Files
clinch/app/services/oidc_jwt_service.rb

135 lines
4.7 KiB
Ruby

class OidcJwtService
extend ClaimsMerger
class << self
# Generate an ID token (JWT) for the user
def generate_id_token(user, application, consent: nil, nonce: nil)
now = Time.current.to_i
# Use application's configured ID token TTL (defaults to 1 hour)
ttl = application.id_token_expiry_seconds
# Use pairwise SID from consent if available, fallback to user ID
subject = consent&.sid || user.id.to_s
payload = {
iss: issuer_url,
sub: subject,
aud: application.client_id,
exp: now + ttl,
iat: now,
email: user.email_address,
email_verified: true,
preferred_username: user.username.presence || user.email_address,
name: user.name.presence || user.email_address
}
# Add nonce if provided (OIDC requires this for implicit flow)
payload[:nonce] = nonce if nonce.present?
# Add groups if user has any
if user.groups.any?
payload[:groups] = user.groups.pluck(:name)
end
# Merge custom claims from groups (arrays are combined, not overwritten)
user.groups.each do |group|
payload = deep_merge_claims(payload, group.parsed_custom_claims)
end
# Merge custom claims from user (arrays are combined, other values override)
payload = deep_merge_claims(payload, user.parsed_custom_claims)
# Merge app-specific custom claims (highest priority, arrays are combined)
payload = deep_merge_claims(payload, application.custom_claims_for_user(user))
JWT.encode(payload, private_key, "RS256", { kid: key_id, typ: "JWT" })
end
# Decode and verify an ID token
def decode_id_token(token)
JWT.decode(token, public_key, true, { algorithm: "RS256" })
end
# Get the public key in JWK format for the JWKS endpoint
def jwks
{
keys: [
{
kty: "RSA",
kid: key_id,
use: "sig",
alg: "RS256",
n: Base64.urlsafe_encode64(public_key.n.to_s(2), padding: false),
e: Base64.urlsafe_encode64(public_key.e.to_s(2), padding: false)
}
]
}
end
# Get the issuer URL (base URL of this OIDC provider)
def issuer_url
# In production, this should come from ENV or config
# For now, we'll use a placeholder that can be overridden
host = ENV.fetch("CLINCH_HOST", "localhost:3000")
# Ensure URL has protocol - use https:// in production, http:// in development
if host.match?(/^https?:\/\//)
host
else
protocol = Rails.env.production? ? "https" : "http"
"#{protocol}://#{host}"
end
end
private
# Get or generate RSA private key
def private_key
@private_key ||= begin
key_source = nil
# Try ENV variable first (best for Docker/Kamal)
if ENV["OIDC_PRIVATE_KEY"].present?
key_source = ENV["OIDC_PRIVATE_KEY"]
# Then try Rails credentials
elsif Rails.application.credentials.oidc_private_key.present?
key_source = Rails.application.credentials.oidc_private_key
end
if key_source.present?
begin
# Handle both actual newlines and escaped \n sequences
# Some .env loaders may escape newlines, so we need to convert them back
key_data = key_source.gsub("\\n", "\n")
OpenSSL::PKey::RSA.new(key_data)
rescue OpenSSL::PKey::RSAError => e
Rails.logger.error "OIDC: Failed to load private key: #{e.message}"
Rails.logger.error "OIDC: Key source length: #{key_source.length}, starts with: #{key_source[0..50]}"
raise "Invalid OIDC private key format. Please ensure the key is in PEM format with proper newlines."
end
else
# In production, we should never generate a key on the fly
# because it would be different across servers/deployments
if Rails.env.production?
raise "OIDC private key not configured. Set OIDC_PRIVATE_KEY environment variable or add to Rails credentials."
end
# Generate a new key for development/test only
Rails.logger.warn "OIDC: No private key found in ENV or credentials, generating new key (development only)"
Rails.logger.warn "OIDC: Set OIDC_PRIVATE_KEY environment variable for consistency across restarts"
OpenSSL::PKey::RSA.new(2048)
end
end
end
# Get the corresponding public key
def public_key
@public_key ||= private_key.public_key
end
# Key identifier (fingerprint of the public key)
def key_id
@key_id ||= Digest::SHA256.hexdigest(public_key.to_pem)[0..15]
end
end
end