Rack-CAS is simple Rack middleware to perform CAS client authentication.
- Rack based
- Framework independent Works with, but doesn't depend on Rails, Sinatra, etc.
- Minimal dependencies Current gem dependencies are rack, addressable and nokogiri.
- Supports CAS extra attributes Extra attributes are a mess though. So let me know if your brand of CAS server isn't supported.
- Single sign out One of the included session stores must be used.
- Rake tasks to prune stale sessions
rack_cas:sessions:prune:active_record
andrack_cas:sessions:prune:mongoid
- Ruby >= 1.9.2
- A working CAS server
- An app that returns a
401 Unauthorized
status when authentication is requried
Add gem 'rack-cas'
to your Gemfile
and run bundle install
Once the necessary gems have been installed, in your config/application.rb
add:
config.rack_cas.server_url = 'https://cas.example.com/'
If the the server URL depends on your environment, you can define it in the according file: config/environments/<env>.rb
If you wish to enable single logout you'll need to modify your configuration as below.
Set the session_store
in your config/application.rb
:
require 'rack-cas/session_store/active_record'
config.rack_cas.session_store = RackCAS::ActiveRecordStore
Edit your config/initializers/session_store.rb
file with the following:
require 'rack-cas/session_store/rails/active_record'
YourApp::Application.config.session_store ActionDispatch::Session::RackCasActiveRecordStore
Run:
rails generate cas_session_store_migration
rake db:migrate
Set the session_store
in your config/application.rb
:
require 'rack-cas/session_store/mongoid'
config.rack_cas.session_store = RackCAS::MongoidStore
Edit your config/initializers/session_store.rb
file with the following:
require 'rack-cas/session_store/rails/mongoid'
YourApp::Application.config.session_store ActionDispatch::Session::RackCasMongoidStore
Add gem 'rack-cas'
to your Gemfile
and run bundle install
Add the following to your config.ru
file:
require 'rack/cas'
use Rack::CAS, server_url: 'https://login.example.com/cas'
See the example Sinatra app to get started.
Single sign out support outside of Rails is currently untested. We'll be adding instructions here soon.
You can whitelist which extra attributes to keep.
In your config/application.rb
:
config.rack_cas.extra_attributes_filter = %w(some_attribute some_other_attribute)
If you have some parts of your app that should not be CAS authenticated (such as an API namespace), just pass exclude_path
to the middleware. You can pass in a string that matches the beginning of the path, a regular expression or an array of strings and regular expressions.
use Rack::CAS, server_url: '...', exclude_path: '/api'
use Rack::CAS, server_url: '...', exclude_path: /\.json/
use Rack::CAS, server_url: '...', exclude_paths: ['/api', /\.json/]
The same options can be passed to FakeCAS
.
use Rack::FakeCAS, exclude_path: '/api'
If you're working in development or staging your CAS server may not have a legit SSL cert. You can turn off SSL Cert verification by adding the following to config/application.rb
.
config.rack_cas.verify_ssl_cert = false
The CAS standard allows for a renew=true
parameter to be passed to the CAS server which will force the user to re-login every time CAS authentication is performed, for added security. To enable this for your application, add the following to config/application.rb
.
config.rack_cas.renew = true
Your app should return a 401 status whenever a request is made that requires authentication. Rack-CAS will catch these responses and attempt to authenticate via your CAS server.
Once authentication with the CAS server has completed, Rack-CAS will set the following session variables:
request.session['cas']['user'] #=> johndoe
request.session['cas']['extra_attributes'] #=> { 'first_name' => 'John', 'last_name' => ... }
NOTE: extra_attributes
will be an empty hash unless they've been configured on your CAS server.
Testing your controllers and such should be as simple as setting the session variables manually in a helper.
def set_current_user(user)
session['cas'] = { 'user' => user.username, 'extra_attributes' => {} }
end
Integration testing using something like Capybara is a bit trickier because the session can't be manipulated directly. So for integration tests, I recommend using the provided Rack::FakeCAS
middleware instead of Rack::CAS
.
require 'rack/fake_cas'
use Rack::FakeCAS
In addition you can pass a Hash to configure extra attributes for predefined usernames.
use Rack::FakeCAS, {}, {'john' => {'name' => 'John Doe'}}
If you are using Rails, FakeCAS is automatically used in the test environment by default. If you would like to activate it in any other environment, add the following to the corresponding config/environments/<env>.rb
:
config.rack_cas.fake = true
You can also configure extra attribute mappings through the Rails config:
config.rack_cas.fake_attributes = { 'john' => { 'name' => 'John Doe' } }
Then you can simply do the following in your integration tests in order to log in.
visit '/restricted_path'
fill_in 'username', with: 'johndoe'
fill_in 'password', with: 'any password'
click_button 'Login'
NOTE: The FakeCAS middleware will authenticate any username with any password and so should never be used in production.