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Informations about the package php-saml

OneLogin's SAML PHP Toolkit

Build Status Coverage Status License

Add SAML support to your PHP softwares using this library. Forget those complicated libraries and use that open source library provided and supported by OneLogin Inc.

Why add SAML support to my software?

SAML is an XML-based standard for web browser single sign-on and is defined by the OASIS Security Services Technical Committee. The standard has been around since 2002, but lately it is becoming popular due its advantages:

General description

OneLogin's SAML PHP toolkit let you build a SP (Service Provider) over your PHP application and connect it to any IdP (Identity Provider).

Supports:

Key features:

Integrate your PHP toolkit at OneLogin using this guide: https://developers.onelogin.com/page/saml-toolkit-for-php

Installation

Dependencies

Since PHP 5.3 is officially unssuported we recommend you to use a newer PHP version.

Code

Option 1. Download from github

The toolkit is hosted on github. You can download it from:

Copy the core of the library inside the php application. (each application has its structure so take your time to locate the PHP SAML toolkit in the best place). See the "Guide to add SAML support to my app" to know how.

Option 2. Composer

The toolkit supports composer. You can find the onelogin/php-saml package at https://packagist.org/packages/onelogin/php-saml

In order to import the saml toolkit to your current php project, execute

After installation has completed you will find at the vendor/ folder a new folder named onelogin and inside the php-saml. Make sure you are including the autoloader provided by composer. It can be found at vendor/autoload.php.

Important In this option, the x509 certs must be stored at vendor/onelogin/php-saml/certs and settings file stored at vendor/onelogin/php-saml.

Your settings are at risk of being deleted when updating packages using composer update or similiar commands. So is highly recommended that instead of use settings files, you pass the settings as an array directly to the constructor (explained later in this document). If you do not use this approach your settings are at risk of being deleted when updating packages using composer update or similiar commands.

Compatibility

This 2.0 version has a new library. The toolkit is still compatible.

The old code that you used in order to add SAML support gonna continue working with minor changes. You only need to load the files of the lib/Saml folder. (notice that the compatibility.php file do that).

The old-demo folder contains code from an old app that uses the old version of the toolkit (v.1). Take a look.

Sometimes the names of the classes of the old code could be a bit different and if is your case you must change them for OneLogin_Saml_Settings, OneLogin_Saml_Response, OneLogin_Saml_AuthRequest or OneLogin_Saml_Metadata.

We recommend that you migrate the old code to the new one to be able to use the new features that the new library Saml2 carries.

Namespaces

If you are using the library with a framework like Symfony2 that contains namespaces, remember that calls to the class must be done by adding a backslash (\) to the start, for example to use the static method getSelfURLNoQuery use:

\OneLogin_Saml2_Utils::getSelfURLNoQuery()

Security warning

In production, the strict parameter MUST be set as "true". Otherwise your environment is not secure and will be exposed to attacks.

Getting started

Knowing the toolkit

The new OneLogin SAML Toolkit contains different folders (certs, endpoints, extlib, lib, demo, etc.) and some files.

Let's start describing the folders:

certs/

SAML requires a x.509 cert to sign and encrypt elements like NameID, Message, Assertion, Metadata.

If our environment requires sign or encrypt support, this folder may contain the x509 cert and the private key that the SP will use:

Or also we can provide those data in the setting file at the $settings['sp']['x509cert'] and the $settings['sp']['privateKey'].

Sometimes we could need a signature on the metadata published by the SP, in this case we could use the x.509 cert previously mentioned or use a new x.509 cert: metadata.crt and metadata.key.

extlib/

This folder contains the 3rd party libraries that the toolkit uses. At the moment only uses the xmlseclibs (autor Robert Richards, BSD Licensed) which handle the sign and the encryption of xml elements.

lib/

This folder contains the heart of the toolkit, the libraries:

doc/

This folder contains the API documentation of the toolkit.

endpoints/

The toolkit has three endpoints:

You can use the files provided by the toolkit or create your own endpoints files when adding SAML support to your applications. Take in mind that those endpoints files uses the setting file of the toolkit's base folder.

locale/

Locale folder contains some translations: en_US and es_ES as a proof of concept. Currently there are no translations but we will eventually localize the messages and support multiple languages.

Other important files

Miscellaneous

How it works

Settings

First of all we need to configure the toolkit. The SP's info, the IdP's info, and in some cases, configure advanced security issues like signatures and encryption.

There are two ways to provide the settings information:

There is a template file, settings_example.php, so you can make a copy of this file, rename and edit it.

