keycloak-scim/authorization_services/topics/enforcer/keycloak-enforcement-bearer.adoc
2017-02-14 10:07:54 +01:00

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[[_enforcer_bearer]]
==== Protecting a Stateless Service Using a Bearer Token
If the adapter is configured with the `bearer-only` configuration option, the policy enforcer decides whether a request
to access a protected resource is allowed or denied based on the permissions of the bearer token.
. HTTP GET example passing an RPT as a bearer token
```bash
GET /my-resource-server/my-protected-resource HTTP/1.1
Host: host.com
Authorization: Bearer ${RPT}
...
```
In this example, a *keycloak.json* file in your application is similar to the following:
.Example of WEB-INF/keycloak.json with the bearer-only configuration option
```json
...
"bearer-only" : true,
...
```
===== Authorization Response
When a client tries to access a resource server with a bearer token that is lacking permissions to access a protected resource, the resource server
responds with a *401* status code and a `WWW-Authenticate` header. The value of the `WWW-Authenticate` header depends on the authorization protocol
in use by the resource server.
Here is an example of a response from a resource server that is using UMA as the authorization protocol:
```bash
HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
WWW-Authenticate: UMA realm="photoz-restful-api",as_uri="http://localhost:8080/auth/realms/photoz/authz/authorize",ticket="${PERMISSION_TICKET}"
```
And another example when the resource server is using the Entitlement protocol:
```bash
HTTP/1.1 401 Unauthorized
WWW-Authenticate: KC_ETT realm="photoz-restful-api",as_uri="http://localhost:8080/auth/realms/photoz/authz/entitlement"
```
Once a client receives a response from the server, it examines the status code and `WWW-Authenticate` header to obtain an RPT from the {{book.project.name}} Server.