|Backchannel logout is a background, out-of-band, REST invocation to the IDP to logout the user. Some IDPs can only perform logout through browser redirects as they may
only be able to identity sessions via a browser cookie.
|Responses from the IDP may contain an issuer claim. This config value is optional. If specified, this claim will be validated against the value you provide.
|Another optional switch. This is the prompt parameter defined by the OIDC specification. Through it you can force re-authentication and other options. See the specification for
|Specifies whether the IDP accepts forwarded authentication requests that contain the prompt=none query parameter or not. When a realm receives an auth request with `prompt=none` it checks
if the user is currently authenticated and normally returns a `login_required` error if the user is not logged in. However, when a default IDP can be determined
for the auth request (either via `kc_idp_hint` query param or by setting up a default IDP for the realm) we should be able to forward the auth request with
`prompt=none` to the default IDP so that it checks if the user is currently authenticated there. Because not all IDPs support requests with `prompt=none` this switch
is used to indicate if the default IDP supports the param before redirecting the auth request.
It is important to note that if the user is not authenticated in the IDP, the client will still get a `login_required` error. Even if the user is currently authenticated in the IDP,
the client might still get an `interaction_required` error if authentication or consent pages requiring user interaction would be otherwise displayed. This includes required actions
(e.g. change password), consent screens and any screens set to be displayed by the `first broker login` flow or `post broker login` flow.
|Another optional switch. This is to specify if {project_name} will verify the signatures on the external ID Token signed by this identity provider. If this is on,
the {project_name} will need to know the public key of the external OIDC identity provider. See below for how to set it up.
WARNING: For the performance purposes, {project_name} caches the public key of the external OIDC identity provider. If you think that private key of your identity provider
|Applicable if `Validate Signatures` is on. If the switch is on, then identity provider public keys will be downloaded from given JWKS URL.
This allows great flexibility because new keys will be always re-downloaded when the identity provider generates new keypair. If the switch is off,
then public key (or certificate) from the {project_name} DB is used, so whenever the identity provider keypair changes, you will always need to import the new key to the {project_name} DB as well.
|URL where the identity provider JWK keys are stored. See the https://self-issued.info/docs/draft-ietf-jose-json-web-key.html[JWK specification] for more details.
If you use an external {project_name} as an identity provider, then you can use URL like http://broker-keycloak:8180/auth/realms/test/protocol/openid-connect/certs assuming your brokered
{project_name} is running on http://broker-keycloak:8180 and it's realm is `test`.
|Applicable if `Use JWKS URL` is off. This field specifies ID of the public key in PEM format. This config value is optional. As there is no standard way
is not specified, the validating public key specified above is used for all requests regardless of key ID sent by external IDP. When set, value of this
If you are connecting to a {project_name} external IDP, you can import the IDP settings from the url `<root>/auth/realms/{realm-name}/.well-known/openid-configuration`.