[KEYCLOAK-2833] Migrate the Node.js documentation to the official repositories
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@ -36,6 +36,8 @@
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.. link:topics/oidc/javascript-adapter.adoc[JavaScript Adapter]
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.. link:topics/oidc/nodejs-adapter.adoc[Node.js Adapter]
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.. link:topics/oidc/oidc-generic.adoc[Other OpenID Connect libraries]
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{% if book.community %}
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... link:topics/oidc/mod-auth-openidc.adoc[mod_auth_oidc Apache HTTPD Module]
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... link:topics/saml/java/MigrationFromOlderVersions.adoc[Migration from older versions]
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{% endif %}
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.. link:topics/saml/mod-auth-mellon.adoc[mod_auth_mellon Apache HTTPD Module]
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. link:topics/client-registration.adoc[Client Registration]
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. link:topics/client-registration.adoc[Client Registration]
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132
topics/oidc/nodejs-adapter.adoc
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132
topics/oidc/nodejs-adapter.adoc
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[[_nodejs_adapter]]
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=== Node.js Adapter
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{{book.project.name}} provides a Node.js adapter to protect JavaScript apps on the server side. The library can be downloaded directly from https://www.npmjs.com/package/keycloak-connect[ {{book.project.name}} organization] and the source is available at
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https://github.com/keycloak/keycloak-nodejs-connect[GitHub].
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To use the Node.js adapter you must first create a client for your application in the {{book.project.name}} Administration Console. The adapter supports public, confidential and bearer-only access type. Which one to choose depends on the use-case scenario.
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Once the client is created click on the `Installation` tab select `{{book.project.name}} OIDC JSON` for `Format Option` then click on `Download`. The downloaded `keycloak.json` file should be at the root folder. Exactly, like in https://github.com/keycloak/keycloak-nodejs-connect/tree/master/example[this example].
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keycloak.json::
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Alongside the `example.js` lives `keycloak.json` obtained from our {{book.project.name}}
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admin console when we provisioned this app.
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{
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"realm": "example-realm",
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"realm-public-key": "MIGfMA0GCSqGSIb3DQEBAQUAA4GNADCBiQKBgQCrVrCuTtArbgaZzL1hvh0xtL5mc7o0NqPVnYXkLvgcwiC3BjLGw1tGEGoJaXDuSaRllobm53JBhjx33UNv+5z/UMG4kytBWxheNVKnL6GgqlNabMaFfPLPCF8kAgKnsi79NMo+n6KnSY8YeUmec/p2vjO2NjsSAVcWEQMVhJ31LwIDAQAB",
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"auth-server-url": "http://localhost:8080/auth",
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"ssl-required": "external",
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"resource": "example-app",
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"credentials": {
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"secret": "mysecret"
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}
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}
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==== Installation
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Assuming you've already installed https://nodejs.org[Node.js], create a folder for your application:
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mkdir myapp && cd myapp
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Use `npm init` command to create a `package.json` for your application. And now install the {{book.project.name}} connect adapter in the `myapp` folder, saving it in the dependencies list:
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npm install --save keycloak-connect
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==== Usage
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Instantiate a Keycloak class::
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The `Keycloak` class provides a central point for configuration
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and integration with your application. The simplest creation
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involves no arguments.
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var keycloak = new Keycloak();
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By default, this will locate a file named `keycloak.json` alongside
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the main executable of your application to initialize keycloak-specific
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settings (public key, realm name, various URLs). The `keycloak.json` file
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is obtained from the {{book.project.name}} Admin Console.
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Instantiation with this method results in all of the reasonable defaults
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being used.
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Configuring a web session store::
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If you wish to use web sessions to manage
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server-side state for authentication, you will need to initialize the
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`Keycloak(...)` with at least a `store` parameter, passing in the actual
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session store that `express-session` is using.
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var session = require('express-session');
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var memoryStore = new session.MemoryStore();
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var keycloak = new Keycloak({ store: memoryStore });
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Passing a custom scope value::
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By default, the scope value `openid` will be passed as query parameter to {{book.project.name}}'s login URL but you can add an additional custom value :
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var keycloak = new Keycloak({ scope: 'offline_access' });
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==== Install middleware
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Once instantiated, install the middleware into your connect-capable app:
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var app = express();
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app.use( keycloak.middleware() );
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==== Protect resources
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Simple authentication::
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To enforce that a user must be authenticated before accessing a resource,
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simply use a no-argument version of `keycloak.protect()`:
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app.get( '/complain', keycloak.protect(), complaintHandler );
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Role-based authorization::
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To secure a resource with an application role for the current app:
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app.get( '/special', keycloak.protect('special'), specialHandler );
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To secure a resource with an application role for a *different* app:
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app.get( '/extra-special', keycloak.protect('other-app:special', extraSpecialHandler );
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To secure a resource with a realm role:
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app.get( '/admin', keycloak.protect( 'realm:admin' ), adminHandler );
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Advanced authorization::
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To secure resources based on parts of the URL itself, assuming a role exists
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for each section:
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function protectBySection(token, request) {
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return token.hasRole( request.params.section );
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}
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app.get( '/:section/:page', keycloak.protect( protectBySection ), sectionHandler );
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==== Additional URLs
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Explicit user-triggered logout::
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By default, the middleware catches calls to `/logout` to send the user through a
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{{book.project.name}}-centric logout workflow. This can be changed by specifying a `logout`
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configuration parameter to the `middleware()` call:
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app.use( keycloak.middleware( { logout: '/logoff' } ));
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{{book.project.name}} Admin Callbacks::
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Also, the middleware supports callbacks from the {{book.project.name}} console to logout a single
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session or all sessions. By default, these type of admin callbacks occur relative
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to the root URL of `/` but can be changed by providing an `admin` parameter
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to the `middleware()` call:
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app.use( keycloak.middleware( { admin: '/callbacks' } );
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@ -21,6 +21,9 @@
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===== JavaScript (client-side)
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* <<fake/../../oidc/javascript-adapter.adoc#_javascript_adapter,JavaScript>>
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===== Node.js (server-side)
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* <<fake/../../oidc/nodejs-adapter.adoc#_nodejs_adapter,Node.js>>
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===== Apache Cordova
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* <<fake/../../oidc/javascript-adapter.adoc#_javascript_adapter,JavaScript>>
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