An implementation of the Security Assertion Markup Language (SAML) in Erlang. So far this supports enough of the standard to act as a Service Provider (SP) to perform authentication with SAML. It has been tested extensively against the SimpleSAMLPHP IdP and can be used in production.
The SAML standard refers to a flow of request/responses that make up one concrete action as a "protocol". Currently all of the basic Single-Sign-On and Single-Logout protocols are supported. There is no support at present for the optional Artifact Resolution, NameID Management, or NameID Mapping protocols.
Future work may add support for the Assertion Query protocol (which is useful to check if SSO is already available for a user without demanding they authenticate immediately).
Single sign-on protocols:
- SP: send AuthnRequest (REDIRECT or POST) -> receive Response + Assertion (POST)
Single log-out protocols:
- SP: send LogoutRequest (REDIRECT) -> receive LogoutResponse (REDIRECT or POST)
- SP: receive LogoutRequest (REDIRECT OR POST) -> send LogoutResponse (REDIRECT)
esaml supports RSA+SHA1/SHA256 signing of all SP payloads, and validates signatures on all IdP responses. Compatibility flags are available to disable verification where IdP implementations lack support (see the esaml_sp record, and members such as idp_signs_logout_requests
).
Edoc documentation for the whole API is available at:
https://arekinath.github.io/esaml/
2-clause BSD
The simplest way to use esaml in your app is with the esaml_cowboy
module. There is an example under examples/sp
that shows how to make a simple SAML SP in this way.
Each of the protocols you wish to support will normally require at least one distinct URL endpoint, plus one additional URL for the SAML SP metadata. In the sp
example, only one protocol is used: the single-sign-on SP AuthnRequest -> Response + Assertion protocol.
The typical approach is to use a single Cowboy route for all SAML endpoints:
Dispatch = cowboy_router:compile([
{'_', [
{"/saml/:operation", sp_handler, []}
]}
])
Then, based on the value of the operation
binding, you can decide which protocol to proceed with, by matching these up with the URIs you supply to esaml_sp:setup/1
.
init(_Transport, Req, _Args) ->
...
SP = esaml_sp:setup(#esaml_sp{
consume_uri = Base ++ "/consume",
metadata_uri = Base ++ "/metadata",
...
}),
...
handle(Req, S = #state{}) ->
{Operation, Req2} = cowboy_req:binding(operation, Req),
{Method, Req3} = cowboy_req:method(Req2),
handle(Method, Operation, Req3, S).
handle(<<"GET">>, <<"metadata">>, Req, S) ->
...
handle(<<"POST">>, <<"consume">>, Req, S) ->
...
The functions on the esaml_cowboy
module can either parse and validate an incoming SAML payload, or generate one and reply to the request with it.
For example, the way the metadata endpoint is handled in the example is to unconditionally call esaml_cowboy:reply_with_metadata/2
, which generates the SP metadata and replies to the request:
handle(<<"GET">>, <<"metadata">>, Req, S = #state{sp = SP}) ->
{ok, Req2} = esaml_cowboy:reply_with_metadata(SP, Req),
{ok, Req2, S};
On the other hand, the consumer endpoint (which handles the second step in the SSO protocol, receiving the Response + Assertion from the IdP) has to validate its payload before replying:
handle(<<"POST">>, <<"consume">>, Req, S = #state{sp = SP}) ->
case esaml_cowboy:validate_assertion(SP, Req) of
{ok, Assertion, RelayState, Req2} ->
% authentication success!
...;
{error, Reason, Req2} ->
{ok, Req3} = cowboy_req:reply(403, [{<<"content-type">>, <<"text/plain">>}],
["Access denied, assertion failed validation\n"], Req2),
{ok, Req3, S}
end;
More complex configurations, including multiple IdPs, dynamic retrieval of IdP metadata, and integration with many kinds of application authentication systems are possible.
The second esaml example, sp_with_logout
demonstrates the addition endpoints necessary to enable Single Log-out protocol support. It also shows how you can build a bridge from esaml to local application session storage, by generating session cookies for each user that logs in (and storing them in ETS).
You can also tap straight into lower-level APIs in esaml if esaml_cowboy
doesn't meet your needs. The esaml_binding
and esaml_sp
modules are the interface used by esaml_cowboy
itself, and contain all the basic primitives to generate and parse SAML payloads.
This is particularly useful if you want to implement SOAP endpoints using SAML.
Pull requests are always welcome for bug fixes and improvements. Fixes that enable compatibility with different IdP implementations are usually welcome, but please ensure they do not come at the expense of compatibility with another IdP. esaml prefers to follow as closely to the SAML standards as possible.
Bugs/issues opened without patches are also welcome, but might take a lot longer to be looked at. ;)