APM Configuration to Support Duo MFA using iRule
Overview
BIG-IP APM has supported Duo as an MFA provider for a long time with RADIUS-based integration. Recently, Duo has added support for Universal Prompt that uses Open ID Connect (OIDC) protocol to provide two-factor authentication. To integrate APM as an OIDC client and resource server, and Duo as an Identity Provider (IdP), Duo requires the user’s logon name and custom parameters to be sent for Authentication and Token request.
This guide describes the configuration required on APM to enable Duo MFA integration using an iRule. iRules addresses the custom parameter challenges by generating the needed custom values and saving them in session variables, which the OAuth Client agent then uses to perform MFA with Duo. This integration procedure is supported on BIG-IP versions 13.1, 14.1x, 15.1x, and 16.x.
To integrate Duo MFA with APM, complete the following tasks:
1. Choose deployment type: Per-request or Per-session
2. Configure credentials and policies for MFA on the DUO web portal
3. Create OAuth objects on the BIG-IP system
4. Configure the iRule
5. Create the appropriate access policy/policies on the BIG-IP system
6. Apply policy/policies and iRule to the APM virtual server
Choose deployment type
APM supports two different types of policies for performing authentication functions.
- Per-session policies: Per-session policies provide authentication and authorization functions that occur only at the beginning of a user’s session. These policies are compatible with most APM use cases such as VPN, Webtop portal, Remote Desktop, federation IdP, etc.
- Per-request policies: Per-request policies provide dynamic authentication and authorization functionality that may occur at any time during a user’s session, such as step-up authentication or auditing functions only for certain resources. These policies are only compatible with Identity Aware Proxy and Web Access Management use cases and cannot be used with VPN or webtop portals.
This guide contains information about setting up both policy types.
Prerequisites
Ensure the BIG-IP system has DNS and internet connectivity to contact Duo directly for validating the user's OAuth tokens.
Configure credentials and policies for MFA on Duo web portal
Before you can protect your F5 BIG-IP APM Web application with Duo, you will first need to sign up for a Duo account.
1. Log in to the Duo Admin Panel and navigate to Applications.
2. Click Protect an application.
Figure 1: Duo Admin Panel – Protect an Application
3. Locate the entry for F5 BIG-IP APM Web in the applications list and click Protect to get the Client ID, Client secret, and API hostname. You will need this information to configure objects on APM.
Figure 2: Duo Admin Panel – F5 BIG-IP APM Web
4. As DUO is used as a secondary authentication factor, the user’s logon name is sent along with the authentication request. Depending on your security policy, you may want to pre-provision users in Duo, or you may allow them to self-provision to set their preferred authentication type when they first log on.
To add users to the Duo system, navigate to the Dashboard page and click the Add New... -> Add User button. A Duo username should match the user's primary authentication username. Refer to the https://duo.com/docs/enrolling-users link for the different methods of user enrollment.
Refer to Duo Universal Prompt for additional information on Duo’s two-factor authentication.
Create OAuth objects on the BIG-IP system
Create a JSON web key
When APM is configured to act as an OAuth client or resource server, it uses JSON web keys (JWKs) to validate the JSON web tokens it receives from Duo.
To create a JSON web key:
1. On the Main tab, select Access > Federation > JSON Web Token > Key Configuration.
The Key Configuration screen opens.
2. To add a new key configuration, click Create.
3. In the ID and Shared Secret fields, enter the Client ID and Client Secret values respectively obtained from Duo when protecting the application.
4. In the Type list, select the cryptographic algorithm used to sign the JSON web key.
Figure 3: Key Configuration screen
5. Click Save.
Create a JSON web token
As an OAuth client or resource server, APM validates the JSON web tokens (JWT) it receives from Duo.
To create a JSON web token:
1. On the Main tab, select Access > Federation > JSON Web Token > Token Configuration.
The Token Configuration screen opens.
2. To add a new token configuration, click Create.
3. In the Issuer field, enter the API hostname value obtained from Duo when protecting the application.
4. In the Signing Algorithms area, select from the Available list and populate the Allowed and Blocked lists.
5. In the Keys (JWK) area, select the previously configured JSON web key in the allowed list of keys.
Figure 4: Token Configuration screen
6. Click Save.
Configure Duo as an OAuth provider
APM uses the OAuth provider settings to get URIs on the external OAuth authorization server for JWT web tokens.
