community.general.keycloak_client module – Allows administration of Keycloak clients via Keycloak API
Note
This module is part of the community.general collection (version 5.8.3).
You might already have this collection installed if you are using the ansible
package.
It is not included in ansible-core
.
To check whether it is installed, run ansible-galaxy collection list
.
To install it, use: ansible-galaxy collection install community.general
.
To use it in a playbook, specify: community.general.keycloak_client
.
Synopsis
This module allows the administration of Keycloak clients via the Keycloak REST API. It requires access to the REST API via OpenID Connect; the user connecting and the client being used must have the requisite access rights. In a default Keycloak installation, admin-cli and an admin user would work, as would a separate client definition with the scope tailored to your needs and a user having the expected roles.
The names of module options are snake_cased versions of the camelCase ones found in the Keycloak API and its documentation at https://www.keycloak.org/docs-api/8.0/rest-api/index.html. Aliases are provided so camelCased versions can be used as well.
The Keycloak API does not always sanity check inputs e.g. you can set SAML-specific settings on an OpenID Connect client for instance and vice versa. Be careful. If you do not specify a setting, usually a sensible default is chosen.
Parameters
Parameter |
Comments |
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URL to the admin interface of the client. This is ‘adminUrl’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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Whether or not to display this client in account console, even if the user does not have an active session. Choices:
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A dict of further attributes for this client. This can contain various configuration settings; an example is given in the examples section. While an exhaustive list of permissible options is not available; possible options as of Keycloak 3.4 are listed below. The Keycloak API does not validate whether a given option is appropriate for the protocol used; if specified anyway, Keycloak will simply not use it. |
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For OpenID-Connect clients, URL where client keys in JWK are stored. |
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For OpenID-Connect clients, client certificate for validating JWT issued by client and signed by its key, base64-encoded. |
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For OpenID-Connect clients, JWA algorithm which the client needs to use when sending OIDC request object. One of |
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For SAML clients, boolean specifying whether or not a statement containing method and timestamp should be included in the login response. |
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For SAML clients, boolean specifying whether a client signature is required and validated. |
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Boolean specifying whether SAML assertions should be encrypted with the client’s public key. |
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For SAML clients, boolean specifying whether always to use POST binding for responses. |
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For SAML clients, boolean specifying whether a OneTimeUse condition should be included in login responses. |
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Boolean specifying whether SAML documents should be signed by the realm. |
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For SAML clients, boolean specifying whether REDIRECT signing key lookup should be optimized through inclusion of the signing key id in the SAML Extensions element. |
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Signature algorithm used to sign SAML documents. One of |
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SAML signing key certificate, base64-encoded. |
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SAML signing key private key, base64-encoded. |
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SAML POST Binding URL for the client’s assertion consumer service (login responses). |
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SAML Redirect Binding URL for the client’s assertion consumer service (login responses). |
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For SAML clients, Boolean specifying whether to ignore requested NameID subject format and using the configured one instead. |
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For SAML clients, the NameID format to use (one of |
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SAML signature canonicalization method. This is one of four values, namely |
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SAML POST binding url for the client’s single logout service. |
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SAML redirect binding url for the client’s single logout service. |
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For OpenID-Connect clients, boolean specifying whether to use a JWKS URL to obtain client public keys. |
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For OpenID-Connect clients, JWA algorithm for signed UserInfo-endpoint responses. One of |
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OpenID Connect client_id to authenticate to the API with. Default: |
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Client Secret to use in conjunction with auth_client_id (if required). |
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URL to the Keycloak instance. |
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Password to authenticate for API access with. |
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Keycloak realm name to authenticate to for API access. |
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Username to authenticate for API access with. |
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Override realm authentication flow bindings. |
