kubemqctl
Keycloak
kubemqctl | Keycloak | |
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3 | 230 | |
23 | 19,946 | |
- | 2.2% | |
4.3 | 10.0 | |
10 months ago | 3 days ago | |
Go | Java | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
kubemqctl
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Kubernetes-based development with Devspace
Our message queue is probably redismq, rabbitmq or kubemq, for which we also easily find helm charts.
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KubeMQ: A Modern Alternative to Kafka
In terms of resource usage, KubeMQ outshines Kafka with its minimal footprint. The KubeMQ docker container takes up only 30MB of space. Such a small footprint contributes to a fault-tolerant setup and streamlined deployments. Unlike Kafka, adding KubeMQ to a small development Kubernetes environment in a local workstation is straightforward. But at the same time, KubeMQ is scalable enough to be deployed in a hybrid environment running on hundreds of on-premise and cloud-hosted nodes. At the core of this deployment ease is kubemqctl, the command line interface tool for KubeMQ, analogous to Kubernetes’ kubectl.
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KubeMQ Bridges for Edge Computing
New-Item -ItemType Directory 'C:\Program Files\kubemqctl' Invoke-WebRequest https://github.com/kubemq-io/kubemqctl/releases/download/latest/kubemqctl.exe -OutFile 'C:\Program Files\kubemqctl\kubemqctl.exe' \$env:Path += ';C:\Program Files\kubemqctl'
Keycloak
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Simplifying Keycloak Configuration with Terraform and Terragrunt
Keycloak, an open-source identity and access management solution, provides robust authentication and authorization services for modern applications. However, configuring Keycloak instances manually can be tedious and error-prone. In this blog post, we'll explore how to simplify Keycloak configuration using Terraform and Terragrunt, enabling infrastructure as code (IaC) practices for managing Keycloak realms, clients, users, and more.
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Securing Vue Apps with Keycloak
In this article we'll be using Keycloak to secure a Vue.js Web application. We're going to leverage oidc-client-ts to integrate OIDC authentication with the Vue app. The oidc-client-ts package is a well-maintained and used library. It provides a lot of utilities for building out a fully production app.
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User Management and Identity Brokering for On-Prem Apps with Keycloak
Keycloak has been a leader in the Identity and Access Management world since its launch almost 8 years ago. It is an open-source offering under the stewardship of Red Hat
- Navigating Identity Authentication: From LDAP to Modern Protocols
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Ask HN: No-code, simple-setup user management
It sounds like what you're looking for is an identity provider.
A popular open source option is https://www.keycloak.org/
This application can manage your users, then you can use standards like OpenID or SAML to plug it into your application, of which there are usually many plugins to accomplish this depending on your tech stack.
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Top 6 Open Source Identity and Access Management (IAM) Solutions For Enterprises
KeyCloak is a Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) project that offers enterprise IAM solutions. Keycloak emphasizes proficient enterprise authorization solutions by providing:
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Outline: Self hostable, realtime, Markdown compatible knowledge base
Outline only uses SSO for authentication. The solution when self hosting is use a private keycloak server [1]. This allows you to do email based auth.
[1] https://www.keycloak.org/
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Keycloak open redirect: wildcard redirect URIs can be exploited to steal tokens
> Keycloak was good but has too much legacy for 10+ years.
I got curious, actually seems to check out and explains why it's so well documented (but also complex and oftentimes confusing):
> The first production release of Keycloak was in September 2014, with development having started about a year earlier.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keycloak
https://github.com/keycloak/keycloak/releases/tag/1.0.0.Fina...
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What Is OIDC?
> Don't outsource either your authentication or authorization. Run it in-house.
This is hard to do, though. I hope people here will drop a lot of combinations that work for them!
Personally, for a small/medium scale project, I went with:
Keycloak: https://www.keycloak.org/
It supports various backing RDBMSes (like PostgreSQL, MariaDB/MySQL and others), allows both users that you persist in your own DB, as well as various external sources, like social login across various platforms, is an absolute pain to configure and sometimes acts in stupid ways behind a reverse proxy, but has most of the features that you might ever want, which sadly comes coupled with some complexity and an enterprise feeling.
I quite like that it offers the login/registration views that you need with redirects, as well as user management, storing roles/permissions and other custom attributes. It's on par with what you'd expect and should serve you nicely.
mod_auth_openidc: https://github.com/OpenIDC/mod_auth_openidc
This one's a certified OpenID Connect Relying Party implementation for... Apache2/httpd.
Some might worry about the performance and there are other options out there (like a module for OpenResty, which is built on top of Nginx), but when coupled with mod_md Apache makes for a great reverse proxy/ingress for my personal needs.
The benefit here is that I don't need 10 different implementations for each service/back end language that's used, I can outsource the heavy lifting to mod_auth_openidc (protected paths, needed roles/permissions, redirect URLs, token renewal and other things) and just read a few trusted headers behind the reverse proxy if further checks are needed, which is easy in all technologies.
That said, the configuration there is also hard and annoying to do, as is working with OpenID Connect in general, even though you can kind of understand why that complexity is inherent. Here's a link with some certified implementations, by the way: https://openid.net/developers/certified-openid-connect-imple...
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Auth0 increases price by 300%
You couldn't pay me to use their bullshit...if you need an identity server/provider go with Keycloak. Open source, free, and standards based, works better and scales better too.
What are some alternatives?
RabbitMQ - Open source RabbitMQ: core server and tier 1 (built-in) plugins
authelia - The Single Sign-On Multi-Factor portal for web apps
athenapdf - Drop-in replacement for wkhtmltopdf built on Go, Electron and Docker
authentik - The authentication glue you need.
charts - Public helm charts
Apache Shiro - Apache Shiro
kubemq-community - KubeMQ is a Kubernetes native message queue broker
OPA (Open Policy Agent) - Open Policy Agent (OPA) is an open source, general-purpose policy engine.
kubemq-bridges - KubeMQ Bridges bridge, replicate, aggregate, and transform messages between KubeMQ clusters no matter where they are, allowing to build a true cloud-native messaging single network running globally.
IdentityServer - The most flexible and standards-compliant OpenID Connect and OAuth 2.x framework for ASP.NET Core
k3s - Lightweight Kubernetes
Spring Security - Spring Security