In addition to the required settings data (IdP, SP), there is extra information that could be defined. In the same way that a template exists for the basic info, there is a template for that advanced info located at the base folder of the toolkit and named advanced_settings_example.php that you can copy and rename it as advanced_settings.php

In the security section, you can set the way that the SP will handle the messages and assertions. Contact the admin of the IdP and ask him what the IdP expects, and decide what validations will handle the SP and what requirements the SP will have and communicate them to the IdP's admin too.

Once we know what kind of data could be configured, let's talk about the way settings are handled within the toolkit.

The settings files described (settings.php and advanced_settings.php) are loaded by the toolkit if not other array with settings info is provided in the constructors of the toolkit. Let's see some examples.

You can declare the $settingsInfo in the file that constains the constructor execution or locate them in any file and load the file in order to get the array available as we see in the following example:

How load the library

In order to use the toolkit library you need to import the _toolkit_loader.php file located on the base folder of the toolkit. You can load this file in this way:

After that line we will be able to use the classes (and their methods) of the toolkit (because the external and the Saml2 libraries files are loaded).

If you wrote the code of your SAML app for the version 1 of the PHP-SAML toolkit you will need to load the compatibility.php, file which loads the SAML library files, in addition to the the _toolkit_loader.php.

That SAML library uses the new classes and methods of the latest version of the toolkits but maintain the old classes, methods, and workflow of the old process to accomplish the same things.

We strongly recommend migrating your old code and use the new API of the new toolkit due there are a lot of new features that you can't handle with the old code.

Initiate SSO

In order to send an AuthNRequest to the IdP:

The AuthNRequest will be sent signed or unsigned based on the security info of the advanced_settings.php ('authnRequestsSigned').

The IdP will then return the SAML Response to the user's client. The client is then forwarded to the Attribute Consumer Service of the SP with this information. If we do not set a 'url' param in the login method and we are using the default ACS provided by the toolkit (endpoints/acs.php), then the ACS endpoint will redirect the user to the file that launched the SSO request.

We can set an 'returnTo' url to change the workflow and redirect the user to the other PHP file.

The login method can recieve other four optional parameters:

If a match on the future SAMLResponse ID and the AuthNRequest ID to be sent is required, that AuthNRequest ID must to be extracted and saved.

The SP Endpoints

Related to the SP there are three important views: The metadata view, the ACS view and the SLS view. The toolkit provides examples of those views in the endpoints directory.

SP Metadata endpoints/metadata.php

This code will provide the XML metadata file of our SP, based on the info that we provided in the settings files.

The getSPMetadata will return the metadata signed or not based on the security info of the advanced_settings.php ('signMetadata').

Before the XML metadata is exposed, a check takes place to ensure that the info to be provided is valid.

Instead of use the Auth object, you can directly use

to get the settings object and with the true parameter we will avoid the IdP Settings validation.

Attribute Consumer Service(ACS) endpoints/acs.php

This code handles the SAML response that the IdP forwards to the SP through the user's client.

The SAML response is processed and then checked that there are no errors. It also verifies that the user is authenticated and stored the userdata in session.

At that point there are two possible alternatives:

  1. If no RelayState is provided, we could show the user data in this view or however we wanted.

  2. If RelayState is provided, a redirection takes place.

Notice that we saved the user data in the session before the redirection to have the user data available at the RelayState view.

The getAttributes method

In order to retrieve attributes we can use:

With this method we get all the user data provided by the IdP in the Assertion of the SAML Response.

If we execute we could get:

Each attribute name can be used as an index into $attributes to obtain the value. Every attribute value is an array - a single-valued attribute is an array of a single element.

The following code is equivalent:

Before trying to get an attribute, check that the user is authenticated. If the user isn't authenticated or if there were no attributes in the SAML assertion, an empty array will be returned. For example, if we call to getAttributes before a $auth->processResponse, the getAttributes() will return an empty array.

Single Logout Service (SLS) endpoints/sls.php

This code handles the Logout Request and the Logout Responses.

If the SLS endpoints receives a Logout Response, the response is validated and the session could be closed

If the SLS endpoints receives an Logout Request, the request is validated, the session is closed and a Logout Response is sent to the SLS endpoint of the IdP.

If you aren't using the default PHP session, or otherwise need a manual way to destroy the session, you can pass a callback method to the processSLO method as the fourth parameter

If we don't want that processSLO to destroy the session, pass a true parameter to the processSLO method

Initiate SLO

In order to send a Logout Request to the IdP:

Also there are three optional parameters that can be set:

The Logout Request will be sent signed or unsigned based on the security info of the advanced_settings.php ('logoutRequestSigned').