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Are authorization services enabled for this client or not (OpenID connect). This is ‘authorizationServicesEnabled’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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a data structure defining the authorization settings for this client. For reference, please see the Keycloak API docs at https://www.keycloak.org/docs-api/8.0/rest-api/index.html#_resourceserverrepresentation. This is ‘authorizationSettings’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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Default URL to use when the auth server needs to redirect or link back to the client This is ‘baseUrl’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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The access type of this client is bearer-only. This is ‘bearerOnly’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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How do clients authenticate with the auth server? Either Choices:
|
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Client id of client to be worked on. This is usually an alphanumeric name chosen by you. Either this or id is required. If you specify both, id takes precedence. This is ‘clientId’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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Client template to use for this client. If it does not exist this field will silently be dropped. This is ‘clientTemplate’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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Controls the HTTP connections timeout period (in seconds) to Keycloak API. Default: |
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If enabled, users have to consent to client access. This is ‘consentRequired’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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List of default client scopes. |
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list of default roles for this client. If the client roles referenced do not exist yet, they will be created. This is ‘defaultRoles’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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Description of the client in Keycloak. |
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Are direct access grants enabled for this client or not (OpenID connect). This is ‘directAccessGrantsEnabled’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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Is this client enabled or not? Choices:
|
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Is frontchannel logout enabled for this client or not. This is ‘frontchannelLogout’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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Is the “Full Scope Allowed” feature set for this client or not. This is ‘fullScopeAllowed’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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Configures the HTTP User-Agent header. Default: |
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Id of client to be worked on. This is usually an UUID. Either this or client_id is required. If you specify both, this takes precedence. |
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Enable implicit flow for this client or not (OpenID connect). This is ‘implicitFlowEnabled’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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Name of the client (this is not the same as client_id). |
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Cluster node re-registration timeout for this client. This is ‘nodeReRegistrationTimeout’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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Revoke any tokens issued before this date for this client (this is a UNIX timestamp). This is ‘notBefore’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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List of optional client scopes. |
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Type of client (either Choices:
|
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a list of dicts defining protocol mappers for this client. This is ‘protocolMappers’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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Dict specifying the configuration options for the protocol mapper; the contents differ depending on the value of protocolMapper and are not documented other than by the source of the mappers and its parent class(es). An example is given below. It is easiest to obtain valid config values by dumping an already-existing protocol mapper configuration through check-mode in the existing field. |
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Specifies whether a user needs to provide consent to a client for this mapper to be active. Choices:
|
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The human-readable name of the consent the user is presented to accept. |
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Usually a UUID specifying the internal ID of this protocol mapper instance. |
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The name of this protocol mapper. |
|
This is either Choices:
|
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The Keycloak-internal name of the type of this protocol-mapper. While an exhaustive list is impossible to provide since this may be extended through SPIs by the user of Keycloak, by default Keycloak as of 3.4 ships with at least
An exhaustive list of available mappers on your installation can be obtained on the admin console by going to Server Info -> Providers and looking under ‘protocol-mapper’. |
|
Is the access type for this client public or not. This is ‘publicClient’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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The realm to create the client in. Default: |
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Acceptable redirect URIs for this client. This is ‘redirectUris’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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dict of registered cluster nodes (with |
