# oauth2-proxy [oauth2-proxy](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy) is a reverse proxy and static file server that provides authentication using Providers (Google, GitHub, and others) to validate accounts by email, domain or group. ## TL;DR; ```console $ helm repo add oauth2-proxy https://oauth2-proxy.github.io/manifests $ helm install my-release oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy ``` ## Introduction This chart bootstraps an oauth2-proxy deployment on a [Kubernetes](http://kubernetes.io) cluster using the [Helm](https://helm.sh) package manager. ## Installing the Chart To install the chart with the release name `my-release`: ```console $ helm install my-release oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy ``` The command deploys oauth2-proxy on the Kubernetes cluster in the default configuration. The [configuration](#configuration) section lists the parameters that can be configured during installation. ## Uninstalling the Chart To uninstall/delete the `my-release` deployment: ```console $ helm uninstall my-release ``` The command removes all the Kubernetes components associated with the chart and deletes the release. ## Upgrading an existing Release to a new major version A major chart version change (like v1.2.3 -> v2.0.0) indicates that there is an incompatible breaking change needing manual actions. ### To 1.0.0 This version upgrades oauth2-proxy to v4.0.0. Please see the [changelog](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy/blob/v4.0.0/CHANGELOG.md#v400) in order to upgrade. ### To 2.0.0 Version 2.0.0 of this chart introduces support for Kubernetes v1.16.x by way of addressing the deprecation of the Deployment object apiVersion `apps/v1beta2`. See [the v1.16 API deprecations page](https://kubernetes.io/blog/2019/07/18/api-deprecations-in-1-16/) for more information. Due to [this issue](https://github.com/helm/helm/issues/6583) there may be errors performing a `helm upgrade` of this chart from versions earlier than 2.0.0. ### To 3.0.0 Version 3.0.0 introduces support for [EKS IAM roles for service accounts](https://docs.aws.amazon.com/eks/latest/userguide/iam-roles-for-service-accounts.html) by adding a managed service account to the chart. This is a breaking change since the service account is enabled by default. To disable this behaviour set `serviceAccount.enabled` to `false` ### To 4.0.0 Version 4.0.0 adds support for the new Ingress apiVersion **networking.k8s.io/v1**. Therefore the `ingress.extraPaths` parameter needs to be updated to the new format. See the [v1.22 API deprecations guide](https://kubernetes.io/docs/reference/using-api/deprecation-guide/#ingress-v122) for more information. For the same reason `service.port` was renamed to `service.portNumber`. ### To 5.0.0 Version 5.0.0 introduces support for custom labels and refactor [Kubernetes recommended labels](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/overview/working-with-objects/common-labels/). This is a breaking change because many labels of all resources need to be updated to stay consistent. In order to upgrade, delete the Deployment before upgrading: ```bash kubectl delete deployment my-release-oauth2-proxy ``` This will introduce a slight downtime. For users who don't want downtime, you can perform these actions: - Perform a non-cascading removal of the deployment that keeps the pods running - Add new labels to pods - Perform `helm upgrade` ### To 6.0.0 Version 6.0.0 bumps the version of the redis subchart from ~10.6.0 to ~16.4.0. You probably need to adjust your redis config. See [here](https://github.com/bitnami/charts/tree/master/bitnami/redis#upgrading) for detailed upgrade instructions. ## Configuration The following table lists the configurable parameters of the oauth2-proxy chart and their default values. Parameter | Description | Default --- | --- | --- `affinity` | node/pod affinities | None `authenticatedEmailsFile.enabled` | Enables authorize individual email addresses | `false` `authenticatedEmailsFile.persistence` | Defines how the email addresses file will