The IdP will return the Logout Response through the user's client to the Single Logout Service of the SP. If we do not set a 'url' param in the logout method and are using the default SLS provided by the toolkit (endpoints/sls.php), then the SLS endpoint will redirect the user to the file that launched the SLO request.

We can set an 'returnTo' url to change the workflow and redirect the user to other php file.

If a match on the future LogoutResponse ID and the LogoutRequest ID to be sent is required, that LogoutRequest ID must to be extracted and stored.

Example of a view that initiates the SSO request and handles the response (is the acs target)

We can code a unique file that initiates the SSO process, handle the response, get the attributes, initiate the SLO and processes the logout response.

Note: Review the demo1 folder that contains that use case; in a later section we explain the demo1 use case further in detail.

Main classes and methods

Described below are the main classes and methods that can be invoked.

The Old Saml library

Lets start describing the classes and methods of the SAML library, an evolution of the old v.1 toolkit that is provided to keep the backward compability. Most of them use classes and methods of the new SAML2 library.

OneLogin_Saml_AuthRequest - AuthRequest.php

Has the protected attribute $auth, an OneLogin_Saml2_Auth object.

OneLogin_Saml_Response - Response.php
OneLogin_Saml_Settings - Settings.php

A simple class used to build the Setting object used in the v1.0 of the toolkit.

OneLogin_Saml_Metadata - Metadata.php
OneLogin_Saml_XmlSec - XmlSec.php

Auxiliary class that contains methos to validate the SAML Response: validateNumAssertions, validateTimestamps, isValid (which uses the other two previous methods and also validate the signature of SAML Response).

Saml2 library

Lets describe now the classes and methods of the SAML2 library.

OneLogin_Saml2_Auth - Auth.php

Main class of OneLogin PHP Toolkit

OneLogin_Saml2_AuthnRequest - AuthnRequest.php

SAML 2 Authentication Request class

OneLogin_Saml2_Response - Response.php

SAML 2 Authentication Response class

OneLogin_Saml2_LogoutRequest - LogoutRequest.php

SAML 2 Logout Request class

OneLogin_Saml2_LogoutResponse - LogoutResponse.php

SAML 2 Logout Response class

OneLogin_Saml2_Settings - Settings.php

Configuration of the OneLogin PHP Toolkit

OneLogin_Saml2_Metadata - Metadata.php

A class that contains functionality related to the metadata of the SP

OneLogin_Saml2_Utils - Utils.php

Auxiliary class that contains several methods

For more info, look at the source code; each method is documented and details about what does and how to use it are provided. Make sure to also check the doc folder where HTML documentation about the classes and methods is provided for SAML and SAML2.

Demos included in the toolkit

The toolkit includes three demo apps to teach how use the toolkit, take a look on it.

Demos require that SP and IdP are well configured before test it.

Demo1

SP setup

The Onelogin's PHP Toolkit allows you to provide the settings info in two ways:

In this demo we provide the data in the second way, using a setting array named $settingsInfo. This array users the settings_example.php included as a template to create the settings.php settings and store it in the demo1/ folder. Configure the SP part and later review the metadata of the IdP and complete the IdP info.

If you check the code of the index.php file you will see that the settings.php file is loaded in order to get the $settingsInfo var to be used in order to initialize the Setting class.

Notice that in this demo, the setting.php file that could be defined at the base folder of the toolkit is ignored and the libs are loaded using the _toolkit_loader.php located at the base folder of the toolkit.

IdP setup

Once the SP is configured, the metadata of the SP is published at the metadata.php file. Configure the IdP based on that information.

How it works

  1. First time you access to index.php view, you can select to login and return to the same view or login and be redirected to the attrs.php view.

  2. When you click:

    2.1 in the first link, we access to (index.php?sso) an AuthNRequest is sent to the IdP, we authenticate at the IdP and then a Response is sent through the user's client to the SP, specifically the Assertion Consumer Service view: index.php?acs. Notice that a RelayState parameter is set to the url that initiated the process, the index.php view.

    2.2 in the second link we access to (attrs.php) have the same process described at 2.1 with the diference that as RelayState is set the attrs.php.

  3. The SAML Response is processed in the ACS (index.php?acs), if the Response is not valid, the process stops here and a message is shown. Otherwise we are redirected to the RelayState view. a) index.php or b) attrs.php.

  4. We are logged in the app and the user attributes are showed. At this point, we can test the single log out functionality.

  5. The single log out funcionality could be tested by two ways.

    5.1 SLO Initiated by SP. Click on the "logout" link at the SP, after that a Logout Request is sent to the IdP, the session at the IdP is closed and replies through the client to the SP with a Logout Response (sent to the Single Logout Service endpoint). The SLS endpoint (index.php?sls) of the SP process the Logout Response and if is valid, close the user session of the local app. Notice that the SLO Workflow starts and ends at the SP.