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The registration access token provides access for clients to the client registration service. This is ‘registrationAccessToken’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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Root URL appended to relative URLs for this client. This is ‘rootUrl’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
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When using client_authenticator_type |
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Are service accounts enabled for this client or not (OpenID connect). This is ‘serviceAccountsEnabled’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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Enable standard flow for this client or not (OpenID connect). This is ‘standardFlowEnabled’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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State of the client On On Choices:
|
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Whether or not surrogate auth is required. This is ‘surrogateAuthRequired’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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Authentication token for Keycloak API. |
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Whether or not to use configuration from the client_template. This is ‘useTemplateConfig’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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Whether or not to use mapper configuration from the client_template. This is ‘useTemplateMappers’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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Whether or not to use scope configuration from the client_template. This is ‘useTemplateScope’ in the Keycloak REST API. Choices:
|
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Verify TLS certificates (do not disable this in production). Choices:
|
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List of allowed CORS origins. This is ‘webOrigins’ in the Keycloak REST API. |
Examples
- name: Create or update Keycloak client (minimal example), authentication with credentials
community.general.keycloak_client:
auth_keycloak_url: https://auth.example.com/auth
auth_realm: master
auth_username: USERNAME
auth_password: PASSWORD
client_id: test
state: present
delegate_to: localhost
- name: Create or update Keycloak client (minimal example), authentication with token
community.general.keycloak_client:
auth_client_id: admin-cli
auth_keycloak_url: https://auth.example.com/auth
auth_realm: master
token: TOKEN
client_id: test
state: present
delegate_to: localhost
- name: Delete a Keycloak client
community.general.keycloak_client:
auth_client_id: admin-cli
auth_keycloak_url: https://auth.example.com/auth
auth_realm: master
auth_username: USERNAME
auth_password: PASSWORD
client_id: test
state: absent
delegate_to: localhost
- name: Create or update a Keycloak client (with all the bells and whistles)
community.general.keycloak_client:
auth_client_id: admin-cli
auth_keycloak_url: https://auth.example.com/auth
auth_realm: master
auth_username: USERNAME
auth_password: PASSWORD
state: present
realm: master
client_id: test
id: d8b127a3-31f6-44c8-a7e4-4ab9a3e78d95
name: this_is_a_test
description: Description of this wonderful client
root_url: https://www.example.com/
admin_url: https://www.example.com/admin_url
base_url: basepath
enabled: true
client_authenticator_type: client-secret
secret: REALLYWELLKEPTSECRET
redirect_uris:
- https://www.example.com/*
- http://localhost:8888/
web_origins:
- https://www.example.com/*
not_before: 1507825725
bearer_only: false
consent_required: false
standard_flow_enabled: true
implicit_flow_enabled: false
direct_access_grants_enabled: false
service_accounts_enabled: false
authorization_services_enabled: false
public_client: false
frontchannel_logout: false
protocol: openid-connect
full_scope_allowed: false
node_re_registration_timeout: -1
client_template: test
use_template_config: false
use_template_scope: false
use_template_mappers: false
always_display_in_console: true
registered_nodes:
node01.example.com: 1507828202
registration_access_token: eyJWT_TOKEN
surrogate_auth_required: false
default_roles:
- test01
- test02
authentication_flow_binding_overrides:
browser: 4c90336b-bf1d-4b87-916d-3677ba4e5fbb
protocol_mappers:
- config:
access.token.claim: true
claim.name: "family_name"
id.token.claim: true
jsonType.label: String
user.attribute: lastName
userinfo.token.claim: true
consentRequired: true
consentText: "${familyName}"
name: family name
protocol: openid-connect
protocolMapper: oidc-usermodel-property-mapper
- config:
attribute.name: Role
attribute.nameformat: Basic
single: false
consentRequired: false
name: role list
protocol: saml
protocolMapper: saml-role-list-mapper
attributes:
saml.authnstatement: true
saml.client.signature: true
saml.force.post.binding: true
saml.server.signature: true
saml.signature.algorithm: RSA_SHA256
saml.signing.certificate: CERTIFICATEHERE
saml.signing.private.key: PRIVATEKEYHERE
saml_force_name_id_format: false
saml_name_id_format: username
saml_signature_canonicalization_method: "http://www.w3.org/2001/10/xml-exc-c14n#"
user.info.response.signature.alg: RS256
request.object.signature.alg: RS256
use.jwks.url: true
jwks.url: JWKS_URL_FOR_CLIENT_AUTH_JWT
jwt.credential.certificate: JWT_CREDENTIAL_CERTIFICATE_FOR_CLIENT_AUTH
delegate_to: localhost
Return Values
Common return values are documented here, the following are the fields unique to this module:
Key |
Description |
---|---|
Representation of client after module execution (sample is truncated). Returned: on success Sample: |
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Representation of existing client (sample is truncated). Returned: always Sample: |
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Message as to what action was taken. Returned: always Sample: |
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Representation of proposed client. Returned: always Sample: |
Collection links
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