Dynamic client registration
Last updated: 11 minutes read.
Tyk Enterprise Developer Portal
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Introduction
Why OAuth2.0 is important
OAuth 2.0 is a crucial security mechanism for both public and internal APIs, as it provides a secure and standardized way to authenticate and authorize access to protected resources. It enables granular access control and revocation of access when necessary without exposing sensitive login credentials. In short, OAuth 2.0 offers a secure and flexible approach to managing access to APIs.
Implementing an OAuth2.0 provider can be a complex process that involves several technical and security considerations. As such, many API providers choose to use specialized identity providers instead of implementing OAuth2.0 provider themselves.
By using specialized identity providers, API providers can leverage the provider’s expertise and infrastructure to manage access to APIs and ensure the security of the authentication process. This also allows API providers to focus on their core business logic and reduce the burden of managing user identities themselves.
How does Tyk help
Tyk offers a standard and reliable way to work with identity providers through the Dynamic Client Registration protocol (DCR), which is an Internet Engineering Task Force protocol that establishes standards for dynamically registering clients with authorization servers.
Tyk Enterprise Developer portal allows API providers to set up a connection with identity providers that support DCR so that API Consumers can use the OAuth2.0 credentials issued by the identity provider to access APIs exposed on the portal.
Prerequisites for getting started
Before getting starting with configuring the portal, it’s required to configure your Identity provider and the Dashboard beforehand.
Create an initial access token
Before setting up Tyk Enterprise Developer Portal to work with DCR, you need to configure the identity provider. Please refer to the guides for popular providers to create the initial access token for DCR:
Note
Whilst many providers require initial access tokens, they are optional. Please refer to your provider documentation to confirm if required.
Create OAuth2.0 scopes to enforce access control and rate limit
Tyk uses OAuth2.0 scope to enforce access control and rate limit for API Products. Therefore, creating at least two scopes for an API Product and plan is required. The below example demonstrates how to achieve that with Keycloak:
Step 1. Navigate to the Client scopes menu item
Step 2. Create a scope for an API Product
Step 3. Create a scope for a plan
Note
When using Keycloak, ensure that you set the type of the scope to be Optional
. Default scopes are applied automatically, while optional scopes can be requested by clients on a case-by-case basis to extend the permissions granted by the user. In recent versions of Keycloak this should appear as a dropdown menu option, as shown in the images above. In older releases of Keycloak this may need to be set explicitly in a separate tab, as show on the image below.
Create Tyk policies for an API Product and plan
Navigate to the Tyk Dashboard and create two policies: one for a plan and one for an API Product. Both policies should include only the APIs with JWT authentication that you want to bundle as an API Product.
Step 1. Create a policy for an API product.
Step 2. Create a policy for a plan.
Create the No Operation policy and API
Tyk requires any API that uses the scope to policy mapping to have a default policy. Access rights and rate limits defined in the default policy take priority over other policies, including policies for the API Product and plan.
To avoid that, you need to create the No Operation API and policy that won’t grant access to the APIs included in the API Product but will satisfy the requirement for a default policy.
Step 1. Create the No Operation API.
Navigate to the APIs
menu in the Tyk Dashboard:
Create a new HTTP API:
Save it:
Step 2. Create the No Operation policy.
Navigate to the Policies
menu in the Tyk Dashboard:
Create a new policy and select the No Operation API in the Add API Access Rights
section:
Configure the No Operation policy and save it:
Configure scope to policy mapping
To enforce policies for the API Product and plan, you need to configure the scope to policy mapping for each API included in the API Product. To achieve that, perform the following steps for each API included in the API Product.
Step 1. Navigate to the API.
Step 2. Select the required JWT signing method. In this example, we use RSA. Leave the Public key
and pol
fields blank, they will be filled automatically by the Enterprise portal.
Step 3. Select the No Operation policy as the default policy for this API.
Step 4. Enable scope to policy mapping and specify the value of the JWT claim used to extract scopes in the Scope name
field (the default value is “scope”).
Step 5. Add a scope to policy mapping for the product scope. Type the product scope in the Claim field
and select the product policy.
Step 6. Add a scope to policy mapping for the plan scope. Type the plan scope in the Claim field
and select the plan policy, then save the API.
Configure Tyk Enterprise Developer Portal to work with an identity provider
Once policies for the plan and product are created, and the scope-to-policy mapping is configured for all APIs that are included in the product, it’s time to set up the portal to work with your IdP.
Configure the App registration settings
In the portal, navigate to the OAuth2.0 Providers
menu section. In that section, you need to configure the connection settings to the IdP and define one or more types (configurations) of OAuth 2.0 clients. For instance, you can define two types of OAuth 2.0 clients:
- A confidential client that supports the Client credential grant type for backend integrations;
- A web client that supports the Authorization code grant type for integration with web applications that can’t keep the client secret confidential.
Each configuration of OAuth 2.0 client could be associated with one or multiple API Products so that when an API Consumer requests access to an API Product, they can select a client type that is more suitable for their use case.
Specify connection setting to your IdP
To connect the portal to the IdP, you need to specify the following settings:
- OIDC well-known configuration URL.
