Django RemoteUserBackend (or subclass) to handle User creation and configuration process
  4. Provide the SAML2 authenticate response payload in response.META['SAML2_AUTH_RESPONSE']
  5. Any errors result in PermissionDenied exceptions to allow for app specific handling
  6. Configuration can be store in django3_auth_saml2.config.SAML2_AUTH_CONFIG as an alternative to using the Django settings.py file

System Requirements

This package requires the xmlsec library to be installed.

Views

This package provides two views:

  • login - The URL View should be called when the User attempts to login directly to the app
  • acs - This URL View should be called by the SSO system (Okta)

When the User attempts to use login, the View will redirect the User's web browser to the SSO system for authentication. Once the User authenticates at the SSO system, the SSO system will then call the acs URL view to sign into the Django app.

In your ROOT_URLCONF.urlpatterns you will need to define two URLs. The first is for the SSO system, and the second is your login URL that will force the User to authenticate via the SSO first. You can change these to suit your specific app API.

Keep in mind that the 'django3_auth_saml2.urls' provides the 'acs' view, so that the example below would result in the app API "/sso/acs/" and "/sso/login/".

urlpatterns = [
    path('sso/', include('django3_auth_saml2.urls')),
    path('login/', RedirectView.as_view(url='/sso/login/')),
]

Django System Configuration

The options have been streamlined from the original django-sam2-auth package, only the following are supported:

Required

AUTHENTICATION_BACKEND
(NEW) the dotted string name of the backend, for example:
"django.contrib.auth.backends.RemoteUserBackend"

One of:

A) METADATA_AUTO_CONF_URL
The URL to the SSO system where the metadata document can be retrieved, for example:
"https://mycorp.oktapreview.com/app/sadjfalkdsflkads/sso/saml/metadata"

B) METADATA_LOCAL_FILE_PATH
As an alternative to using the URL, you can store the metadata contents to a local file, for example:
"/etc/oktapreview-netbox-metadata.xml"

Optional

DEFAULT_NEXT_URL
The next URL used to redirect the User after login is successful. Defaults to /.

DEFAULT_SSO_ACS_URL
The URL to be used for SSO sign-in purposes. Defaults to /sso/acs/.

ENTITY_ID
This is generally the URL to your application, for example:
"https://okta-devtest.ngrok.io"

ASSERTION_URL - same This is generally the URL to your application, for example:
"https://okta-devtest.ngrok.io"

NAME_ID_FORMAT
Identifies the format of the User name, see docs for options. This value defaults to using email.

By default the User name value will be taken from the SAML response name_id.text value. For example, if the NAME_ID_FORMAT is set to use email, then the User name value will be the User's email address.

For more information on these terms, refer to docs.

Example

You should create the SAML2_AUTH_CONFIG dictionary in the Django settings.py file, for example:

SAML2_AUTH_CONFIG = {
    # Using default remote backend
    'AUTHENTICATION_BACKEND': 'django.contrib.auth.backends.RemoteUserBackend',

    # Metadata is required, choose either remote url or local file path
    'METADATA_AUTO_CONF_URL': "https://mycorp.oktapreview.com/app/sadjfalkdsflkads/sso/saml/metadata"
}

User Create & Configuration via RemoteUserBackend

By default acs will define the remote_user parameter from the saml2_auth_resp.name_id.text value when it calls the backend authenticate() method. For example, if the SSO system (Okta) has configured the name ID format as email (as shown in the example above), then the User name will be the Users email address.

The acs View will set the response.META['SAML2_AUTH_RESPONSE'] to the saml2.response.AuthnResponse instance so that you can access this information.

When acs calls the backend authenticate(), the User will be created if it does not exist by defaul; see class property create_unknown_user. In this case the RemoteUserBackend.configure_user() method is called.

You can subclass RemoteUserBackend, implemeting your own authenticate() and configure_user() methods to use the response.META['SAML2_AUTH_RESPONSE'] data. You can to access the SAML2 user identiy attributes. See samples in backends.py.

Using Netbox?

If you are using Netbox and you do not want to fork/modify the system settings.py file, please refer to netbox-plugin-auth-saml2