docs/content/reference/guides/proxy-authorization.md
Proxies can integrate with Authelia via several authorization endpoints. These endpoints are by default configured appropriately for most use cases; however they can be individually configured, removed, added, etc.
They are currently divided into two sections:
These endpoints are meant to collect important information from these requests via headers to determine both metadata about the request (such as the resource and IP address of the user) which is determined via the Implementations, and the identity of the user which is determined via the Authn Strategies.
| Name | Path | Implementation | Authn Strategies |
|---|---|---|---|
| forward-auth | /api/authz/forward-auth | ForwardAuth | HeaderAuthorization, CookieSession |
| ext-authz | /api/authz/ext-authz | ExtAuthz | HeaderAuthorization, CookieSession |
| auth-request | /api/authz/auth-request | AuthRequest | HeaderAuthorization, CookieSession |
| legacy | /api/verify | Legacy | HeaderLegacy, CookieSession |
Various metadata is collected from the request made to the Authelia authorization server. This table describes the metadata collected. All of this metadata is utilized for the purpose of determining if the user is authorized to a particular resource.
| Name | Description |
|---|---|
| Method | The Method Verb of the Request |
| Scheme | The URI Scheme of the Request |
| Hostname | The URI Hostname of the Request |
| Path | The URI Path of the Request |
| IP | The IP address of the client making the Request |
| Authelia URL | The URL of the Authelia Portal |
Some values may have either fallbacks or override values. If they exist they will be in the alternatives table which will be below the main metadata table.
The metadata table contains the recommended source of this information and this source is often times automatic depending on the proxy implementation. The difference between an override and a fallback is an override values will take precedence over the metadata values, and fallbacks only take effect if the override values or metadata values are completely unset.
This is the implementation which supports Traefik via the ForwardAuth Middleware, Caddy via the forward_auth directive, HAProxy via the auth-request lua plugin, and Skipper via the webhook auth filter.
| Metadata | Source | Key |
|---|---|---|
| Method 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-Method 2 |
| Scheme 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-Proto 2 |
| Hostname 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-Host 2 |
| Path 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-URI 2 |
| IP 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-For 3 |
| Authelia URL 1 | Session Cookie Configuration | authelia_url |
| Metadata | Alternative Type | Source | Key |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scheme 1 | Fallback | Header | Server Scheme |
| IP 1 | Fallback | TCP Packet | Source IP |
| Authelia URL 1 | Override | Query Argument | authelia_url |
This is the implementation which supports Envoy via the HTTP ExtAuthz Filter.
| Metadata | Source | Key |
|---|---|---|
| Method 1 | Start Line | HTTP Method 2 |
| Scheme 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-Proto 2 |
| Hostname 1 | Header | Host 2 |
| Path 1 | Header | Endpoint Sub-Path 2 |
| IP 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-For 2 |
| Authelia URL 1 | Session Cookie Configuration | authelia_url |
| Metadata | Alternative Type | Source | Key |
|---|---|---|---|
| Scheme 1 | Fallback | Header | Server Scheme |
| IP 1 | Fallback | TCP Packet | Source IP |
| Authelia URL 1 | Override | Header | X-Authelia-URL |
This is the implementation which supports NGINX via the auth_request HTTP module, and can technically support HAProxy via the auth-request lua plugin.
| Metadata | Source | Key |
|---|---|---|
| Method 1 | Header | X-Original-Method 2 |
| Scheme 1 | Header | X-Original-URL 2 |
| Hostname 1 | Header | X-Original-URL 2 |
| Path 1 | Header | X-Original-URL 2 |
| IP 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-For 3 |
| Authelia URL 1 | Session Cookie Configuration | authelia_url |
{{< callout context="note" title="Note" icon="outline/info-circle" >}}
This endpoint does not support automatic redirection. This is because there is no support on NGINX's side
to achieve this with ngx_http_auth_request_module and the redirection must be performed within the NGINX
configuration. However, we return the appropriate URL to redirect users to with the Location header which
simplifies this process especially for multi-cookie domain deployments.
{{< /callout >}}
| Metadata | Alternative Type | Source | Key |
|---|---|---|---|
| IP 1 | Fallback | TCP Packet | Source IP |
| Authelia URL 1 | Override | Query Argument | authelia_url |
This is the legacy implementation which used to operate similar to both the ForwardAuth and AuthRequest implementations.
{{< callout context="note" title="Note" icon="outline/info-circle" >}} This implementation has duplicate entries for metadata. This is due to the fact this implementation used to cater for the AuthRequest and ForwardAuth implementations. The table is in order of precedence where if a header higher in the list exists it is used over those lower in the list. {{< /callout >}}
| Metadata | Source | Key |
|---|---|---|
| Method 1 | Header | X-Original-Method |
| Scheme 1 | Header | X-Original-URL |
| Hostname 1 | Header | X-Original-URL |
| Path 1 | Header | X-Original-URL |
| Method 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-Method |
| Scheme 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-Proto |
| Hostname 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-Host |
| Path 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-URI |
| IP 1 | Header | X-Forwarded-For |
| Authelia URL 1 | Query Argument | rd |
| Authelia URL 1 | Header | X-Authelia-URL |
Authentication strategies are used to determine the users identity which is essential to determining if they are authorized to visit a particular resource. Authentication strategies are executed in order, and have three potential results.
Failure Action: Redirect the user for authentication.
Metadata: Cookie header value, considered absent when the configured cookie key is absent from this header or the header is absent.
This strategy uses a cookie which links the user to a session to determine the users identity. This is the default strategy for end-users.
Failure Action: Responds with the WWW-Authenticate header and a 401 Unauthorized status code.
Metadata: Authorization header, considered absent when the header is absent.
This strategy uses the Authorization header to determine the users' identity.
Failure Action: Responds with the Proxy-Authenticate header and a 407 Proxy Authentication Required status code.
Metadata: Proxy-Authorization header, considered absent when the header is absent.
This strategy uses the Proxy-Authorization header to determine the users' identity.
Failure Action: Responds with the WWW-Authenticate header and a 401 Unauthorized status code.
Metadata: Proxy-Authorization header, considered absent when the header is absent.
This strategy uses the Proxy-Authorization header to determine the users' identity. It is specifically intended for use with the AuthRequest implementation.
Failure Action: Responds with the WWW-Authenticate header and a 401 Unauthorized status code.
Metadata: Proxy-Authorization header, considered absent when the header is absent.
This strategy uses the Proxy-Authorization header to determine the users' identity.
This is considered required metadata, and must either be provided via the primary metadata source or the alternative source for the request to be considered valid. ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4 ↩5 ↩6 ↩7 ↩8 ↩9 ↩10 ↩11 ↩12 ↩13 ↩14 ↩15 ↩16 ↩17 ↩18 ↩19 ↩20 ↩21 ↩22 ↩23 ↩24 ↩25 ↩26 ↩27 ↩28 ↩29 ↩30 ↩31 ↩32 ↩33 ↩34 ↩35 ↩36 ↩37
This is considered a required header. If an alternative or fallback source is described this is very likely to be incorrect and cannot be supported. ↩ ↩2 ↩3 ↩4 ↩5 ↩6 ↩7 ↩8 ↩9 ↩10 ↩11 ↩12 ↩13
This header is not required but the fallback is likely desirable in most scenarios. ↩ ↩2