    5.2 SLO Initiated by IdP. In this case, the action takes place on the IdP side, the logout process is initiated at the idP, sends a Logout Request to the SP (SLS endpoint, index.php?sls). The SLS endpoint of the SP process the Logout Request and if is valid, close the session of the user at the local app and send a Logout Response to the IdP (to the SLS endpoint of the IdP). The IdP receives the Logout Response, process it and close the session at of the IdP. Notice that the SLO Workflow starts and ends at the IdP.

Notice that all the SAML Requests and Responses are handled at a unique file, the index.php file and how GET paramters are used to know the action that must be done.

Demo2

SP setup

The Onelogin's PHP Toolkit allows you to provide the settings info in two ways:

The first is the case of the demo2 app. The setting.php file and the setting_extended.php file should be defined at the base folder of the toolkit. Review the setting_example.php and the advanced_settings_example.php to learn how to build them.

In this case as Attribute Consume Service and Single Logout Service we are going to use the files located in the endpoint folder (acs.php and sls.php).

IdP setup

Once the SP is configured, the metadata of the SP is published at the metadata.php file. Based on that info, configure the IdP.

How it works

At demo1, we saw how all the SAML Request and Responses were handler at an unique file, the index.php file. This demo1 uses high-level programming.

At demo2, we have several views: index.php, sso.php, slo.php, consume.php and metadata.php. As we said, we gonna use the endpoints that are defined in the toolkit (acs.php, sls.php of the endpoints folder). This demo2 uses low-level programming.

Notice that the SSO action can be initiated at index.php or sso.php.

The SAML workflow that take place is similar that the workflow defined in the demo1, only changes the targets.

  1. When you access index.php or sso.php for the first time, an AuthNRequest is sent to the IdP automatically, (as RelayState is sent the origin url). We authenticate at the IdP and then a Response is sent to the SP, to the ACS endpoint, in this case acs.php of the endpoints folder.

  2. The SAML Response is processed in the ACS, if the Response is not valid, the process stops here and a message is shown. Otherwise we are redirected to the RelayState view (sso.php or index.php). The sso.php detects if the user is logged and redirects to index.php, so we will be in the index.php at the end.

  3. We are logged into the app and the user attributes (if any) are shown. At this point, we can test the single log out functionality.

  4. The single log out funcionality could be tested by two ways.

    4.1 SLO Initiated by SP. Click on the "logout" link at the SP, after that we are redirected to the slo.php view and there a Logout Request is sent to the IdP, the session at the IdP is closed and replies to the SP a Logout Response (sent to the Single Logout Service endpoint). In this case The SLS endpoint of the SP process the Logout Response and if is valid, close the user session of the local app. Notice that the SLO Workflow starts and ends at the SP.

    5.2 SLO Initiated by IdP. In this case, the action takes place on the IdP side, the logout process is initiated at the idP, sends a Logout Request to the SP (SLS endpoint sls.php of the endpoint folder). The SLS endpoint of the SP process the Logout Request and if is valid, close the session of the user at the local app and sends a Logout Response to the IdP (to the SLS endpoint of the IdP).The IdP receives the Logout Response, process it and close the session at of the IdP. Notice that the SLO Workflow starts and ends at the IdP.

Demo Old

SP setup

This demo uses the old style of the version 1 of the toolkit. An object of the class OneLogin_Saml_Settings must be provided to the constructor of the AuthRequest.

You will find an example_settings.php file at the demo-old's folder that could be used as a template for you settings.php file.

In that template, SAML settings are divided into two parts, the application specific (const_assertion_consumer_service_url, const_issuer, const_name_identifier_format) and the user/account specific idp_sso_target_url, x509certificate). You'll need to add your own code here to identify the user or user origin (e.g. by subdomain, ip_address etc.).

IdP setup

Once the SP is configured, the metadata of the SP is published at the metadata.php file. After that, configure the IdP based on that information.

How it works

At the metadata.php view is published the metadata of the SP.

The index.php file acts as an initiater for the SAML conversation if it should should be initiated by the application. This is called Service Provider Initiated SAML. The service provider creates a SAML Authentication Request and sends it to the identity provider (IdP).

The consume.php is the ACS endpoint. Receives the SAML assertion. After Response validation, the userdata and the nameID will be available, using getNameId() or getAttributes() we obtain them.

Since the version 1 of the php toolkit does not support SLO we don't show how handle SLO in this demo-old.


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