To configure an OAuth provider:
1. On the Main tab, select Access > Federation > OAuth Client / Resource Server > Provider.
The Provider screen opens.
2. To add a provider, click Create.
3. In the Name field, type a name for the provider.
4. From the Type list, select Custom.
5. For Token Configuration (JWT), select a configuration from the list.
6. In the Authentication URI field, type the URI on the provider where APM should redirect the user for authentication. The hostname is the same as the API hostname in the Duo application.
7. In the Token URI field, type the URI on the provider where APM can get a token. The hostname is the same as the API hostname in the Duo application.
Figure 5: OAuth Provider screen
8. Click Finished.
Configure Duo server for APM
The OAuth Server settings specify the OAuth provider and role that Access Policy Manager (APM) plays with that provider. It also sets the Client ID, Client Secret, and Client’s SSL certificates that APM uses to communicate with the provider.
To configure a Duo server:
1. On the Main tab, select Access > Federation > OAuth Client / Resource Server > OAuth Server.
The OAuth Server screen opens.
2. To add a server, click Create.
3. In the Name field, type a name for the Duo server.
4. From the Mode list, select how you want the APM to be configured.
5. From the Type list, select Custom.
6. From the OAuth Provider list, select the Duo provider.
7. From the DNS Resolver list, select a DNS resolver (or click the plus (+) icon, create a DNS resolver, and then select it).
8. In the Token Validation Interval field, type a number.
In a per-request policy subroutine configured to validate the token, the subroutine repeats at this interval or the expiry time of the access token, whichever is shorter.
9. In the Client Settings area, paste the Client ID and Client secret you obtained from Duo when protecting the application.
10. From the Client's ServerSSL Profile Name, select a server SSL profile.
Figure 6: OAuth Server screen
11. Click Finished.
Configure an auth-redirect-request and a token-request
Requests specify the HTTP method, parameters, and headers to use for the specific type of request. An auth-redirect-request tells Duo where to redirect the end-user, and a token-request accesses the authorization server for obtaining an access token.
To configure an auth-redirect-request:
1. On the Main tab, select Access > Federation > OAuth Client / Resource Server > Request.
The Request screen opens.
2. To add a request, click Create.
3. In the Name field, type a name for the request.
4. For the HTTP Method, select GET.
5. For the Type, select auth-redirect-request.
6. As shown in Figure 7, specify the list of GET parameters to be sent:
- request parameter with value depending on the type of policy
- For per-request policy: %{subsession.custom.jwt_duo}
- For per-session policy: %{session.custom.jwt_duo}
- client_id parameter with type client-id
- response_type parameter with type response-type
Figure 7: Request screen with auth-redirect-request (Use “subsession.custom…” for Per-request or “session.custom…” for Per-session)
7. Click Finished.
To configure a token-request:
1. On the Main tab, select Access > Federation > OAuth Client / Resource Server > Request.
The Request screen opens.
2. To add a request, click Create.
3. In the Name field, type a name for the request.
4. For the HTTP Method, select POST.
5. For the Type, select token-request.
6. As shown in Figure 8, specify the list of POST parameters to be sent:
- client_assertion parameter with value depending on the type of policy
- For per-request policy: %{subsession.custom.jwt_duo_token}
- For per-session policy: %{session.custom.jwt_duo_token}
- client_assertion_type parameter with value urn:ietf:params:oauth:client-assertion-type:jwt-bearer
- grant_type parameter with type grant-type
- redirect_uri parameter with type redirect-uri
Figure 8: Request screen with token-request (Use “subsession.custom…” for Per-request or “session.custom…” for Per-session)
7. Click Finished.
Configure the iRule
iRules gives you the ability to customize and manage your network traffic. Configure an iRule that creates the required sub-session variables and usernames for Duo integration.
Note: This iRule has sections for both per-request and per-session policies and can be used for either type of deployment.
To configure an iRule:
1. On the Main tab, click Local Traffic > iRules.
2. To create an iRules, click Create.
3. In the Name field, type a name for the iRule.
4. Copy the sample code given below and paste it in the Definition field.
Replace the following variables with values specific to the Duo application:
- <Duo Client ID> in the getClientId function with Duo Application ID.