be projected, via a configmap or secret | `configmap` `authenticatedEmailsFile.template` | Name of the configmap or secret that is handled outside of that chart | `""` `authenticatedEmailsFile.restrictedUserAccessKey` | The key of the configmap or secret that holds the email addresses list | `""` `authenticatedEmailsFile.restricted_access` | [email addresses](https://oauth2-proxy.github.io/oauth2-proxy/docs/configuration/oauth_provider#email-authentication) list config | `""` `authenticatedEmailsFile.annotations` | configmap or secret annotations | `nil` `config.clientID` | oauth client ID | `""` `config.clientSecret` | oauth client secret | `""` `config.cookieSecret` | server specific cookie for the secret; create a new one with `openssl rand -base64 32 \| head -c 32 \| base64` | `""` `config.existingSecret` | existing Kubernetes secret to use for OAuth2 credentials. See [oauth2-proxy.secrets helper](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/manifests/blob/main/helm/oauth2-proxy/templates/_helpers.tpl#L157C13-L157C33) for the required values | `nil` `config.configFile` | custom [oauth2_proxy.cfg](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy/blob/master/contrib/oauth2-proxy.cfg.example) contents for settings not overridable via environment nor command line | `""` `config.existingConfig` | existing Kubernetes configmap to use for the configuration file. See [config template](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/manifests/blob/master/helm/oauth2-proxy/templates/configmap.yaml) for the required values | `nil` `config.cookieName` | The name of the cookie that oauth2-proxy will create. | `""` `alphaConfig.enabled` | Flag to toggle any alpha config related logic | `false` `alphaConfig.annotations` | Configmap annotations | `{}` `alphaConfig.serverConfigData` | Arbitrary configuration data to append to the server section | `{}` `alphaConfig.metricsConfigData` | Arbitrary configuration data to append to the metrics section | `{}` `alphaConfig.configData` | Arbitrary configuration data to append | `{}` `alphaConfig.configFile` | Arbitrary configuration to append, treated as a Go template and rendered with the root context | `""` `alphaConfig.existingConfig` | existing Kubernetes configmap to use for the alpha configuration file. See [config template](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/manifests/blob/master/helm/oauth2-proxy/templates/secret-alpha.yaml) for the required values | `nil` `alphaConfig.existingSecret` | existing Kubernetes secret to use for the alpha configuration file. See [config template](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/manifests/blob/master/helm/oauth2-proxy/templates/secret-alpha.yaml) for the required values | `nil` `customLabels` | Custom labels to add into metadata | `{}` | `config.google.adminEmail` | user impersonated by the google service account | `""` `config.google.useApplicationDefaultCredentials` | use the application-default credentials (i.e. Workload Identity on GKE) instead of providing a service account json | `false` `config.google.targetPrincipal` | service account to use/impersonate | `""` `config.google.serviceAccountJson` | google service account json contents | `""` `config.google.existingConfig` | existing Kubernetes configmap to use for the service account file. See [google secret template](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/manifests/blob/master/helm/oauth2-proxy/templates/google-secret.yaml) for the required values | `nil` `config.google.groups` | restrict logins to members of these google groups | `[]` `containerPort` | used to customise port on the deployment | `""` `extraArgs` | Extra arguments to give the binary. Either as a map with key:value pairs or as a list type, which allows to configure the same flag multiple times. (e.g. `["--allowed-role=CLIENT_ID:CLIENT_ROLE_NAME_A", "--allowed-role=CLIENT_ID:CLIENT_ROLE_NAME_B"]`). | `{}` or `[]` `extraContainers` | List of extra containers to be added to the pod | `[]` `extraEnv` | key:value list of extra environment variables to give