keycloak-scim/openshift/topics/advanced_concepts.adoc

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== Advanced Concepts
These cover additional configuration topics, such as seting up keystores and a truststore for the {project_name} server, creating an administrator account, an overview of available {project_name} client registration methods, and guidance on configuring clustering.
=== Requirements and Deploying xref:../introduction/introduction.adoc#passthrough-templates[Passthrough TLS Termination] {project_name} Templates
==== Preparing the Deployment
Log in to the OpenShift CLI with a user that holds the _cluster:admin_ role.
. Create a new project:
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ oc new-project sso-app-demo
----
. Add the `view` role to the link:https://docs.openshift.com/container-platform/latest/dev_guide/service_accounts.html#default-service-accounts-and-roles[`default`] service account. This enables the service account to view all the resources in the sso-app-demo namespace, which is necessary for managing the cluster.
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ oc policy add-role-to-user view system:serviceaccount:$(oc project -q):default
----
[[Configuring-Keystores]]
==== Creating HTTPS and JGroups Keystores, and Truststore for the {project_name} Server
The {project_name} application templates using xref:../introduction/introduction.adoc#passthrough-templates[passthrough TLS termination] require:
* An xref:create-https-keystore[HTTPS keystore] used for encryption of https traffic,
* The xref:create-jgroups-keystore[JGroups keystore] used for encryption of JGroups communications between nodes in the cluster, and
* xref:create-server-truststore[{project_name} server truststore] used for securing the {project_name} requests
the {project_openshift_product_name} image to be deployed properly.
[IMPORTANT]
====
The {project_name} application templates using xref:../introduction/introduction.adoc#reencrypt-templates[re-encryption TLS termination] do not *require* or *expect* the aforementioned HTTPS and JGroups keystores and {project_name} server truststore to be prepared beforehand. The templates use OpenShift's internal link:https://docs.openshift.com/container-platform/latest/dev_guide/secrets.html#service-serving-certificate-secrets[service serving x509 certificate secrets] to automatically create the HTTPS and JGroups keystores. The {project_name} server truststore is also created automatically, containing the */var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/service-ca.crt* CA certificate file, which is used to create these cluster certificates. Moreover, the truststore for the {project_name} server is pre-populated with the all known, trusted CA certificate files found in the Java system path.
====
The *_openssl_* toolkit is used in the following example to generate a CA certificate to sign the HTTPS keystore, and create a truststore for the {project_name} server. *_keytool_*, a package *included with the Java Development Kit*, is then utilized to the generate self-signed certificates for these keystores.
[WARNING]
====
For production environments Red Hat recommends that you use your own SSL certificate purchased from a verified Certificate Authority (CA) for SSL-encrypted connections (HTTPS).
See the https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/jboss_enterprise_application_platform/6.1/html-single/security_guide/index#Generate_a_SSL_Encryption_Key_and_Certificate[JBoss Enterprise Application Platform Security Guide] for more information on how to create a keystore with self-signed or purchased SSL certificates.