- Initial access token.
First of all, select your IdP from the Identity provider
dropdown list. Different IdPs have slightly different approaches to DCR implementation, so the portal will use a driver that is specific to your IdP. If your IdP is not present in the dropdown list, select the Other
option. In that case, the portal will use the most standard implementation of the DCR driver, which implements the DCR flow as defined in the RFC.
Then you need to specify the connection settings: the initial access token and the well-known endpoint. If your Identity Provider uses certificates that are not trusted, the portal will not work with it by default. To bypass certificate verification, you can select the SSL secure skip verify
checkbox.
Create client configurations
Once the connection settings are specified, you need to create one or multiple types of clients. You might have multiple types of clients that are suitable for different use cases, such as backend integration or web applications.
You need at least one type of client for the DCR flow to work. To add the first client type, scroll down to the Client Types
section and click on the Add client type
button.
To configure a client type, you need to specify the following settings:
- Client type display name. This name will be displayed to API consumers when they check out API products. Try to make it descriptive and short, so it’s easier for API consumers to understand.
- Description. A more verbose description of a client type can be provided in this field. By default, we do not display this on the checkout page, but you can customize the respective template and make the description visible to API consumers. Please refer to the customization section for guidance.
- Allowed response_types. Response types associated with this type of client as per the OIDC spec.
- Allowed grant_types. Grant types that this type of client will support as per the OIDC spec.
- Token endpoint auth methods. The token endpoint that will be used by this type of client as per the OIDC spec.
- Additionally, there’s an additional field for Okta: Okta application type which defines which type of Okta client should be created. Ignored for all other IdPs.
Please note that your IdP might override some of these settings based on its configuration.
An example of configuration is demonstrated below. After configuring a client type, scroll to the top of the page to save it by clicking on the SAVE CHANGES
button.
Configure API Products and plans for the DCR flow
Once the App registration settings are configured, it is time for the final step: to configure the API Products and plans to work with the DCR flow.
Configure API Products for the DCR flow
To configure API Products to work with the DCR flow, you need to:
- Enable the DCR flow for the products you want to work with the DCR flow.
- Associate each product with one or multiple types of clients that were created in the previous step.
- Specify scopes for this API Product. Note the portal uses the scope to policy mapping to enforce access control to API Products, so there should be at least one scope.
For achieving this, navigate to the API Products
menu and select the particular API product you want to use for the DCR flow. Next, go to the ‘App registration configs’ section and enable the ‘Enable dynamic client registration’ checkbox.
After that, specify the scope for this API product. You should have at least one scope that was created in the Prerequisites for getting started. If you need to specify more than one scope, you can separate them with spaces.
Finally, select one or multiple types of clients that were created in the Create client configurations section of this guide to associate them with that product.
Configure plans for the DCR flow
The last step is to configure the plans you want to use with the DCR flow. To do this, go to the portal’s Plans
menu section and specify the OAuth2.0 scope to use with each plan. You should have at least one scope that was created in the Prerequisites for getting started. If you need to specify more than one scope, you can separate them with spaces.
Test the DCR flow
To test the DCR flow, you need to perform the following actions:
- Request access to the API product and plan you have selected for the DCR flow as a developer.
- Approve the access request as an admin.
- As a developer, copy the access credentials and obtain an access token.
- As a developer, make an API call to verify the flow’s functionality.
Request access to the API Product
To request access to the DCR enabled API Product:
- Log in as a developer and navigate to the catalogue page.
- Select the DCR enabled API Product and add it to the shopping cart.
- Navigate to the checkout page.
- On the checkout page, select a plan to use with that product, select an existing application, or create a new one. If you plan to build an application that uses the Authorization code grant type, you also need to specify redirect URI of your application in the
Redirect URLs
field. If you have multiple redirect URI, you can separate them with commas. - Select a client type which is more suitable for your use case in the
Select a client type
section. - Finally, select the applicable type of client and click on the
Submit request
button.
Approve the access request
To approve the access request, navigate to the Access requests
menu in the portal, select the access request and approve it by clicking on the Approve
button.
Obtain an access token
Once the access request is approved, the developer should receive an email informing them of the approval. Please refer to the email customization section if you wish to change the email template.
As a developer, navigate to the My Dashboard
section in the developer portal, select the application, and copy the OAuth 2.0 credentials.
Then use the credentials you have copied to obtain an access token. Make sure to include the scopes that are used to enforce access to the API product and plan. Otherwise, the gateway will not authorize the request. Here’s an example of to achieve that with curl
:
curl --location --request POST 'http://localhost:9999/realms/DCR/protocol/openid-connect/token' \
--header 'Authorization: Basic N2M2NGM2ZTQtM2I0Ny00NTMyLWFlMWEtODM1ZTMyMWY2ZjlkOjNwZGlJSXVxd004Ykp0M0toV0tLZHFIRkZMWkN3THQ0' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded' \
--data-urlencode 'scope=product_payments free_plan' \
--data-urlencode 'grant_type=client_credentials'
Since in this example we use the client_secret_basic token endpoint authentication method, the credentials must be supplied as a Base64-encoded string: {client_id}:{client_secret}.