the binary | `[]` `extraVolumes` | list of extra volumes | `[]` `extraVolumeMounts` | list of extra volumeMounts | `[]` `hostAliases` | hostAliases is a list of aliases to be added to /etc/hosts for network name resolution. `htpasswdFile.enabled` | enable htpasswd-file option | `false` `htpasswdFile.entries` | list of [encrypted user:passwords](https://oauth2-proxy.github.io/oauth2-proxy/docs/configuration/overview#command-line-options) | `{}` `htpasswdFile.existingSecret` | existing Kubernetes secret to use for OAuth2 htpasswd file | `""` `httpScheme` | `http` or `https`. `name` used for port on the deployment. `httpGet` port `name` and `scheme` used for `liveness`- and `readinessProbes`. `name` and `targetPort` used for the service. | `http` `image.pullPolicy` | Image pull policy | `IfNotPresent` `image.repository` | Image repository | `quay.io/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy` `image.tag` | Image tag | `""` (defaults to appVersion) `imagePullSecrets` | Specify image pull secrets | `nil` (does not add image pull secrets to deployed pods) `ingress.enabled` | Enable Ingress | `false` `ingress.className` | name referencing IngressClass | `nil` `ingress.path` | Ingress accepted path | `/` `ingress.pathType` | Ingress [path type](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/services-networking/ingress/#path-types) | `ImplementationSpecific` `ingress.extraPaths` | Ingress extra paths to prepend to every host configuration. Useful when configuring [custom actions with AWS ALB Ingress Controller](https://kubernetes-sigs.github.io/aws-alb-ingress-controller/guide/ingress/annotation/#actions). | `[]` `ingress.labels` | Ingress extra labels | `{}` `ingress.annotations` | Ingress annotations | `nil` `ingress.hosts` | Ingress accepted hostnames | `nil` `ingress.tls` | Ingress TLS configuration | `nil` `initContainers.waitForRedis.enabled` | if `redis.enabled` is true, use an init container to wait for the redis master pod to be ready. If `serviceAccount.enabled` is true, create additionally a role/binding to get, list and watch the redis master pod | `true` `initContainers.waitForRedis.image.pullPolicy` | kubectl image pull policy | `IfNotPresent` `initContainers.waitForRedis.image.repository` | kubectl image repository | `docker.io/bitnami/kubectl` `initContainers.waitForRedis.kubectlVersion` | kubectl version to use for the init container | `printf "%s.%s" .Capabilities.KubeVersion.Major (.Capabilities.KubeVersion.Minor | replace "+" "")` `initContainers.waitForRedis.securityContext.enabled` | enable Kubernetes security context on container | `true` `initContainers.waitForRedis.timeout` | number of seconds | 180 `initContainers.waitForRedis.resources` | pod resource requests & limits | `{}` `livenessProbe.enabled` | enable Kubernetes livenessProbe. Disable to use oauth2-proxy with Istio mTLS. See [Istio FAQ](https://istio.io/help/faq/security/#k8s-health-checks) | `true` `livenessProbe.initialDelaySeconds` | number of seconds | 0 `livenessProbe.timeoutSeconds` | number of seconds | 1 `namespaceOverride` | Override the deployment namespace | `""` `nodeSelector` | node labels for pod assignment | `{}` `deploymentAnnotations` | annotations to add to the deployment | `{}` `podAnnotations` | annotations to add to each pod | `{}` `podLabels` | additional labesl to add to each pod | `{}` `podDisruptionBudget.enabled`| Enabled creation of PodDisruptionBudget (only if replicaCount > 1) | true `podDisruptionBudget.minAvailable`| minAvailable parameter for PodDisruptionBudget | 1 `podSecurityContext` | Kubernetes security context to apply to pod | `{}` `priorityClassName` | priorityClassName | `nil` `readinessProbe.enabled` | enable Kubernetes readinessProbe. Disable to use oauth2-proxy with Istio mTLS. See [Istio FAQ](https://istio.io/help/faq/security/#k8s-health-checks) | `true` `readinessProbe.initialDelaySeconds` | number of seconds | 0 `readinessProbe.timeoutSeconds` | number of seconds | 5 `readinessProbe.periodSeconds` | number of seconds | 10 `readinessProbe.successThreshold` | number of successes | 1 `replicaCount` | desired number of pods | `1` `resources` | pod resource requests & limits | `{}` `revisionHistoryLimit` | maximum number of revisions maintained | 10 `service.portNumber` | port number for the service | `80` `service.appProtocol` | application protocol on the port of the service | `http` `service.type` | type of service | `ClusterIP` `service.clusterIP` | cluster ip address | `nil` `service.loadBalancerIP` | ip of load balancer | `nil` `service.loadBalancerSourceRanges` | allowed source ranges in load balancer | `nil` `service.nodePort` | external port number for the service when service.type is `NodePort` | `nil` `serviceAccount.enabled` | create a service account | `true` `serviceAccount.name` | the service account name | `` `serviceAccount.annotations` | (optional) annotations for the service account | `{}` `strategy` | configure deployment strategy | `{}` `tolerations` | list of node taints to tolerate | `[]` `securityContext.enabled` | enable Kubernetes security context on container | `true` `proxyVarsAsSecrets` | choose between environment values or secrets for setting up OAUTH2_PROXY variables. When set to false, remember to add the variables OAUTH2_PROXY_CLIENT_ID, OAUTH2_PROXY_CLIENT_SECRET, OAUTH2_PROXY_COOKIE_SECRET in extraEnv | `true` `sessionStorage.type` | Session storage type which can be one of the following: cookie or redis | `cookie` `sessionStorage.redis.existingSecret` | Name of the Kubernetes secret containing the redis & redis sentinel password values (see also `sessionStorage.redis.passwordKey`) | `""` `sessionStorage.redis.password` | Redis password. Applicable for all Redis configurations. Taken from redis subchart secret if not set. sessionStorage.redis.existingSecret takes precedence | `nil` `sessionStorage.redis.passwordKey` | Key of the Kubernetes secret data containing the redis password value | `redis-password` `sessionStorage.redis.clientType` | Allows the user to select which type of client will be used for redis instance. Possible options are: `sentinel`, `cluster` or `standalone` | `standalone` `sessionStorage.redis.standalone.connectionUrl` | URL of redis standalone server for redis session storage (e.g. `redis://HOST[:PORT]`). Automatically generated if not set. | `""` `sessionStorage.redis.cluster.connectionUrls` | List of Redis cluster connection URLs (e.g. `["redis://127.0.0.1:8000", "redis://127.0.0.1:8000"]`) | `[]` `sessionStorage.redis.sentinel.existingSecret` | Name of the Kubernetes secret containing the redis sentinel password value (see also `sessionStorage.redis.sentinel.passwordKey`). Default: `sessionStorage.redis.existingSecret` | `""` `sessionStorage.redis.sentinel.password` | Redis sentinel password. Used only for sentinel connection; any redis node passwords need to use `sessionStorage.redis.password` | `nil` `sessionStorage.redis.sentinel.passwordKey` | Key of the Kubernetes secret data containing the redis sentinel password value | `redis-sentinel-password` `sessionStorage.redis.sentinel.masterName` | Redis sentinel master name | `nil` `sessionStorage.redis.sentinel.connectionUrls` | List of Redis sentinel connection URLs (e.g. `["redis://127.0.0.1:8000", "redis://127.0.0.1:8000"]`) | `[]` `topologySpreadConstraints` | List of pod topology spread constraints | `[]` `redis.enabled` | Enable the redis subchart deployment | `false` `checkDeprecation` | Enable deprecation checks | `true` `metrics.enabled` | Enable Prometheus metrics endpoint | `true` `metrics.port` | Serve Prometheus metrics on this port | `44180` `metrics.nodePort` | External port for the metrics when service.type is `NodePort` | `nil` `metrics.service.appProtocol` | application protocol of the metrics port in the service | `http` `metrics.serviceMonitor.enabled` | Enable Prometheus Operator ServiceMonitor | `false` `metrics.serviceMonitor.namespace` | Define the namespace where to deploy the ServiceMonitor resource | `""` `metrics.serviceMonitor.prometheusInstance` | Prometheus Instance definition | `default` `metrics.serviceMonitor.interval` | Prometheus scrape interval | `60s` `metrics.serviceMonitor.scrapeTimeout` | Prometheus scrape timeout | `30s` `metrics.serviceMonitor.labels` | Add custom labels to the ServiceMonitor resource| `{}` `metrics.serviceMonitor.scheme` | HTTP scheme to use for scraping. Can be used with `tlsConfig` for example if using istio mTLS.