====
[[create-https-keystore]]
*_Create the HTTPS keystore:_*
[[generate-ca-certificate]]
.. Generate a CA certificate. Pick and remember the password. Provide identical password, when xref:signing-csr-with-ca-certificate[signing the certificate sign request with the CA certificate] below:
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ openssl req -new -newkey rsa:4096 -x509 -keyout xpaas.key -out xpaas.crt -days 365 -subj "/CN=xpaas-sso-demo.ca"
----
.. Generate a CA certificate for the HTTPS keystore. Provide `mykeystorepass` as the keystore password:
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ keytool -genkeypair -keyalg RSA -keysize 2048 -dname "CN=secure-sso-sso-app-demo.openshift.example.com" -alias jboss -keystore keystore.jks
----
.. Generate a certificate sign request for the HTTPS keystore. Provide `mykeystorepass` as the keystore password:
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ keytool -certreq -keyalg rsa -alias jboss -keystore keystore.jks -file sso.csr
----
[[signing-csr-with-ca-certificate]]
[start=4]
.. Sign the certificate sign request with the CA certificate. Provide the same password that was used to xref:generate-ca-certificate[generate the CA certificate]:
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ openssl x509 -req -CA xpaas.crt -CAkey xpaas.key -in sso.csr -out sso.crt -days 365 -CAcreateserial
----
.. Import the CA certificate into the HTTPS keystore. Provide `mykeystorepass` as the keystore password. Reply `yes` to `Trust this certificate? [no]:` question:
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ keytool -import -file xpaas.crt -alias xpaas.ca -keystore keystore.jks
----
.. Import the signed certificate sign request into the HTTPS keystore. Provide `mykeystorepass` as the keystore password:
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ keytool -import -file sso.crt -alias jboss -keystore keystore.jks
----
[[create-jgroups-keystore]]
*_Generate a secure key for the JGroups keystore:_*
Provide `password` as the keystore password:
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ keytool -genseckey -alias secret-key -storetype JCEKS -keystore jgroups.jceks
----
[[create-server-truststore]]
*_Import the CA certificate into a new {project_name} server truststore:_*
Provide `mykeystorepass` as the truststore password. Reply `yes` to `Trust this certificate? [no]:` question:
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ keytool -import -file xpaas.crt -alias xpaas.ca -keystore truststore.jks
----
[[Configuring-Secrets]]
==== Secrets
OpenShift uses objects called link:https://docs.openshift.com/container-platform/latest/dev_guide/secrets.html[secrets] to hold sensitive information, such as passwords or keystores.
. Create the secrets for the HTTPS and JGroups keystores, and {project_name} server truststore, generated in the xref:Configuring-Keystores[previous section].
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ oc secret new sso-app-secret keystore.jks jgroups.jceks truststore.jks
----
. Link these secrets to the link:https://docs.openshift.com/container-platform/latest/dev_guide/service_accounts.html#default-service-accounts-and-roles[default] service account, which is used to run {project_name} pods.
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ oc secrets link default sso-app-secret
----
==== Deploying the Chosen {project_name} Passthrough TLS Template via OpenShift CLI
After the aforementioned xref:Configuring-Keystores[keystores] and xref:Configuring-Secrets[secrets] are created, deploy some of the available xref:../introduction/introduction.adoc#passthrough-templates[passthrough TLS termination] as follows:
[WARNING]
====
For simplicity, the values of *_SSO_ADMIN_USERNAME_*, *_SSO_ADMIN_PASSWORD_*, *_HTTPS_PASSWORD_*, *_JGROUPS_ENCRYPT_PASSWORD_*, and *_SSO_TRUSTSTORE_PASSWORD_* variables xref:advanced-topics-deploy-{project_templates_version}-https-template[in the following command] have been chosen to match the default values of the respective parameters of the *_{project_templates_version}-https_* {project_name} application template.
For production environments, Red Hat recommends that you consult the on-site policy, specific to your organization for guidance on how to generate sufficiently strong user name and password for the administrator user account of the {project_name} server, and passwords for the HTTPS and JGroups keystores, and the truststore of the {project_name} server.
Be aware that *the passwords provided when provisioning the template need to match the passwords provided when creating the keystores*. If using different username and passwords, modify the values of respective xref:advanced-topics-deploy-{project_templates_version}-https-template[template parameters] as appropriate for your environment.
====
[NOTE]
====
The following commands using the *_keytool_*, a package *included with the Java Development Kit*, can be used to determine the names associated with the certificate:
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ keytool -v -list -keystore keystore.jks | grep Alias
Enter keystore password: mykeystorepass
Alias name: xpaas.ca
Alias name: jboss
----
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ keytool -v -list -keystore jgroups.jceks -storetype jceks | grep Alias
Enter keystore password: password
Alias name: secret-key
----
Finally, the *_SSO_ADMIN_USERNAME_*, *_SSO_ADMIN_PASSWORD_*, and the *_SSO_REALM_* template parameters in the following command are optional.
