This is a SAML 2.0 authentication provider for Passport, the Node.js authentication library.
The code was originally based on Michael Bosworth's express-saml library.
Passport-SAML has been tested to work with Onelogin, Okta, Shibboleth, SimpleSAMLphp based Identity Providers, and with Active Directory Federation Services.
$ npm install passport-saml
This example utilizes the Feide OpenIdp identity provider. You need an account there to log in with this. You also need to register your site as a service provider.
The SAML identity provider will redirect you to the URL provided by the path
configuration.
passport.use(new SamlStrategy(
{
path: '/login/callback',
entryPoint: 'https://openidp.feide.no/simplesaml/saml2/idp/SSOService.php',
issuer: 'passport-saml'
},
function(profile, done) {
findByEmail(profile.email, function(err, user) {
if (err) {
return done(err);
}
return done(null, user);
});
})
);
Config parameter details:
path
: path to callback; will be combined with protocol and server host information to construct callback url ifcallbackUrl
is not specified (default:/saml/consume
)protocol
: protocol for callback; will be combined with path and server host information to construct callback url ifcallbackUrl
is not specified (default:https://
)callbackUrl
: full callbackUrl (overrides path if supplied)entryPoint
: identity provider entrypointissuer
: issuer string to supply to identity providercert
: see 'security and signatures'privateCert
: see 'security and signatures'decryptionPvk
: optional private key that will be used to attempt to decrypt any encrypted assertions that are receivedidentifierFormat
: if truthy, name identifier format to request from identity provider (default:urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:emailAddress
)acceptedClockSkewMs
: Time in milliseconds of skew that is acceptable between client and server when checkingOnBefore
andNotOnOrAfter
assertion condition validity timestamps. Setting to-1
will disable checking these conditions entirely. Default is0
.validateInResponseTo
: if truthy, then InResponseTo will be validated from incoming SAML responsesrequestIdExpirationPeriodMs
: Defines the expiration time when a Request ID generated for a SAML request will not be valid if seen in a SAML response in theInResponseTo
field. Default is 8 hours.cacheProvider
: Defines the implementation for a cache provider used to store request Ids generated in SAML requests as part ofInResponseTo
validation. Default is a built-in in-memory cache provider. For details see the 'Cache Provider' section.attributeConsumingServiceIndex
: optionalAttributeConsumingServiceIndex
attribute to add to AuthnRequest to instruct the IDP which attribute set to attach to the response (link)
You need to provide a route corresponding to the path
configuration parameter given to the strategy:
app.post('/login/callback',
passport.authenticate('saml', { failureRedirect: '/', failureFlash: true }),
function(req, res) {
res.redirect('/');
}
);
Use passport.authenticate()
, specifying saml
as the strategy:
app.get('/login',
passport.authenticate('saml', { failureRedirect: '/', failureFlash: true }),
function(req, res) {
res.redirect('/');
}
);
As a convenience, the strategy object exposes a generateServiceProviderMetadata
method which will generate a service provider metadata document suitable for supplying to an identity provider. This method will only work on strategies which are configured with a callbackUrl
(since the relative path for the callback is not sufficient information to generate a complete metadata document).
The decryptionCert
argument should be a certificate matching the decryptionPvk
and is required if the strategy is configured with a decryptionPvk
.
Passport-SAML uses the HTTP Redirect Binding for its AuthnRequest
s, and expects to receive the messages back via the HTTP POST binding.
Authentication requests sent by Passport-SAML can be signed using RSA-SHA1. To sign them you need to provide a private key in the PEM format via the privateCert
configuration key. For example:
privateCert: fs.readFileSync('./cert.pem', 'utf-8')
It is a good idea to validate the incoming SAML Responses. For this, you can provide the Identity Provider's certificate using the cert
confguration key:
cert: 'MIICizCCAfQCCQCY8tKaMc0BMjANBgkqh ... W=='
Here is a configuration that has been proven to work with ADFS:
{
entryPoint: 'https://ad.example.net/adfs/ls/',
issuer: 'https://your-app.example.net/login/callback',
callbackUrl: 'https://your-app.example.net/login/callback',
cert: 'MIICizCCAfQCCQCY8tKaMc0BMjANBgkqh ... W==',
identifierFormat: null
}
Please note that ADFS needs to have a trust established to your service in order for this to work.
If the NotBefore
or the NotOnOrAfter
attributes are returned in the SAML response, Passport-SAML will validate them
against the current time +/- a configurable clock skew value. The default for the skew is 0s. This is to account for
differences between the clock time on the client (Node server with Passport-SAML) and the server (Identity provider).
NotBefore
and NotOnOrAfter
can be part of either the SubjectConfirmation
element, or within in the Assertion/Conditions
element
in the SAML response.
When configured (turn validateInResponseTo
to true
in the Passport-SAML config), the InResponseTo
attribute will be validated.
Validation will succeed if Passport-SAML previously generated a SAML request with an id that matches the value of InResponseTo
.
Also note that InResponseTo
is validated as an attribute of the top level Response
element in the SAML response, as well
as part of the SubjectConfirmation
element.
Previous request id's generated for SAML requests will eventually expire. This is controlled with the requestIdExpirationPeriodMs
option
passed into the Passport-SAML config. The default is 28,800,000 ms (8 hours). Once expired, a subsequent SAML response
received with an InResponseTo
equal to the expired id will not validate and an error will be returned.
When InResponseTo
validation is turned on, Passport-SAML will store generated request ids used in SAML requests to the IdP. The implementation
of how things are stored, checked to see if they exist, and eventually removed is from the Cache Provider used by Passport-SAML.
The default implementation is a simple in-memory cache provider. For multiple server/process scenarios, this will not be sufficient as
the server/process that generated the request id and stored in memory could be different than the server/process handling the
SAML response. The InResponseTo
could fail in this case erroneously.
To support this scenario you can provide an implementation for a cache provider by providing an object with following functions:
{
save: function(key, value, callback) {
// save the key with the optional value, invokes the callback with the value saves
},
get: function(key, callback) {
// invokes 'callback' and passes the value if found, null otherwise
},
remove: function(key, callback) {
// removes the key from the cache, invokes `callback` with the
// key removed, null if no key is removed
}
}
The callback
argument is a function in the style of normal Node callbacks:
function callback(err, result)
{
}
Provide an instance of an object which has these functions passed to the cacheProvider
config option when using Passport-SAML.
A single instance of passport-saml will only authenticate users against a single identity provider. If you have a use case where different logins need to be routed to different identity providers, you can create multiple instances of passport-saml, and either dispatch to them with your own routing code, or use a library like https://www.npmjs.org/package/passports.
Gerard Braad has provided an example app at https://github.com/gbraad/passport-saml-example/