Two-phase authentication using spring security like gmail - spring-security

I wan't like to implement 2-level authentication like gmail where user need to authenticate using sms sent on mobile (or code sent on mail) apart from username and password.
I am already using spring security 4 in my project. Is there any support with spring security for the same?
Or please let me know the best approach for implementing the same.
Regards,
Jubin

Related

Q: Passwordless auth on Rails

Is there a way to setup auth without password where user receives one-time password on every login.
Only auth option for Rails that I know of is Devise but it doesn't seem to support "passwordless" auth.
Are there any other options and am I missing something about devise not supporting it?
You could consider requiring your user to have a Fido U2F compliant device.
They need to plug it in on register. and on login. It is more commonly used as 2nd factor authentication. but I can imagine people who might want to use it as a single authentication method. The protocol is web_authn and there is a gem for it in ruby.
https://github.com/cedarcode/webauthn-ruby
you can test at https://webauthn.io/
you could also consider the more common OTP Authenticator app.
Have people scan your QR Core on signup, and that would become the only auth required.
is this what you are asking? Single method of authentication, without a saved password.
sent everything by email or SMS seems annoying
but that is also possible.

Spring Boot + SpringSecurity + OAuth2 client - use custom UserDetailsService or AuthenticationProvider

I am creating website using Spring Boot, Spring MVC and spring-security-oauth2 and I am trying to authenticate my locally stored users against Google, Facebook, GitHub ... OAuth2 services. I also have standard username-password for them.
My idea is to store pair of [OAuth2_provider_type,OAuth2_subjectId] for each user to local database from the first success oauth login and then use this pair to find correct user when user authenticate himself by Google (or FB...) again. I have correctly authenticate with Google/Facebook but I don't know how to connect my local stored users to Spring OAuth2 Security and get them to SecurityContext.
Could somebody point me to some example or integration test where I can see something similar?
I am scanning spring-security-oauth2 sourcecode and I am confused little bit - do I need OAuth2 AuthorizationServer or ResourceServer for that?
Thanks for any help!

