Awesome
Keycloak Angular
<!-- prettier-ignore-start --> <!-- prettier-ignore-end -->Easy Keycloak setup for Angular applications.
- About
- Installation
- Setup
- Example project
- AuthGuard
- HttpClient Interceptor
- Keycloak-js Events
- Contributors
- License
About
This library helps you to use keycloak-js in Angular applications providing the following features:
- A Keycloak Service which wraps the
keycloak-js
methods to be used in Angular, giving extra functionalities to the original functions and adding new methods to make it easier to be consumed by Angular applications. - Generic AuthGuard implementation, so you can customize your own AuthGuard logic inheriting the authentication logic and the roles load.
- A HttpClient interceptor that adds the authorization header to all HttpClient requests. It is also possible to disable this interceptor or exclude routes from having the authorization header.
- This documentation also assists you to configure the keycloak in your Angular applications and with the client setup in the admin console of your keycloak installation.
Installation
Run the following command to install both Keycloak Angular and the official Keycloak client library:
npm install keycloak-angular keycloak-js
Note that keycloak-js
is a peer dependency of Keycloak Angular. This change allows greater flexibility of choosing the right version of the Keycloak client version for your project.
Versions
Angular | keycloak-js | keycloak-angular | Support |
---|---|---|---|
18.x | 18 - 26 | 16.x.x | New Features / Bugs |
17.x | 18 - 25 | 15.x.x | Bugs |
16.x | 18 - 25 | 14.x.x | - |
15.x | 18 - 21 | 13.x.x | - |
14.x | 18 - 19 | 12.x.x | - |
14.x | 10 - 17 | 11.x.x | - |
Only the latest version of Angular in the table above is actively supported. This is due to the fact that compilation of Angular libraries might be incompatible between major versions.
Choosing the right keycloak-js version
The Keycloak client documentation recommends to use the same version of your Keycloak server installation.
Setup
In order to make sure Keycloak is initialized when your application is bootstrapped you will have to add an APP_INITIALIZER
provider to your AppModule
. This provider will call the initializeKeycloak
factory function shown below which will set up the Keycloak service so that it can be used in your application.
Use the code provided below as an example and implement it's functionality in your application. In this process ensure that the configuration you are providing matches that of your client as configured in Keycloak.
import { APP_INITIALIZER, NgModule } from '@angular/core';
import { BrowserModule } from '@angular/platform-browser';
import { KeycloakAngularModule, KeycloakService } from 'keycloak-angular';
import { AppRoutingModule } from './app-routing.module';
import { AppComponent } from './app.component';
function initializeKeycloak(keycloak: KeycloakService) {
return () =>
keycloak.init({
config: {
url: 'http://localhost:8080',
realm: 'your-realm',
clientId: 'your-client-id'
},
initOptions: {
onLoad: 'check-sso',
silentCheckSsoRedirectUri:
window.location.origin + '/assets/silent-check-sso.html'
}
});
}
@NgModule({
declarations: [AppComponent],
imports: [AppRoutingModule, BrowserModule, KeycloakAngularModule],
providers: [
{
provide: APP_INITIALIZER,
useFactory: initializeKeycloak,
multi: true,
deps: [KeycloakService]
}
],
bootstrap: [AppComponent]
})
export class AppModule {}
In the example we have set up Keycloak to use a silent check-sso
. With this feature enabled, your browser will not do a full redirect to the Keycloak server and back to your application, instead this action will be performed in a hidden iframe, so your application resources only need to be loaded and parsed once by the browser when the app is initialized and not again after the redirect back from Keycloak to your app.
To ensure that Keycloak can communicate through the iframe you will have to serve a static HTML asset from your application at the location provided in silentCheckSsoRedirectUri
.
Create a file called silent-check-sso.html
in the assets
directory of your application and paste in the contents as seen below.
<html>
<body>
<script>
parent.postMessage(location.href, location.origin);
</script>
</body>
</html>
If you want to know more about these options and various other capabilities of the Keycloak client is recommended to read the JavaScript Adapter documentation.
Example project
If you want to see a complete overview a pre-configured client together with a working Keycloak server make sure to check out the example project in this repository.