====
[[advanced-topics-deploy-{project_templates_version}-https-template]]
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ oc new-app --template={project_templates_version}-https \
-p HTTPS_SECRET="sso-app-secret" \
-p HTTPS_KEYSTORE="keystore.jks" \
-p HTTPS_NAME="jboss" \
-p HTTPS_PASSWORD="mykeystorepass" \
-p JGROUPS_ENCRYPT_SECRET="sso-app-secret" \
-p JGROUPS_ENCRYPT_KEYSTORE="jgroups.jceks" \
-p JGROUPS_ENCRYPT_NAME="secret-key" \
-p JGROUPS_ENCRYPT_PASSWORD="password" \
-p SSO_ADMIN_USERNAME="admin" \
-p SSO_ADMIN_PASSWORD="redhat" \
-p SSO_REALM="demorealm" \
-p SSO_TRUSTSTORE="truststore.jks" \
-p SSO_TRUSTSTORE_PASSWORD="mykeystorepass" \
-p SSO_TRUSTSTORE_SECRET="sso-app-secret"
--> Deploying template "openshift/{project_templates_version}-https" to project sso-app-demo
{project_name} {project_version} (Ephemeral with passthrough TLS)
---------
An example {project_name} 7 application. For more information about using this template, see \https://github.com/jboss-openshift/application-templates.
A new {project_name} service has been created in your project. The admin username/password for accessing the master realm via the {project_name} console is admin/redhat. Please be sure to create the following secrets: "sso-app-secret" containing the keystore.jks file used for serving secure content; "sso-app-secret" containing the jgroups.jceks file used for securing JGroups communications; "sso-app-secret" containing the truststore.jks file used for securing {project_name} requests.
* With parameters:
* Application Name=sso
* Custom http Route Hostname=
* Custom https Route Hostname=
* Server Keystore Secret Name=sso-app-secret
* Server Keystore Filename=keystore.jks
* Server Keystore Type=
* Server Certificate Name=jboss
* Server Keystore Password=mykeystorepass
* Datasource Minimum Pool Size=
* Datasource Maximum Pool Size=
* Datasource Transaction Isolation=
* JGroups Secret Name=sso-app-secret
* JGroups Keystore Filename=jgroups.jceks
* JGroups Certificate Name=secret-key
* JGroups Keystore Password=password
* JGroups Cluster Password=yeSppLfp # generated
* ImageStream Namespace=openshift
* {project_name} Administrator Username=admin
* {project_name} Administrator Password=redhat
* {project_name} Realm=demorealm
* {project_name} Service Username=
* {project_name} Service Password=
* {project_name} Trust Store=truststore.jks
* {project_name} Trust Store Password=mykeystorepass
* {project_name} Trust Store Secret=sso-app-secret
* Container Memory Limit=1Gi
--> Creating resources ...
service "sso" created
service "secure-sso" created
service "sso-ping" created
route "sso" created
route "secure-sso" created
deploymentconfig "sso" created
--> Success
Run 'oc status' to view your app.
----
[[advanced-concepts-sso-hostname-spi-setup]]
=== Customizing the Hostname for the {project_name} Server
The hostname SPI introduced a flexible way to configure the hostname for the {project_name} server. There are two built-in providers. The first is `request`, which uses the request headers to determine the hostname. This is the *default setting* for {project_openshift_product_name} image. The second is `fixed`, which allows configuring a fixed hostname. The latter makes sure that only valid hostnames can be used and allows internal applications to invoke {project_name} server through an alternative URL.
Run the following commands to set the `fixed` hostname SPI provider for the {project_name} server:
. Deploy the {project_openshift_product_name} image with *_SSO_HOSTNAME_* environment variable set to the desired hostname of the {project_name} server.
+
----
$ oc new-app --template=sso-cd-x509-https \
-p SSO_HOSTNAME="rh-sso-server.openshift.example.com"
----
. Identify the name of the route for the {project_name} service.
+
----
$ oc get routes
----
+
[cols="7",options="header"]
|===
|NAME
|HOST/PORT
|PATH
|SERVICES
|PORT
|TERMINATION
|WILDCARD
|sso
|sso-sso-app-demo.openshift.example.com
|
|sso
|<all>
|reencrypt
|None
|===
. Change the `host:` field to match the hostname specified as the value of the *_SSO_HOSTNAME_* environment variable above.
+
[NOTE]
====
Adjust the `rh-sso-server.openshift.example.com` value in the following command as necessary.
