zitadel
keycloak-config-cli
zitadel | keycloak-config-cli | |
---|---|---|
80 | 10 | |
7,102 | 672 | |
5.9% | 3.0% | |
9.8 | 8.1 | |
about 22 hours ago | 4 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.
zitadel
- Maintainers of Zitadel and Ory discuss their tradeoffs as identity platforms
- Show HN: Auth0 OSS alternative Ory Kratos now with passwordless and SMS support
-
A list of SaaS, PaaS and IaaS offerings that have free tiers of interest to devops and infradev
ZITADEL Cloud — A turnkey user and access management that works for you and supports multi-tenant (B2B) use cases. Free for up to 25,000 authenticated requests, with all security features (no paywall for OTP, Passwordless, Policies, and so on).
-
Ask HN: Technical Challenges in Building Multi-Tenant SaaS Products
One of the challenges we see is providing self-service for team management. That includes letting an admin assign roles to their users, manage user lifecycle (eg through sso), and setting up security policies. For sure you can build the basics, but it becomes complex later on if you manage a lot of tenants or or more enterprise customers. For Auth only there are many solutions out there that work great. There's only a few solutions with multi-tenancy at the core, though, like https://github.com/zitadel/zitadel
- B2B identity infrastructure written in Go
-
14 DevOps and SRE Tools for 2024: Your Ultimate Guide to Stay Ahead
ZITADEL
-
Okta Says Hackers Stole Data for All Customer Support Users
Check out ZITADEL! (full disclosure, I'm part of the team)
It's an open-source IAM solution. It offers a cloud-based SaaS option and can also be downloaded for self-hosting. You can try the hosted cloud version for free - https://zitadel.com/signin
It provides:
- authentication and authorization capabilities (including IdP Federation)
- auditing
- custom extensions
- support for standards such as OIDC/OAuth/SAML/LDAP
- full API support
- various authorization strategies, including Role-Based Access Control (RBAC) and Delegated Access, making it a great choice for both B2C and B2B scenarios.
It mostly aims to ensure ease of operation and scalability (users love the simplicity). The community and team actively contribute towards development and support.
You can download it and host it yourself - https://zitadel.com/docs/self-hosting/deploy/overview
Github- https://github.com/zitadel/zitadel
Case studies and testimonials - https://zitadel.com/blog/tags/successstory
-
Ask HN: Who's looking for contributors for OSS Projects
Check out ZITADEL, an open source identity and access management solution - https://github.com/zitadel/zitadel
A good starting place is the issues. You can also check our documentation and make PRs for improvements. And feel free to jump into discussions. We also give swag to our first-time contributors as a token of appreciation.
-
🚀 ZITADEL v2.40.0 is out!
Go on and try it ➡️ https://zitadel.cloud See what's new ➡️ https://github.com/zitadel/zitadel/releases/tag/v2.40.0
- Show HN: Obligator – An OpenID Connect server for self-hosters
keycloak-config-cli
-
Beyond the login page
Most of the time nowadays, I prefer offloading this to an identity provider, using OpenID Connect or soon Federated Credential Management (FedCM), even if that means shipping an identity provider as part of the deliverables (I generally go with Keycloak, with keycloak-config-cli to provision its configuration). I'm obviously biased though as I work in IT services, developping software mainly for intranets/extranets, and companies now increasingly have their own identity providers or at a minimum have that in their roadmap. So YMMV.
-
Keycloak – Open-Source Identity and Access Management Interview
> But it is painful share the setup with other engineers.
We used keycloak-config-cli [1] it compares a config file stripped of IDs to your Keycloak installation and makes the relevant updates through the REST API.
[1] https://github.com/adorsys/keycloak-config-cli
- Keycloak with PostgreSQL on Kubernetes
-
Is Keycloak ready for Kubernetes?
As far as I know, the state of the art is https://github.com/adorsys/keycloak-config-cli , but I haven't played with that yet. It seems to be a big improvement over other solutions, because it can update configurations and the configurations can be "clean".
- Add keycloak configurations through script
-
Noob question about self-hosting on a VPS
One alternative is to use the admin APIs instead of the UI. You'd SSH into the host and then use curl or https://github.com/adorsys/keycloak-config-cli to configure keycloak. I use the keycloak-config-cli for my setup. It's both how I manage disaster recovery and make changes to configuration.
-
Keycloak; docker or dedicated?
I'm not saying that keycloak is always easy to work with. The thing I found hardest to figure out was how to automate disaster recovery. I want to be able to rebuild my entire auth configuration from scratch including users, default passwords, oauth clients, JWT mappings, etc. The only way I found to do this was to use https://github.com/adorsys/keycloak-config-cli. tl;dr It uses the admin API to provision items. You can export a configured realm, manually tweak some parts of it like enter passwords and add users, and then run it against a keycloak instance to restore everything.
-
Keycloak config management?
I've found this https://github.com/adorsys/keycloak-config-cli and it looks really promising. It can update the configs without a need to restart the whole keycloak instance.
-
Nginx auth_request and Keycloak?
If you do end up using a setup like this then I highly recommend that you look into https://github.com/adorsys/keycloak-config-cli. tl;dr You can export your realm configuration once set up and then use it to restore your system should you lose your keycloak data. It can also be used to provision users but you have to manually add them to the realm export because they are not included in an export for some reason. All the different objects it can manage are documented here: https://www.keycloak.org/docs-api/17.0/rest-api/index.html#_realmrepresentation.
What are some alternatives?
authentik - The authentication glue you need.
testcontainers-spring-boot - Container auto-configurations for Spring Boot based integration tests
Keycloak - Open Source Identity and Access Management For Modern Applications and Services
nginx-openid-connect - Reference implementation of OpenID Connect integration for NGINX Plus
Ory Kratos - Next-gen identity server replacing your Auth0, Okta, Firebase with hardened security and PassKeys, SMS, OIDC, Social Sign In, MFA, FIDO, TOTP and OTP, WebAuthn, passwordless and much more. Golang, headless, API-first. Available as a worry-free SaaS with the fairest pricing on the market!
private_server - This is the configuration for my private server, with the intention of never having to use manual SSH.
casdoor - An open-source UI-first Identity and Access Management (IAM) / Single-Sign-On (SSO) platform with web UI supporting OAuth 2.0, OIDC, SAML, CAS, LDAP, SCIM, WebAuthn, TOTP, MFA and RADIUS [Moved to: https://github.com/casdoor/casdoor]
vouch-proxy - an SSO and OAuth / OIDC login solution for Nginx using the auth_request module
Ory Hydra - OpenID Certified™ OpenID Connect and OAuth Provider written in Go - cloud native, security-first, open source API security for your infrastructure. SDKs for any language. Works with Hardware Security Modules. Compatible with MITREid.
oauth2-proxy - A reverse proxy that provides authentication with Google, Azure, OpenID Connect and many more identity providers.
SuperTokens Community - Open source alternative to Auth0 / Firebase Auth / AWS Cognito
component-keycloak - Commodore Component for Keycloak