PingGateway 2024.11

Decisions in the same domain

The following procedure gives an example of how to create a policy in AM and configure an agent that can request policy decisions, when PingGateway and AM are in the same domain.

Before you start, set up and test the example in Use the default journey.

  1. Set up AM:

    1. Select Authorization > Policy Sets > New Policy Set, and add a policy set with the following values:

      • Id : PEP-SSO

      • Resource Types : URL

    2. In the policy set, add a policy with the following values:

      • Name : PEP-SSO

      • Resource Type : URL

      • Resource pattern : *://*:*/*

      • Resource value : http://app.example.com:8081/home/pep-sso*

        This policy protects the home page of the sample application.

    3. On the Actions tab, add an action to allow HTTP GET.

    4. On the Subjects tab, remove any default subject conditions, add a subject condition for all Authenticated Users.

  2. Add the following route to PingGateway:

    • Linux

    • Windows

    $HOME/.openig/config/routes/04-pep.json
    %appdata%\OpenIG\config\routes\04-pep.json
    {
      "name": "pep-sso",
      "baseURI": "http://app.example.com:8081",
      "condition": "${find(request.uri.path, '^/home/pep-sso')}",
      "heap": [
        {
          "name": "SystemAndEnvSecretStore-1",
          "type": "SystemAndEnvSecretStore"
        },
        {
          "name": "AmService-1",
          "type": "AmService",
          "config": {
            "agent": {
              "username": "ig_agent",
              "passwordSecretId": "agent.secret.id"
            },
            "secretsProvider": "SystemAndEnvSecretStore-1",
            "url": "http://am.example.com:8088/openam/"
          }
        }
      ],
      "handler": {
        "type": "Chain",
        "config": {
          "filters": [
            {
              "name": "SingleSignOnFilter-1",
              "type": "SingleSignOnFilter",
              "config": {
                "amService": "AmService-1"
              }
            },
            {
              "name": "PolicyEnforcementFilter-1",
              "type": "PolicyEnforcementFilter",
              "config": {
                "application": "PEP-SSO",
                "ssoTokenSubject": "${contexts.ssoToken.value}",
                "amService": "AmService-1"
              }
            }
          ],
          "handler": "ReverseProxyHandler"
        }
      }
    }

    For information about how to set up the PingGateway route in Studio, refer to Policy enforcement in Structured Editor or Protecting a web app with Freeform Designer.

    For an example route that uses claimsSubject instead of ssoTokenSubject to identify the subject, refer to Example policy enforcement using claimsSubject.

  3. Test the setup:

    1. In your browser’s privacy or incognito mode, go to https://ig.example.com:8443/home/pep-sso.

    2. If you see warnings that the site isn’t secure, respond to the warnings to access the site.

      Because you haven’t previously authenticated to AM, the request does not contain a cookie with an SSO token. The SingleSignOnFilter redirects you to AM for authentication.

    3. Log in to AM as user demo, password Ch4ng31t.

      When you have authenticated, AM redirects you back to the request URL, and PingGateway requests a policy decision using the AM session cookie.

      AM returns a policy decision that grants access to the sample application.