====
+
----
$ oc patch route/sso --type=json -p '[{"op": "replace", "path": "/spec/host", "value": "rh-sso-server.openshift.example.com"}]'
----
+
If successful, the previous command will return the following output:
+
----
route "sso" patched
----
[[sso-administrator-setup]]
=== Creating the Administrator Account for {project_name} Server
{project_name} does not provide any pre-configured management account out of the box. This administrator account is necessary for logging into the `master` realm's management console and perform server maintenance operations such as, creating realms or users, or registering applications intended to be secured by {project_name}.
The administrator account can be created:
* By providing values for the xref:sso-admin-template-parameters[*_SSO_ADMIN_USERNAME_* and *_SSO_ADMIN_PASSWORD_* parameters], when deploying the {project_name} application template, or
* By xref:sso-admin-remote-shell[a remote shell session to particular {project_name} pod], if the {project_openshift_product_name} image is deployed without an application template.
[NOTE]
====
{project_name} allows an initial administrator account to be created via the link:https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_single_sign-on/7.2/html-single/getting_started_guide/#creating_the_admin_account[Welcome Page] web form, but only if the Welcome Page is accessed from localhost; this method of administrator account creation is not applicable for the {project_openshift_product_name} image.
====
[[sso-admin-template-parameters]]
==== Creating the Administrator Account Using Template Parameters
When deploying {project_name} application template, the *_SSO_ADMIN_USERNAME_* and *_SSO_ADMIN_PASSWORD_* parameters denote the username and password of the {project_name} server's administrator account to be created for the `master` realm.
[NOTE]
====
*Both of these parameters are required.* If not specified, they are auto generated and displayed as an OpenShift instructional message when the template is instantiated.
====
[IMPORTANT]
====
The lifespan of the {project_name} server's administrator account depends upon the storage type used to store the {project_name} server's database:
* For an in-memory database mode (*_{project_templates_version}-https_* and *_{project_templates_version}-x509-https_* templates) the account exists throughout the lifecycle of the particular {project_name} pod (stored account data is lost upon pod destruction),
* For an ephemeral database mode (*_{project_templates_version}-mysql_* and *_{project_templates_version}-postgresql_* templates) the account exists throughout the lifecycle of the database pod (even if the {project_name} pod is destructed, the stored account data is preserved under the assumption that the database pod is still running),
* For persistent database mode (*_{project_templates_version}-mysql-persistent_*, *_{project_templates_version}-x509-mysql-persistent_*, *_{project_templates_version}-postgresql-persistent_*, and *_{project_templates_version}-x509-postgresql-persistent_* templates) the account exists throughout the lifecycle of the persistent medium used to hold the database data. This means that the stored account data is preserved even when both the {project_name} and the database pods are destructed.
It is a common practice to deploy an {project_name} application template to get the corresponding OpenShift deployment config for the application, and then reuse that deployment config multiple times (every time a new {project_name} application needs to be instantiated).
====
[WARNING]
====
In the case of *ephemeral or persistent database mode*, after creating the RH_SSO server's administrator account, remove the *_SSO_ADMIN_USERNAME_* and *_SSO_ADMIN_PASSWORD_* variables from the deployment config before deploying new {project_name} applications.
====
[IMPORTANT]
====
Run the following commands to prepare the previously created deployment config of the {project_name} application for reuse after the administrator account has been created:
. Identify the deployment config of the {project_name} application.
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ oc get dc -o name
deploymentconfig/sso
deploymentconfig/sso-mysql
----
. Clear the *_SSO_ADMIN_USERNAME_* and *_SSO_ADMIN_PASSWORD_* variables setting.
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ oc set env dc/sso \
-e SSO_ADMIN_USERNAME="" \
-e SSO_ADMIN_PASSWORD=""
----
====
[[sso-admin-remote-shell]]
==== Creating the Administrator Account via Remote Shell Session to {project_name} Pod
Run following commands to create an administrator account for the `master` realm of the {project_name} server, when deploying the {project_openshift_product_name} image directly from the image stream (without the xref:../introduction/introduction.adoc#sso-templates[template]), after the {project_name} application pod has been started:
. Identify the {project_name} application pod.
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ oc get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
sso-12-pt93n 1/1 Running 0 1m
sso-mysql-6-d97pf 1/1 Running 0 2m
----
. Open a remote shell session to the {project_openshift_product_name} container.