AuthGuard
A generic AuthGuard, KeycloakAuthGuard
is provided to help you protect authenticated routes in your application. This guard provides you with information to see if the user is logged in and a list of roles from that belong to the user. In your implementation you just need to implement the desired logic to protect your routes.
To write your own implementation extend the KeycloakAuthGuard
class and implement the isAccessAllowed
method. For example the code provided below checks if the user is authenticated and if not the user is requested to sign in. It also checks if the user has the correct roles which could be provided by passing the roles
field into the data of the route.
import { Injectable } from '@angular/core';
import {
ActivatedRouteSnapshot,
Router,
RouterStateSnapshot
} from '@angular/router';
import { KeycloakAuthGuard, KeycloakService } from 'keycloak-angular';
@Injectable({
providedIn: 'root'
})
export class AuthGuard extends KeycloakAuthGuard {
constructor(
protected readonly router: Router,
protected readonly keycloak: KeycloakService
) {
super(router, keycloak);
}
public async isAccessAllowed(
route: ActivatedRouteSnapshot,
state: RouterStateSnapshot
) {
// Force the user to log in if currently unauthenticated.
if (!this.authenticated) {
await this.keycloak.login({
redirectUri: window.location.origin + state.url
});
}
// Get the roles required from the route.
const requiredRoles = route.data.roles;
// Allow the user to proceed if no additional roles are required to access the route.
if (!Array.isArray(requiredRoles) || requiredRoles.length === 0) {
return true;
}
// Allow the user to proceed if all the required roles are present.
return requiredRoles.every((role) => this.roles.includes(role));
}
}
HttpClient Interceptor
By default, all HttpClient requests will add the Authorization header in the format of: Authorization: Bearer **_TOKEN_**
.
There is also the possibility to exclude requests that should not have the authorization header. This is accomplished by implementing the shouldAddToken
method in the keycloak initialization. For example, the configuration below will not add the token to GET
requests that match the paths /assets
or /clients/public
:
await keycloak.init({
config: {
url: 'http://localhost:8080',
realm: 'your-realm',
clientId: 'your-client-id'
},
initOptions: {
onLoad: 'check-sso',
silentCheckSsoRedirectUri:
window.location.origin + '/assets/silent-check-sso.html'
},
shouldAddToken: (request) => {
const { method, url } = request;
const isGetRequest = 'GET' === method.toUpperCase();
const acceptablePaths = ['/assets', '/clients/public'];
const isAcceptablePathMatch = acceptablePaths.some((path) =>
url.includes(path)
);
return !(isGetRequest && isAcceptablePathMatch);
}
});
In the case where your application frequently polls an authenticated endpoint, you will find that users will not be logged out automatically over time. If that functionality is not desirable, you can add an http header to the polling requests then configure the shouldUpdateToken
option in the keycloak initialization.
In the example below, any http requests with the header token-update: false
will not trigger the user's keycloak token to be updated.
await keycloak.init({
config: {
url: 'http://localhost:8080',
realm: 'your-realm',
clientId: 'your-client-id'
},
initOptions: {
onLoad: 'check-sso',
silentCheckSsoRedirectUri:
window.location.origin + '/assets/silent-check-sso.html'
},
bearerExcludedUrls: ['/assets', '/clients/public'],
shouldUpdateToken(request) {
return !request.headers.get('token-update') === 'false';
}
});
Keycloak-js Events
The callback events from keycloak-js are available through a RxJS subject which is defined by keycloakEvents$
.
For example you make keycloak-angular auto refreshing your access token when expired:
keycloakService.keycloakEvents$.subscribe({
next(event) {
if (event.type == KeycloakEventType.OnTokenExpired) {
keycloakService.updateToken(20);
}
}
});
Contributors
<!-- ALL-CONTRIBUTORS-LIST:START - Do not remove or modify this section --> <!-- prettier-ignore -->If you want to contribute to the project, please check out the contributing document.
License
keycloak-angular is licensed under the MIT license.
<!-- prettier-ignore-start --> <!-- prettier-ignore-end -->