Groovy Authentication Attribute - Multifactor Authentication Triggers
MFA can be triggered for all users/subjects whose authentication event/metadata has resolved a specific attribute that matches one of the below conditions:
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Trigger MFA based on a authentication attribute(s) whose value(s) matches a regex pattern. Note that this behavior is only applicable if there is only a single MFA provider configured, since that would allow CAS to know what provider to next activate.
-
Trigger MFA based on a authentication attribute(s) whose value(s) EXACTLY matches an MFA provider. This option is more relevant if you have more than one provider configured or if you have the flexibility of assigning provider ids to attributes as values.
Needless to say, the attributes need to have been resolved for the authentication event prior to this step. This trigger is generally useful when the underlying authentication engine signals CAS to perform additional validation of credentials. This signal may be captured by CAS as an attribute that is part of the authentication event metadata which can then trigger additional multifactor authentication events.
To prepare CAS to support and integrate with Apache Groovy, please review this guide.
An example of this scenario would be the “Access Challenge response” produced by RADIUS servers.
The following settings and properties are available from the CAS configuration catalog:
cas.authn.mfa.triggers.authentication.global-authentication-attribute-name-triggers=
MFA can be triggered for all users/subjects whose authentication event/metadata has resolved a specific attribute that matches one of the below conditions:
This settings supports regular expression patterns. [?].
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cas.authn.mfa.triggers.authentication.global-authentication-attribute-value-regex=
The regular expression that is cross matched against the authentication attribute to determine if the account is qualified for multifactor authentication. This settings supports regular expression patterns. [?].
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Configuration Metadata
The collection of configuration properties listed in this section are automatically generated from the CAS source and components that contain the actual field definitions, types, descriptions, modules, etc. This metadata may not always be 100% accurate, or could be lacking details and sufficient explanations.
Be Selective
This section is meant as a guide only. Do NOT copy/paste the entire collection of settings into your CAS configuration; rather pick only the properties that you need. Do NOT enable settings unless you are certain of their purpose and do NOT copy settings into your configuration only to keep them as reference. All these ideas lead to upgrade headaches, maintenance nightmares and premature aging.
YAGNI
Note that for nearly ALL use cases, declaring and configuring properties listed here is sufficient. You should NOT have to explicitly massage a CAS XML/Java/etc configuration file to design an authentication handler, create attribute release policies, etc. CAS at runtime will auto-configure all required changes for you. If you are unsure about the meaning of a given CAS setting, do NOT turn it on without hesitation. Review the codebase or better yet, ask questions to clarify the intended behavior.
Naming Convention
Property names can be specified in very relaxed terms. For instance cas.someProperty
, cas.some-property
, cas.some_property
are all valid names. While all
forms are accepted by CAS, there are certain components (in CAS and other frameworks used) whose activation at runtime is conditional on a property value, where
this property is required to have been specified in CAS configuration using kebab case. This is both true for properties that are owned by CAS as well as those
that might be presented to the system via an external library or framework such as Spring Boot, etc.
When possible, properties should be stored in lower-case kebab format, such as cas.property-name=value
.
The only possible exception to this rule is when naming actuator endpoints; The name of the
actuator endpoints (i.e. ssoSessions
) MUST remain in camelCase mode.
Settings and properties that are controlled by the CAS platform directly always begin with the prefix cas
. All other settings are controlled and provided
to CAS via other underlying frameworks and may have their own schemas and syntax. BE CAREFUL with
the distinction. Unrecognized properties are rejected by CAS and/or frameworks upon which CAS depends. This means if you somehow misspell a property definition
or fail to adhere to the dot-notation syntax and such, your setting is entirely refused by CAS and likely the feature it controls will never be activated in the
way you intend.
Validation
Configuration properties are automatically validated on CAS startup to report issues with configuration binding, specially if defined CAS settings cannot be recognized or validated by the configuration schema. Additional validation processes are also handled via Configuration Metadata and property migrations applied automatically on startup by Spring Boot and family.
Indexed Settings
CAS settings able to accept multiple values are typically documented with an index, such as cas.some.setting[0]=value
. The index [0]
is meant to be
incremented by the adopter to allow for distinct multiple configuration blocks.