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T-110.5140 Network Application Frameworks and XML Service Federation 30.04.2007 Sasu Tarkoma
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Introduction n How to combine and use services in different security domains? n How to take into account privacy aspects? n How to enable single sign on (SSO) for users?
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Web services trust model Requestor Claims Security tokens Policy Security Token Service Web service Claims Security tokens Policy Claims Security tokens Policy
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WS-Trust n Methods for issuing, renewing, and validating security tokens. n Ways to establish, assess the presence of, and broker trust relationships n Messages for u Requesting security tokens from a security token service (STS) u Renewal of tokens u Cancel binding u Validation n Extensions for forwarding and delegation
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WS-Federation n How to establish trust between security token services (or identity providers) n Goal: use security tokens to realize seamless service access in different domains n Builds on WS-* specifications n WS-trust u Request a security token n WS-policy u Describe and acquire metadata u Grammar for requirements and capabilities u Practical concern: minimum crypto? Do participants support same security mechanisms?
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Federation Sequence Diagram Requestor SRC STS DST STS Web service Request token Issue token Request token with token reference Issue token from DST domain Send request (+token) to service Validate token Approve token Return value
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Delegation
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Federated Sign-out n Sign out notification sent to members of the federation n Special messages to request and cancel sign out messages (subject to policies) n Idempotent and unreliable n Special SOAP message n Clean any cached state and security tokens in the federation n Implication for active transactions not specified (resource specific)
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Pseudonyms n Support for pseudonyms (optional) n A resource does not need necessarily to know the true identity of a requestor n Authorization is required and relevant attributes for personalization n Authorized services can query these attributes n Messages for getting/setting/deleting pseudonyms
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OMA ID-FF n Liberty Alliance Identity Federation Framework (ID-FF) n Basic case: Web direction n Mandatory features for an identity provider u Single sign on and federation u Single sign out u Federation termination u Affliliations u Dynamic proxying of Identity Providers n Circle of trust implemented using u SAML assertions, requests, redirection, and validation
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ID-FF specs n Liberty ID-FF u Identity Federation Framework u A forerunner to the SAML 2.0 specification. All of the functionality in ID-FF has been incorporated into SAML 2.0 n Liberty ID-WSF u Identity Web Services Framework u Builds on WS-Security and SAML 2.0 n Liberty ID-SIS u Identity Services Interface Specifications u High-level web service interfaces that support particular use cases like data/profile, geolocation, contact book, and presence services.
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Shibboleth n The Shibboleth software implements the OASIS SAML v1.1 specification, providing a federated Single-Sign-On and attribute exchange framework. n Shibboleth also provides extended privacy functionality allowing the browser user and their home site to control the Attribute information being released to each Service Provider. n Using Shibboleth-enabled access simplifies management of identity and access permissions for both Identity and Service Providers. n An open-standard authentication system used by universities and the research community n Released under the Apache Software License. n Shibboleth 2.0 is basically equivalent to ID-FF through SAML 2.0 support n Integrates with Microsoft ADFS n http://shibboleth.internet2.edu/ http://shibboleth.internet2.edu/
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Putting it together so far HTTP Liberty ID-FFWS-Federation SAML 1.1WS-Trust WS-Security SOAP SAML 2.0 Shibboleth Integrated with Liberty specifications and the result is SAML 2.0, which OASIS ratified in March 2006. Backed by multiple vendors (IBM, BEA,..) Backed by Microsoft
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Active Directory n Active Directory Federation Services (ADFS) n Windows Server 2003 n Web SSO (single sign-on) n Identity federation u Distributed web-SSO n SSO for IISv6 web farms n Security tokens & assertions u Assertions on security principals u Security token service grants tokens u Possession of private key is proof of identity
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Trust Federation n Federation servers u Maintain trust (keys) u Security (required assertions) u Privacy (allowed assertions) u Auditing (identities, authorizations) n Based on WS-Federation
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Passport n Intended to solve two problems u to be an identity provider to MSN u identity provider for the Internet n First goal u over 250 million active Passport accounts and u 1 billion authentications per day n Second goal u What is the role of the identity provider in transactions? u Passport no longer stores personal information other than username/password credentials n Authentication service for sites n Proprietary technology n Roadmap: towards identity card
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Identities n CardSpace (Microsoft) u Multiple identities u Interface for identity based authentication and authorization u Identity cards that people can choose u Integration with Web sites u Consistent user interface u Microsoft plans to implement this F ActiveX, WS-* n http://www.identityblog.com/
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IdentityCard Source: http://www.identityblog.com/
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Summary n We are going towards identity-based access u A number of identities per host u Pseudonyms, privacy issues u Delegation and federation are needed u SAML 2.0 is a key specification in representing assertions and provides a baseline for interoperability F ID-FF, Shibboleth, ADFS n Challenges u Automatic configuration of policies u Logging and auditing
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