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
$ oc rsh sso-12-pt93n
sh-4.2$
----
. Create the {project_name} server administrator account for the `master` realm at the command line with the `add-user-keycloak.sh` script.
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
sh-4.2$ cd /opt/eap/bin/
sh-4.2$ ./add-user-keycloak.sh \
-r master \
-u sso_admin \
-p sso_password
Added 'sso_admin' to '/opt/eap/standalone/configuration/keycloak-add-user.json', restart server to load user
----
+
[NOTE]
====
The 'sso_admin' / 'sso_password' credentials in the example above are for demonstration purposes only. Refer to the password policy applicable within your organization for guidance on how to create a secure user name and password.
====
. Restart the underlying JBoss EAP server instance to load the newly added user account. Wait for the server to restart properly.
+
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
sh-4.2$ ./jboss-cli.sh --connect ':reload'
{
"outcome" => "success",
"result" => undefined
}
----
+
[WARNING]
====
When restarting the server it is important to restart just the JBoss EAP process within the running {project_name} container, and not the whole container. This is because restarting the whole container will recreate it from scratch, without the {project_name} server administration account for the `master` realm.
====
. Log in to the `master` realm's administration console of the {project_name} server using the credentials created in the steps above. In the browser, navigate to *\http://sso-<project-name>.<hostname>/auth/admin* for the {project_name} web server, or to *\https://secure-sso-<project-name>.<hostname>/auth/admin* for the encrypted {project_name} web server, and specify the user name and password used to create the administrator user.
=== Deployment Process
Once deployed, the *_{project_templates_version}-https_* and *_{project_templates_version}-x509-https_* templates create a single pod that contains both the database and the {project_name} servers. The *_{project_templates_version}-mysql_*, *_{project_templates_version}-mysql-persistent_*, *_{project_templates_version}-x509-mysql-persistent_*, *_{project_templates_version}-postgresql_*, *_{project_templates_version}-postgresql-persistent_*, and *_{project_templates_version}-x509-postgresql-persistent_* templates create two pods, one for the database server and one for the {project_name} web server.
After the {project_name} web server pod has started, it can be accessed at its custom configured hostnames, or at the default hostnames:
* *\http://sso-_<project-name>_._<hostname>_/auth/admin*: for the {project_name} web server, and
* *\https://secure-sso-_<project-name>_._<hostname>_/auth/admin*: for the encrypted {project_name} web server.
Use the xref:sso-administrator-setup[administrator user credentials] to log in into the `master` realm's administration console.
[[SSO-Clients]]
=== {project_name} Clients
Clients are {project_name} entities that request user authentication. A client can be an application requesting {project_name} to provide user authentication, or it can be making requests for access tokens to start services on behalf of an authenticated user. See the link:https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_single_sign-on/7.2/html/server_administration_guide/clients[Managing Clients chapter of the {project_name} documentation] for more information.
{project_name} provides link:https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_single_sign-on/7.2/html/server_administration_guide/clients#oidc_clients[OpenID-Connect] and link:https://access.redhat.com/documentation/en-us/red_hat_single_sign-on/7.2/html/server_administration_guide/clients#saml_clients[SAML] client protocols. +
OpenID-Connect is the preferred protocol and utilizes three different access types:
- *public*: Useful for JavaScript applications that run directly in the browser and require no server configuration.
- *confidential*: Useful for server-side clients, such as EAP web applications, that need to perform a browser login.
- *bearer-only*: Useful for back-end services that allow bearer token requests.
It is required to specify the client type in the *<auth-method>* key of the application *web.xml* file. This file is read by the image at deployment. Set the value of *<auth-method>* element to:
* *KEYCLOAK* for the OpenID Connect client.
* *KEYCLOAK-SAML* for the SAML client.
The following is an example snippet for the application *web.xml* to configure an OIDC client:
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
----
...
<login-config>
<auth-method>KEYCLOAK</auth-method>
</login-config>
...
----
[[Auto-Man-Client-Reg]]
==== Automatic and Manual {project_name} Client Registration Methods
A client application can be automatically registered to an {project_name} realm by using credentials passed in variables specific to the *_eap64-sso-s2i_*, *_eap71-sso-s2i_*, and *_datavirt63-secure-s2i_* templates.