CAS vs. SAML vs. OAuth2

Before you put me down for asking too basic a question without doing any homework, I'd like to say that I have been doing a lot of reading on these topics, but I'm still confused.
My needs seem simple enough. At my company, we have a bunch of Ruby on Rails applications. I want to build an SSO authentication service which all those applications should use.
Trying to do some research on how to go about doing this, I read about CAS, SAML and OAuth2. (I know that the "Auth" in OAuth stands for authorization, and not authentication, but I read enough articles saying how OAuth can be used for authentication just fine - this is one of them.)
Could someone tell me in simple terms what these 3 are? Are they alternatives (competing)? Is it even right to be comparing them?
And there are so many gems which all seem to be saying very similar stuff:
https://github.com/rubycas/rubycas-server and https://github.com/rubycas/rubycas-client
https://github.com/nbudin/devise_cas_authenticatable
https://github.com/onelogin/ruby-saml
CASino and https://github.com/rbCAS/casino-activerecord_authenticator
And I am sure there are hundreds of OAuth related gems.
I just want a separate Rails application which handles all the authentication for my other Rails apps.
Note: I do not want to allow users to use their Google / Facebook accounts to login. Our users already have accounts on our site. I want them to be able to login using that account once and be able to access all our apps without signing in again. Signing out in any app should sign them out of all apps.
UPDATE
I have come across these two OAuth solutions:
http://dev.mikamai.com/post/110722727899/oauth2-on-rails
http://blog.yorkxin.org/posts/2013/11/05/oauth2-tutorial-grape-api-doorkeeper-en/
They seem to be describing something very similar to what I want. But I haven't found any guide / blog post / tutorial showing how to do this with SAML / CAS.
Suggestions welcome.
UPDATE 2
More details about our use-case.
We do not have any existing SAML architecture in place. Primarily, it is going to be OUR users (registered directly on our website) who are going to be accessing all our applications. In the future, we may have third-party (partner) companies calling our APIs. We may also have users from these third-party (partner) companies (registered on their websites) accessing our apps.
CAS-Server:
A stand-alone central login page where the user enters their credentials (i.e. their username and password).
CAS supports the standardized SAML 1.1 protocol primarily to support
attribute release to clients and single sign-out.
(a table in a SQL database, ActiveDirectory/LDAP, Google accounts, etc.)
Full compatibility with the open, multi-platform CAS protocol (CAS clients are implemented for a wide range of platforms, including PHP, various Java frameworks, .NET, Zope, etc.)
Multi-language localization -- RubyCAS-Server automatically detects the user's preferred language and presents the appropriate interface.
SAML :
Security Assertion Markup Language is an XML-based, open-standard data format for exchanging authentication and authorization data between parties, in particular, between an identity provider and a service provider.
SAML authorization is a two step process and you are expected to implement support for both.
OAuth 2.0:
The OAuth 2.0 authorization framework enables a third-party
application to obtain limited access to an HTTP service, either on
behalf of a resource owner by orchestrating an approval interaction
between the resource owner and the HTTP service, or by allowing the
third-party application to obtain access on its own behalf.
Important Note :
SAML has one feature that OAuth2 lacks: the SAML token contains the user identity information (because of signing). With OAuth2, you don't get that out of the box, and instead, the Resource Server needs to make an additional round trip to validate the token with the Authorization Server.
On the other hand, with OAuth2 you can invalidate an access token on the Authorization Server, and disable it from further access to the Resource Server.
Both approaches have nice features and both will work for SSO. We have proved out both concepts in multiple languages and various kinds of applications. At the end of the day OAuth2 seems to be a better fit for our needs (since there isn't an existing SAML infrastructure in place to utilize).
OAuth2 provides a simpler and more standardized solution which covers
all of our current needs and avoids the use of workarounds for
interoperability with native applications.
When should I use which?
1.If your usecase involves SSO (when at least one actor or participant is an enterprise), then use SAML.
2.If your usecase involves providing access (temporarily or permanent) to resources (such as accounts, pictures, files etc), then use OAuth.
3.If you need to provide access to a partner or customer application to your portal, then use SAML.
4.If your usecase requires a centralized identity source, then use SAML (Identity provider).
5.If your usecase involves mobile devices, then OAuth2 with some form of Bearer Tokens is appropriate.
Reference 1,Reference 2,Reference 3
If you need to authenticate for LDAP or ActiveDirectory then a solution like one of the CAS gems you mentioned above is right for you (RubyCAS, CASino).
If you can afford it, one of the commercial vendors (like Okta) is your best option because they will stay on top of security patches and manage your authentication needs for you. In particular, if you have to support ActiveDirectory, they've already implemented it.
OAuth is most useful for third party authentication, though it can do SSO. So if you wanted to support Google / Facebook logins or be a third party authenticator then it's a great choice. Since you don't want to support Google / Facebook then OAuth is probably not what you want.
If you are only intending to use HTTP POST for your SSO needs then the ruby-saml gem could be the way to go. You would have to implement your own Identity provider and add a service provider component to all your websites (possibly in the form of a gem.) Part of what you would need is a rails api to act as your identity provider. This gem helps support writing API's in rails.
EDIT
You mention the possibility that future third party users might be logging on to your site. This changes your calculus away from rolling your own ruby-saml solution.
The best way to share your authentication API is to implement an OAuth layer. Doorkeeper is a popular solution and is fast becoming the standard for Rails authentication. It's community support, flexibility and ease of use make it the best way to go for a consumable authentication API.
Railscast for implementing doorkeeper
Anjan.
I've used CAS and OAuth in my work. Here are some of my opinions, and hope to help.
Basically
Both CAS and SAML aim to solve SSO situation. And CAS is a service or an authentication system, which can support SAML protocol.
OAuth aims to solve authorization and authentication.
And in practice,
Both CAS and SAML act as an gateway in front of a group of applications which belong to one organization. Just like your case.
OAuth is used to authorize and authenticate between different organizations.
Just my thoughts, and hope to hear more voices.
We have used CAS and SAML in our architecture (Mobile App, Online Portal, and MicroServices) and both are used for different purpose.
Our Online Portal is like online banking that runs in public domain and has to be secure. We don't want to store password and other secure token's in the DB of the online portal, therefore, we use CAS for authentication and authorization. During registration, when user chooses the password, we store the password in CAS and store corresponding token in the DB of Portal
When user login next time, User enters the user name and password in Portal. Portal fetches the token corresponding to user from DB and sends User_name, password, and token to CAS for validation.
But, in case user has already logged in into one application and we redirect user to our another application then we dont want to user to enter username and password again for second application. We use SAML to solve this. First application shares user details with SAML server and gets token in return. First application passes the token to second application. Second application sends token to SAML server to get user details and on success lands user to desired page. Our first application can be Mobile App and second can be Portal in the scenario of App2Web.
Since you have got lot of answers for this question, I would like to suggest you an identity product that can be cater these kind of all protocol in one hand with lot of authentication and user management features. You can just try WSO2 Identity Server version for this.

How do i implement google/facebook login to my application?

so i have an application based on the ionic-framework and a server side based sails.js.
my application uses data like username, passwords, user image etc.. so i though i'll be a good idea to use google sign up using OAuth 2.0.
I have no idea how to implement that to my application. could you please give me a wide detailed explanation with some examples on how OAuth 2.0 is working with sails?
Have you tried using sails-generate-auth ? It is based on passport and it generates whole authentication layer for your sails.js application including OAuth2.0 and OpenID.
Edit
More information about accessing third-party user's profile details:
next step after the oauth authentication - sails

Authenticating to Spring Security after authenticating to Twitter / Facebook

I have a grails app configured with spring-security-core and I need to allow Facebook / Twitter logins. I'm using the facebook plugin for grails and I'm using twitter4j for twitter authentication. Currently, I am successfully authenticating against Twitter and Facebook.
I'm wondering how I am to integrate those logins with Spring security. If a user logs in with Twitter I am assuming I need to create an account in my database and then use that account to process a login for Spring Security so that it wires up the session appropriately and all the authentication checks happen based on my #Secured annotations and tag usage in my views.
Something similar, I am guessing, needs to happen based on Facebook logins. Can someone point me in the right direction to get this implemented correctly?
A really good resource for understanding how to integrate an external authentication source is this article by Luke Taylor:
http://blog.springsource.com/2010/08/02/spring-security-in-google-app-engine/
Grant

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