.. | ||
src/main | ||
pom.xml | ||
README.md | ||
tenant1-realm.json | ||
tenant2-realm.json |
Keycloak Example - Multi Tenancy
The following example was tested on Wildfly 8.1.0.Final and JBoss EAP 6.3. It should be compatible with any JBoss AS, JBoss EAP or Wildfly that supports Java EE 7.
This example demonstrates the simplest possible scenario for Keycloak Multi Tenancy support. Multi Tenancy is understood on this context as a single application (WAR) that is deployed on a single or clustered application server, authenticating users from different realms against a single or clustered Keycloak server.
The multi tenancy is achieved by having one realm per tenant on the server side and a per-request decision on which realm to authenticate the request against.
This example contains only the minimal bits required for a multi tenant application.
This example is composed of the following parts:
- ProtectedServlet - A servlet that displays the username and realm from the current user
- PathBasedKeycloakConfigResolver - A configuration resolver that takes the realm based on the path: /simple-multitenant/tenant2 means that the realm is "tenant2".
Step 1: Setup a basic Keycloak server
Install Keycloak server and start it on port 8080. Check the Reference Guide if unsure on how to do it.
Once the Keycloak server is up and running, import the two realms from "src/main/resources/", namely:
- tenant1-realm.json
- tenant2-realm.json
Step 2: Deploy and run the example
- Build and deploy this sample's WAR file. For this example, deploy on the same server that is running the Keycloak Server, although this is not required for real world scenarios.
- Access http://localhost:8080/multitenant/tenant1 and login as
user-tenant1
, passworduser-tenant1
- Access http://localhost:8080/multitenant/tenant2 and login as
user-tenant2
, passworduser-tenant2