Alternatively, you can manually register the client application by configuring and exporting the {project_name} client adapter and including it in the client application configuration.
===== Automatic {project_name} Client Registration
Automatic {project_name} client registration is determined by {project_name} environment variables specific to the *_eap64-sso-s2i_*, *_eap71-sso-s2i_*, and *_datavirt63-secure-s2i_* templates. The {project_name} credentials supplied in the template are then used to register the client to the {project_name} realm during deployment of the client application.
The {project_name} environment variables included in the *_eap64-sso-s2i_*, *_eap71-sso-s2i_*, and *_datavirt63-secure-s2i_* templates are:
[cols="2*", options="header"]
|===
|Variable
|Description
|*_HOSTNAME_HTTP_*
|Custom hostname for http service route. Leave blank for default hostname of <application-name>.<project>.<default-domain-suffix>
|*_HOSTNAME_HTTPS_*
|Custom hostname for https service route. Leave blank for default hostname of <application-name>.<project>.<default-domain-suffix>
|*_SSO_URL_*
|The {project_name} web server authentication address: $$https://secure-sso-$$_<project-name>_._<hostname>_/auth
|*_SSO_REALM_*
|The {project_name} realm created for this procedure.
|*_SSO_USERNAME_*
|The name of the _realm management user_.
|*_SSO_PASSWORD_*
| The password of the user.
|*_SSO_PUBLIC_KEY_*
|The public key generated by the realm. It is located in the *Keys* tab of the *Realm Settings* in the {project_name} console.
|*_SSO_BEARER_ONLY_*
|If set to *true*, the OpenID Connect client is registered as bearer-only.
|*_SSO_ENABLE_CORS_*
|If set to *true*, the {project_name} adapter enables Cross-Origin Resource Sharing (CORS).
|===
If the {project_name} client uses the SAML protocol, the following additional variables need to be configured:
[cols="2*", options="header"]
|===
|Variable
|Description
|*_SSO_SAML_KEYSTORE_SECRET_*
|Secret to use for access to SAML keystore. The default is _sso-app-secret_.
|*_SSO_SAML_KEYSTORE_*
|Keystore filename in the SAML keystore secret. The default is _keystore.jks_.
|*_SSO_SAML_KEYSTORE_PASSWORD_*
|Keystore password for SAML. The default is _mykeystorepass_.
|*_SSO_SAML_CERTIFICATE_NAME_*
|Alias for keys/certificate to use for SAML. The default is _jboss_.
|===
See xref:Example-EAP-Auto[Example Workflow: Automatically Registering EAP Application in {project_name} with OpenID-Connect Client] for an end-to-end example of the automatic client registration method using an OpenID-Connect client.
===== Manual {project_name} Client Registration
Manual {project_name} client registration is determined by the presence of a deployment file in the client application's _../configuration/_ directory. These files are exported from the client adapter in the {project_name} web console. The name of this file is different for OpenID-Connect and SAML clients:
[horizontal]
*OpenID-Connect*:: _../configuration/secure-deployments_
*SAML*:: _../configuration/secure-saml-deployments_
These files are copied to the {project_name} adapter configuration section in the _standalone-openshift.xml_ at when the application is deployed.
There are two methods for passing the {project_name} adapter configuration to the client application:
* Modify the deployment file to contain the {project_name} adapter configuration so that it is included in the _standalone-openshift.xml_ file at deployment, or
* Manually include the OpenID-Connect _keycloak.json_ file, or the SAML _keycloak-saml.xml_ file in the client application's *../WEB-INF* directory.
See xref:Example-EAP-Manual[Example Workflow: Manually Configure an Application to Use {project_name} Authentication, Using SAML Client] for an end-to-end example of the manual {project_name} client registration method using a SAML client.
=== Limitations
OpenShift does not currently accept OpenShift role mapping from external providers. If {project_name} is used as an authentication gateway for OpenShift, users created in {project_name} must have the roles added using the OpenShift Administrator `oc adm policy` command.
For example, to allow an {project_name}-created user to view a project namespace in OpenShift:
[source,bash,subs="attributes+,macros+"]
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$ oc adm policy add-role-to-user view <pass:quotes[_user-name_]> -n <pass:quotes[_project-name_]>
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