As a result, you should receive a JWT access token containing the required scopes:
Make an API Call
Finally, use the access token to make an API call and test the flow functionality:
curl --location --request GET 'http://localhost:8080/payment-api/get' \
--header 'Authorization: Bearer eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsInR5cCIgOiAiSldUIiwia2lkIiA6ICJUR1ZQd25MWlduaWpNc2taU3lHeHFtYnFDNVlIcW9QUUJYZE4xTmJCRDZjIn0.eyJleHAiOjE2Nzg0NDA2ODksImlhdCI6MTY3ODQ0MDM4OSwianRpIjoiMGYwNTdlYjItODQ5My00ZmM2LTllMzQtZTk0OWUzYWQ2MmI2IiwiaXNzIjoiaHR0cDovL2xvY2FsaG9zdDo5OTk5L3JlYWxtcy9EQ1IiLCJzdWIiOiJlNGE3YmFkNy04ZDA4LTQxOTAtODc1Ni1mNTU1ZWQ3Y2JhZjciLCJ0eXAiOiJCZWFyZXIiLCJhenAiOiI3YzY0YzZlNC0zYjQ3LTQ1MzItYWUxYS04MzVlMzIxZjZmOWQiLCJzY29wZSI6ImZyZWVfcGxhbiBwcm9kdWN0X3BheW1lbnRzIiwiY2xpZW50SWQiOiI3YzY0YzZlNC0zYjQ3LTQ1MzItYWUxYS04MzVlMzIxZjZmOWQiLCJjbGllbnRIb3N0IjoiMTcyLjE3LjAuMSIsImNsaWVudEFkZHJlc3MiOiIxNzIuMTcuMC4xIn0.WGp9UIqE7CjFhHdaM64b0G2HGP4adaDg3dgc0YVCV9rTDYmri32Djku7PcLiDKyNLCvlQXUm_O2YmwMCLLUHKPGlRmBMG2y-79-T8z5V-qBATbE6uzwPh38p-SYIIDBUZtlMEhnVp049ZqNolUW-n2uB4CTRb0kDosdRnqhiMUFpe-ORwnZB-4BHGRlwWKyjc5Da6CvVczM1a_c5akqurGMFaX9DC81SS-zMXXpQPDpAkvUJBfLYDHEvXWH8JISqYv7ZQSAbOyE4b-EkVAesyHIMDCQ_pzf5Yp2ivM0dOufN9kdG2w_9ToMqJieVyQILJPowEakmEealbNUFQvc5FA'
You should receive the following response:
{
"args": {},
"headers": {
"Accept": "*/*",
"Accept-Encoding": "gzip",
"Authorization": "Bearer eyJhbGciOiJSUzI1NiIsInR5cCIgOiAiSldUIiwia2lkIiA6ICJUR1ZQd25MWlduaWpNc2taU3lHeHFtYnFDNVlIcW9QUUJYZE4xTmJCRDZjIn0.eyJleHAiOjE2Nzg0NDA2ODksImlhdCI6MTY3ODQ0MDM4OSwianRpIjoiMGYwNTdlYjItODQ5My00ZmM2LTllMzQtZTk0OWUzYWQ2MmI2IiwiaXNzIjoiaHR0cDovL2xvY2FsaG9zdDo5OTk5L3JlYWxtcy9EQ1IiLCJzdWIiOiJlNGE3YmFkNy04ZDA4LTQxOTAtODc1Ni1mNTU1ZWQ3Y2JhZjciLCJ0eXAiOiJCZWFyZXIiLCJhenAiOiI3YzY0YzZlNC0zYjQ3LTQ1MzItYWUxYS04MzVlMzIxZjZmOWQiLCJzY29wZSI6ImZyZWVfcGxhbiBwcm9kdWN0X3BheW1lbnRzIiwiY2xpZW50SWQiOiI3YzY0YzZlNC0zYjQ3LTQ1MzItYWUxYS04MzVlMzIxZjZmOWQiLCJjbGllbnRIb3N0IjoiMTcyLjE3LjAuMSIsImNsaWVudEFkZHJlc3MiOiIxNzIuMTcuMC4xIn0.WGp9UIqE7CjFhHdaM64b0G2HGP4adaDg3dgc0YVCV9rTDYmri32Djku7PcLiDKyNLCvlQXUm_O2YmwMCLLUHKPGlRmBMG2y-79-T8z5V-qBATbE6uzwPh38p-SYIIDBUZtlMEhnVp049ZqNolUW-n2uB4CTRb0kDosdRnqhiMUFpe-ORwnZB-4BHGRlwWKyjc5Da6CvVczM1a_c5akqurGMFaX9DC81SS-zMXXpQPDpAkvUJBfLYDHEvXWH8JISqYv7ZQSAbOyE4b-EkVAesyHIMDCQ_pzf5Yp2ivM0dOufN9kdG2w_9ToMqJieVyQILJPowEakmEealbNUFQvc5FA",
"Host": "httpbin.org",
"User-Agent": "curl/7.85.0",
},
"origin": "XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX, XXX.XXX.XXX.XXX",
"url": "http://httpbin.org/get"
}