Please visit http://keycloak.org for more information on Keycloak including how to download, documentation, and video tutorials.
Keycloak is an SSO Service for web apps and REST services. It can be used for social applications as well as enterprise applications. It is based on OpenID Connect with support for SAML 2.0 as well. Here's some of the features:
- SSO and Single Log Out for browser applications
- Social Broker. Enable Google, Facebook, Yahoo, Twitter, GitHub, LinkedIn social login with no code required.
- Optional LDAP/Active Directory integration
- Optional User Registration
- Password and TOTP support (via Google Authenticator or FreeOTP). Client cert auth coming soon.
- User session management from both admin and user perspective
- Customizable themes for user facing pages: login, grant pages, account management, emails, and admin console all customizable!
- OAuth Bearer token auth for REST Services
- Integrated Browser App to REST Service token propagation
- Admin REST API
- OAuth 2.0 Grant requests
- CORS Support
- CORS Web Origin management and validation
- Completely centrally managed user and role mapping metadata. Minimal configuration at the application side
- Admin Console for managing users, roles, role mappings, applications, user sessions, allowed CORS web origins, and OAuth clients.
- Deployable as a WAR, appliance, or an Openshift cloud service (SaaS).
- Supports JBoss AS7, EAP 6.x, Wildfly, Tomcat, and Jetty applications. Plans to support Node.js, RAILS, GRAILS, and other non-Java applications.
- Javascript/HTML 5 adapter for pure Javascript apps
- Session management from admin console
- Revocation policies
- Password policies
- OpenID Connect Support
- SAML Support
- Token claim and SAML assertion mappings, role name mappings, etc. Ability to configure exactly what information you want in your tokens and SAML documents
- IDP brokering or chaining. You can set up Keycloak to be a child IDP to another SAML or OIDC IDP.
- Kerberos bridging. Logged in Kerberos users can access Keycloak SAML or OIDC applications via our Kerberos bridge.
Please visit http://keycloak.org for more information on Keycloak including how to download, documentation, and video tutorials.