This controller manage Keycloak clients and realms over Kubernetes resources and creates a Kubernetes secret with
the clientSecret
for clients of type confidential
.
Within the cluster, multiple Keycloak instances can be referenced. This become useful in a multi-tenant environment where different services has to be registered at different Keycloak instances.
By default, the controller watches only for events in its namespace.
To enable watching in all namespaces set environment variable CONTROLLER_NAMESPACED=false
.
Before deploying the controller, create the CustomResourceDefinition:
kubectl apply -f src/main/k8s/
The controller can then be deployed using the corresponding helm chart.
The Docker container can be found here: https://hub.docker.com/r/kiwigrid/keycloak-controller
See sub-dir examples
for more sophisticated samples.
apiVersion: k8s.kiwigrid.com/v1beta1
kind: Keycloak
metadata:
name: keycloak-instance-example
spec:
url: https://keycloak.example.com/auth
realm: master
clientId: admin-cli
username: admin
passwordSecretName: keycloak-http
apiVersion: k8s.kiwigrid.com/v1beta1
kind: KeycloakRealm
metadata:
name: realm-example
spec:
keycloak: keycloak-instance-example
realm: my-realm
roles:
- service
- admin
- operations
apiVersion: k8s.kiwigrid.com/v1beta1
kind: KeycloakClient
metadata:
name: client-example
spec:
keycloak: keycloak-instance-example
realm: my-realm
clientId: client-example
clientType: public
directAccessGrantsEnabled: true
standardFlowEnabled: false
implicitFlowEnabled: false
mapper:
- name: example-service-audience
protocolMapper: oidc-audience-mapper
config:
claim.name: audience
access.token.claim: "true"
included.client.audience: my-service
To test the controller using the same process as Github Actions from a blank container, install act
:
brew install act
And then trigger the pull request action:
act pull_request -P ubuntu-latest=nektos/act-environments-ubuntu:18.04
To run Keycloak Controller locally some of the same scripts that power the Github Actions can be used, but you'll want to provision your machine locally instead, as you most likely don't want to delete all your installs and builds for every single change, or change your local environment in a forceful manner - such as installing versions of a tool that conflicts with another local tool you are using.
The tools you'll need to make sure are installed are kubectl
, helm
, kind
, java
, and maven
.
Please look at their official documentation to find how to install each.
Once they are installed you can run the various ci scripts:
Here is an example of running the full pipeline, parallelized where possible - of course you could run them ad-hoc in any order that makes sense:
Build .jar
and run a Kubernetes cluster in Docker:
bash .github/local.maven.sh &
bash .github/local.kind.sh &
wait
Build docker image using .jar from previous step, and get Helm ready:
bash .github/ci.docker-build.sh &
bash .github/ci.helm.sh &
wait
Install Keycloak and Keycloak Controller configured to use the image produced and uploaded to Kind in the last step:
bash .github/ci.keycloak.sh "9.0.1" & \
bash .github/ci.keycloak-controller.sh "0.6.1" & \
wait
bash .github/ci.example.sh &&
bash .github/ci.verify.sh
bash .github/local.maven.sh &&
bash .github/ci.docker-build.sh &&
kubectl rollout restart deployment -n keycloak keycloak-controller &&
kubectl rollout status deployment -n keycloak keycloak-controller
kind delete clusters chart-testing