Multifactor Authentication Custom Triggers

To create your own custom multifactor authentication trigger, you will need to design a component that is able to resolve events in the CAS authentication chain. The trigger’s (i.e. event resolver’s) job is to examine a set of conditions and requirements and provide an event id to CAS that would indicate the next step in the authentication flow.

A typical custom trigger, as an example, might be:

  • Activate MFA provider identified by mfa-duo if the client browser’s IP address matches the pattern 123.+.

Note that:

  • You are really not doing anything custom per se. All built-in CAS triggers behave in the same exact way when they attempt to resolve the next event.
  • As you will observe below, the event resolution machinery is completely oblivious to multifactor authentication; all it cares about is finding the next event in the chain in a very generic way. Our custom implementation of course wants to have the next event deal with some form of MFA via a provider, but in theory we could have resolved the next event to be hello-world.

Requirements

You will need to have compile-time access to the following modules in the Overlay:

1
2
3
4
5
<dependency>
    <groupId>org.apereo.cas</groupId>
    <artifactId>cas-server-core-webflow</artifactId>
    <version>${cas.version}</version>
</dependency>
1
implementation "org.apereo.cas:cas-server-core-webflow:${project.'cas.version'}"
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
dependencyManagement {
    imports {
        mavenBom "org.apereo.cas:cas-server-support-bom:${project.'cas.version'}"
    }
}

dependencies {
    implementation "org.apereo.cas:cas-server-core-webflow"
}
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
dependencies {
    /*
    The following platform references should be included automatically and are listed here for reference only.
            
    implementation enforcedPlatform("org.apereo.cas:cas-server-support-bom:${project.'cas.version'}")
    implementation platform(org.springframework.boot.gradle.plugin.SpringBootPlugin.BOM_COORDINATES)
    */

    implementation "org.apereo.cas:cas-server-core-webflow"
}

These are modules that ship with CAS by default and thou shall mark them with a compile or provided scope in your build configuration.

Design Triggers

The below example demonstrates a reasonable outline of a custom event resolver:

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
package org.apereo.cas.custom.mfa;

public class ExampleMultifactorAuthenticationTrigger implements MultifactorAuthenticationTrigger {

    @Autowired
    private CasConfigurationProperties casProperties;

   @Override
   public Optional<MultifactorAuthenticationProvider> isActivated(final Authentication authentication,
                                                                  final RegisteredService registeredService,
                                                                  final HttpServletRequest httpServletRequest,
                                                                  final Service service) {

       return Optional.empty();
   }
}

Register Triggers

The event resolver trigger then needs to be registered. See this guide for better details.

The below example demonstrates a reasonable outline of a custom event resolver:

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
package org.apereo.cas.custom.config;

@AutoConfiguration
@EnableConfigurationProperties(CasConfigurationProperties.class)
public class SomethingConfiguration {
    @Bean
    public MultifactorAuthenticationTrigger exampleMultifactorAuthenticationTrigger() {
        return new ExampleMultifactorAuthenticationTrigger();
    }
    
    @Bean
    public CasWebflowEventResolver exampleMultifactorAuthenticationWebflowEventResolver(
        @Qualifier("initialAuthenticationAttemptWebflowEventResolver")
        final CasDelegatingWebflowEventResolver initialEventResolver) {
        val resolver = new DefaultMultifactorAuthenticationProviderEventResolver(
            authenticationSystemSupport.getObject(),
            centralAuthenticationService.getObject(),
            servicesManager.getObject(),
            ticketRegistrySupport.getObject(),
            warnCookieGenerator.getObject(),
            authenticationRequestServiceSelectionStrategies.getObject(),
            multifactorAuthenticationProviderSelector.getObject(),
            exampleMultifactorAuthenticationTrigger());
        initialEventResolver.addDelegate(resolver);
        return resolver;
    }
}

Do not forget to register the configuration class with CAS. See this guide for better details.