Based on the work from intelimina.
This is a plugin based on the implementation of redmine_cas.
It redirects to an SSO server bypassing the original Redmine login authentication using the SSO server authentication in its place.
User registration is implicit and cannot be disabled at the moment.
So your OpenID provider should probably provide unique endpoints for your needs.
Check out FusionAuth for an excellent solution.
Just include username
in the scope being sent and replied to the client app.
- Go to your Redmine plugins directory.
- Clone/copy this plugin.
- Run
bundle install
- Run
bundle exec rake redmine:plugins:migrate RAILS_ENV=production
- Restart your server
- Login as administrator and head over to the plugins page.
- Open the configuration page for redmine openid connect plugin.
- Fill in the details.
- Go to your SSO server and add these urls as authorized redirect urls:
https://<your-redmine-domain>/oic/local_login
https://<your-redmine-domain>/oic/local_logout
- Check the JWT Token generation. You need the following contents:
member_of
:String[]
of role/group names that your config maps to user properties like is administrator or is authorized to log inuser_name
:String
with the user's desired username (required for user creation), aliases:nickname
,preferred_username
given_name
:String
with the user's first name (required for user creation)family_name
:String
with the user's surname (required for user creation)name
:String
with the user's full name (used as a fallback for first name and surname)- Should some of these fields be missing, try finding Lambda functions or Generators that allow you to customize the JWT Tokens issued
If you enable the OpenId Connect plugin and your OpenId Connect Server is not reachable, but you still would like to login, you can use an additional parameter, to be able to login directly into redmine:
https://<your-redmine-domain>/login?local_login=true
Enjoy!