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oauth2-proxy/docs/4_tls.md
2019-08-10 21:46:13 -07:00

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default TLS Configuration /tls-configuration 4

SSL Configuration

There are two recommended configurations.

  1. Configure SSL Termination with OAuth2 Proxy by providing a --tls-cert-file=/path/to/cert.pem and --tls-key-file=/path/to/cert.key.

    The command line to run oauth2_proxy in this configuration would look like this:

    ./oauth2_proxy \
        --email-domain="yourcompany.com"  \
        --upstream=http://127.0.0.1:8080/ \
        --tls-cert-file=/path/to/cert.pem \
        --tls-key-file=/path/to/cert.key \
        --cookie-secret=... \
        --cookie-secure=true \
        --provider=... \
        --client-id=... \
        --client-secret=...
    
  2. Configure SSL Termination with Nginx (example config below), Amazon ELB, Google Cloud Platform Load Balancing, or ....

    Because oauth2_proxy listens on 127.0.0.1:4180 by default, to listen on all interfaces (needed when using an external load balancer like Amazon ELB or Google Platform Load Balancing) use --http-address="0.0.0.0:4180" or --http-address="http://:4180".

    Nginx will listen on port 443 and handle SSL connections while proxying to oauth2_proxy on port 4180. oauth2_proxy will then authenticate requests for an upstream application. The external endpoint for this example would be https://internal.yourcompany.com/.

    An example Nginx config follows. Note the use of Strict-Transport-Security header to pin requests to SSL via HSTS:

    server {
        listen 443 default ssl;
        server_name internal.yourcompany.com;
        ssl_certificate /path/to/cert.pem;
        ssl_certificate_key /path/to/cert.key;
        add_header Strict-Transport-Security max-age=2592000;
    
        location / {
            proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:4180;
            proxy_set_header Host $host;
            proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
            proxy_set_header X-Scheme $scheme;
            proxy_connect_timeout 1;
            proxy_send_timeout 30;
            proxy_read_timeout 30;
        }
    }
    

    The command line to run oauth2_proxy in this configuration would look like this:

    ./oauth2_proxy \
       --email-domain="yourcompany.com"  \
       --upstream=http://127.0.0.1:8080/ \
       --cookie-secret=... \
       --cookie-secure=true \
       --provider=... \
       --client-id=... \
       --client-secret=...