Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant
Neil Madden <neil.madden@forgerock.com> Wed, 19 February 2020 21:52 UTC
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From: Neil Madden <neil.madden@forgerock.com>
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Date: Wed, 19 Feb 2020 21:52:45 +0000
Cc: Hans Zandbelt <hans.zandbelt@zmartzone.eu>, Anthony Nadalin <tonynad=40microsoft.com@dmarc.ietf.org>, "oauth@ietf.org" <oauth@ietf.org>
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To: Torsten Lodderstedt <torsten@lodderstedt.net>
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Subject: Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant
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OAuth2 clients are often private to the AS - they live in a database that only the AS can access, have attributes specific to their use in OAuth2, and so on. Many existing systems have access controls based on users, roles, permissions and so on and expect all users accessing the system to exist in some user repository, e.g. LDAP, where they can be looked up and appropriate permissions determined. A service account can be created inside such a system as if it was a regular user, managed through the normal account provisioning tools, assigned permissions, roles, etc. Another reason is that sometimes OAuth is just one authentication option out of many, and so permissions assigned to service accounts are preferred over scopes because they are consistently applied no matter how a request is authenticated. This is often the case when OAuth has been retrofitted to an existing system and they need to preserve compatibility with already deployed clients. See e.g. Google cloud platform (GCP): https://developers.google.com/identity/protocols/OAuth2ServiceAccount They use the JWT bearer grant type for service account authentication and assign permissions to those service accounts and typically have very broad scopes. For service-to-service API calls you typically get an access token with a single scope that is effectively “all of GCP” and everything is managed at the level of permissions on the RO service account itself. They only break down fine-grained scopes when you are dealing with user data and will be getting an access token approved by a real user (through a normal auth code flow). — Neil > On 19 Feb 2020, at 21:35, Torsten Lodderstedt <torsten@lodderstedt.net> wrote: > > Can you explain more in detail why the client credentials grant type isn’t applicable for the kind of use cases you mentioned? > >> Am 19.02.2020 um 22:03 schrieb Neil Madden <neil.madden@forgerock.com>: >> >> I very much agree with this with regards to real users. >> >> The one legitimate use-case for ROPC I’ve seen is for service accounts - where you essentially want something like client_credentials but for whatever reason you need the RO to be a service user rather than an OAuth2 client (typically so that some lower layer of the system can still perform its required permission checks). >> >> There are better grant types for this - e.g. JWT bearer - but they are a bit harder to implement. Having recently converted some code from ROPC to JWT bearer for exactly this use-case, it went from a couple of lines of code to two screens of code. For service to service API calls within a datacenter I’m not convinced this resulted in a material increase in security for the added complexity. >> >> — Neil >> >>> On 18 Feb 2020, at 21:57, Hans Zandbelt <hans.zandbelt@zmartzone.eu> wrote: >>> >>> I would also seriously look at the original motivation behind ROPC: I know it has been deployed and is used in quite a lot of places but I have never actually come across a use case where it is used for migration purposes and the migration is actually executed (I know that is statistically not a very strong argument but I challenge others to come up with one...) >>> In reality it turned out just to be a one off that people used as an easy way out to stick to an anti-pattern and still claim to do OAuth 2.0. It is plain wrong, it is not OAuth and we need to get rid of it. >>> >>> Hans. >>> >>> On Tue, Feb 18, 2020 at 10:44 PM Aaron Parecki <aaron@parecki.com> wrote: >>> Agreed. Plus, the Security BCP is already effectively acting as a grace period since it currently says the password grant MUST NOT be used, so in the OAuth 2.0 world that's already a pretty strong signal. >>> >>> Aaron >>> >>> >>> >>> On Tue, Feb 18, 2020 at 4:16 PM Justin Richer <jricher@mit.edu> wrote: >>> There is no need for a grace period. People using OAuth 2.0 can still do OAuth 2.0. People using OAuth 2.1 will do OAuth 2.1. >>> >>> — Justin >>> >>>>> On Feb 18, 2020, at 3:54 PM, Anthony Nadalin <tonynad=40microsoft.com@dmarc.ietf.org> wrote: >>>> >>>> I would suggest a SHOULD NOT instead of MUST, there are still sites using this and a grace period should be provided before a MUST is pushed out as there are valid use cases out there still. >>>> >>>> From: OAuth <oauth-bounces@ietf.org> On Behalf Of Dick Hardt >>>> Sent: Tuesday, February 18, 2020 12:37 PM >>>> To: oauth@ietf.org >>>> Subject: [EXTERNAL] [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant >>>> >>>> Hey List >>>> >>>> (Once again using the OAuth 2.1 name as a placeholder for the doc that Aaron, Torsten, and I are working on) >>>> >>>> In the security topics doc >>>> >>>> https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-security-topics-14#section-2.4 >>>> >>>> The password grant MUST not be used. >>>> >>>> Some background for those interested. I added this grant into OAuth 2.0 to allow applications that had been provided password to migrate. Even with the caveats in OAuth 2.0, implementors decide they want to prompt the user to enter their credentials, the anti-pattern OAuth was created to eliminate. >>>> >>>> >>>> Does anyone have concerns with dropping the password grant from the OAuth 2.1 document so that developers don't use it? >>>> >>>> /Dick >>>> _______________________________________________ >>>> OAuth mailing list >>>> OAuth@ietf.org >>>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> OAuth mailing list >>> OAuth@ietf.org >>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth >>> -- >>> ---- >>> Aaron Parecki >>> aaronparecki.com >>> @aaronpk >>> >>> _______________________________________________ >>> OAuth mailing list >>> OAuth@ietf.org >>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth >>> >>> >>> -- >>> hans.zandbelt@zmartzone.eu >>> ZmartZone IAM - www.zmartzone.eu >>> _______________________________________________ >>> OAuth mailing list >>> OAuth@ietf.org >>> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth >> >> _______________________________________________ >> OAuth mailing list >> OAuth@ietf.org >> https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth
- [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Dick Hardt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] [EXTERNAL] OAuth 2.1: dropping pas… Anthony Nadalin
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] [EXTERNAL] OAuth 2.1: dropping pas… Dick Hardt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] [EXTERNAL] OAuth 2.1: dropping pas… Justin Richer
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] [EXTERNAL] OAuth 2.1: dropping pas… Phillip Hunt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Aaron Parecki
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Hans Zandbelt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] [EXTERNAL] OAuth 2.1: dropping pas… Dick Hardt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Torsten Lodderstedt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Brock Allen
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Richard Backman, Annabelle
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Dick Hardt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Matthew De Haast
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Torsten Lodderstedt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Torsten Lodderstedt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Levi Schuck
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Torsten Lodderstedt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Torsten Lodderstedt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Richard Backman, Annabelle
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Justin Richer
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Richard Backman, Annabelle
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Dick Hardt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Phillip Hunt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Brian Campbell
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant William Denniss
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant William Denniss
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Aaron Parecki
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant lanerashaad80@gmail.com
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Neil Madden
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Nat Sakimura
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Dick Hardt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Dominick Baier
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Phillip Hunt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Dick Hardt
- Re: [OAUTH-WG] OAuth 2.1: dropping password grant Justin Richer