| `""` `metrics.serviceMonitor.tlsConfig` | TLS configuration to use when scraping the endpoint. For example if using istio mTLS.| `{}` `metrics.serviceMonitor.bearerTokenFile` | Path to bearer token file.| `""` `metrics.serviceMonitor.annotations` | Used to pass annotations that are used by the Prometheus installed in your cluster| `{}` `metrics.serviceMonitor.metricRelabelings` | Metric relabel configs to apply to samples before ingestion.| `[]` `metrics.serviceMonitor.relabelings` | Relabel configs to apply to samples before ingestion.| `[]` `extraObjects` | Extra K8s manifests to deploy | `[]` Specify each parameter using the `--set key=value[,key=value]` argument to `helm install`. For example, ```console $ helm install my-release oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy \ --set=image.tag=v0.0.2,resources.limits.cpu=200m ``` Alternatively, a YAML file that specifies the values for the above parameters can be provided while installing the chart. For example, ```console $ helm install my-release oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy -f values.yaml ``` > **Tip**: You can use the default [values.yaml](values.yaml) ## TLS Configuration See: [TLS Configuration](https://oauth2-proxy.github.io/oauth2-proxy/docs/configuration/tls). Use ```values.yaml``` like: ```yaml ... extraArgs: tls-cert-file: /path/to/cert.pem tls-key-file: /path/to/cert.key extraVolumes: - name: ssl-cert secret: secretName: my-ssl-secret extraVolumeMounts: - mountPath: /path/to/ name: ssl-cert ... ``` With a secret called `my-ssl-secret`: ```yaml ... data: cert.pem: AB..== cert.key: CD..== ``` ## Extra environment variable templating The extraEnv value supports the tpl function which evaluate strings as templates inside the deployment template. This is useful to pass a template string as a value to the chart's extra environment variables and to render external configuration environment values ```yaml ... tplValue: "This is a test value for the tpl function" extraEnv: - name: TEST_ENV_VAR_1 value: test_value_1 - name: TEST_ENV_VAR_2 value: '{{ .Values.tplValue }}' ``` ## Custom templates configuration You can replace the default template files using a Kubernetes `configMap` volume. The default templates are the two files [sign_in.html](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy/blob/master/pkg/app/pagewriter/sign_in.html) and [error.html](https://github.com/oauth2-proxy/oauth2-proxy/blob/master/pkg/app/pagewriter/error.html). ```yaml config: configFile: | ... custom_templates_dir = "/data/custom-templates" extraVolumes: - name: custom-templates configMap: name: oauth2-proxy-custom-templates extraVolumeMounts: - name: custom-templates mountPath: "/data/custom-templates" readOnly: true extraObjects: - apiVersion: v1 kind: ConfigMap metadata: name: oauth2-proxy-custom-templates data: sign_in.html: | sign_in error.html: |

error

{{.StatusCode}}

``` ## Multi whitelist-domain configuration For using multi whitelist-domain configuration for one Oauth2-proxy instance, you have to use the config.configFile section. It will be overwriting the `/etc/oauth2_proxy/oauth2_proxy.cfg` configuration file. In this example, Google provider is used, but you can find all other provider configuration here [oauth_provider](https://oauth2-proxy.github.io/oauth2-proxy/docs/configuration/oauth_provider/) ```yaml config: ... clientID="$YOUR_GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID" clientSecret="$YOUR_GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET" cookieSecret="$YOUR_COOKIE_SECRET" configFile: | ... email_domains = [ "*" ] upstreams = [ "file:///dev/null" ] cookie_secure = "false" cookie_domains = [ ".domain.com", ".otherdomain.io" ] whitelist_domains = [ ".domain.com", ".otherdomain.io"] provider = "google" ```