- <Duo API Hostname> in the createJwtToken function with API Hostname. For example, https://api-duohostname.com/oauth/v1/token.
- <JSON Web Key> in the getJwkName function with the configured JSON web key.
Note: The iRule ID here is set as JWT_CREATE. You can rename the ID as desired. You specify this ID in the iRule Event agent in Visual Policy Editor.
Note: The variables used in the below example are global, which may affect your performance. Refer to the K95240202: Understanding iRule variable scope article for further information on global variables, and determine if you use a local variable for your implementation.
proc randAZazStr {len} { return [subst [string repeat {[format %c [expr {int(rand() * 26) + (rand() > .5 ? 97 : 65)}]]} $len]] } proc getClientId { return <Duo Client ID> } proc getExpiryTime { set exp [clock seconds] set exp [expr $exp + 900] return $exp } proc getJwtHeader { return "{\"alg\":\"HS512\",\"typ\":\"JWT\"}" } proc getJwkName { return <JSON Web Key> #e.g. return "/Common/duo_jwk" } proc createJwt {duo_uname} { set header [call getJwtHeader] set exp [call getExpiryTime] set client_id [call getClientId] set redirect_uri "https://" set redirect [ACCESS::session data get "session.server.network.name"] append redirect_uri $redirect append redirect_uri "/oauth/client/redirect" set payload "{\"response_type\": \"code\",\"scope\":\"openid\",\"exp\":${exp},\"client_id\":\"${client_id}\",\"redirect_uri\":\"${redirect_uri}\",\"duo_uname\":\"${duo_uname}\"}" set jwt_duo [ ACCESS::oauth sign -header $header -payload $payload -alg HS512 -key [call getJwkName] ] return $jwt_duo } proc createJwtToken { set header [call getJwtHeader] set exp [call getExpiryTime] set client_id [call getClientId] set aud "<Duo API Hostname>/oauth/v1/token" #Example: set aud https://api-duohostname.com/oauth/v1/token set jti [call randAZazStr 32] set payload "{\"sub\": \"${client_id}\",\"iss\":\"${client_id}\",\"aud\":\"${aud}\",\"exp\":${exp},\"jti\":\"${jti}\"}" set jwt_duo [ ACCESS::oauth sign -header $header -payload $payload -alg HS512 -key [call getJwkName] ] return $jwt_duo } when ACCESS_POLICY_AGENT_EVENT { set irname [ACCESS::policy agent_id] if { $irname eq "JWT_CREATE" } { set ::duo_uname [ACCESS::session data get "session.logon.last.username"] ACCESS::session data set session.custom.jwt_duo [call createJwt $::duo_uname] ACCESS::session data set session.custom.jwt_duo_token [call createJwtToken] } } when ACCESS_PER_REQUEST_AGENT_EVENT { set irname [ACCESS::perflow get perflow.irule_agent_id] if { $irname eq "JWT_CREATE" } { set ::duo_uname [ACCESS::session data get "session.logon.last.username"] ACCESS::perflow set perflow.custom [call createJwt $::duo_uname] ACCESS::perflow set perflow.scratchpad [call createJwtToken] } }
Figure 9: iRule screen
5. Click Finished.
Create the appropriate access policy/policies on the BIG-IP system
Per-request policy
Skip this section for a per-session type deployment
The per-request policy is used to perform secondary authentication with Duo. Configure the access policies through the access menu, using the Visual Policy Editor. The per-request access policy must have a subroutine with an iRule Event, Variable Assign, and an OAuth Client agent that requests authorization and tokens from an OAuth server. You may use other per-request policy items such as URL branching or Client Type to call Duo only for certain target URIs.
Figure 10 shows a subroutine named duosubroutine in the per-request policy that handles Duo MFA authentication.
Figure 10: Per-request policy in Visual Policy Editor
Configuring the iRule Event agent
The iRule Event agent specifies the iRule ID to be executed for Duo integration. In the ID field, type the iRule ID as configured in the iRule.
Figure 11: iRule Event agent in Visual Policy Editor
Configuring the Variable Assign agent
The Variable Assign agent specifies the variables for token and redirect requests and assigns a value for Duo MFA in a subroutine. This is required only for per-request type deployment. Add sub-session variables as custom variables and assign their custom Tcl expressions as shown in Figure 12.
- subsession.custom.jwt_duo_token = return [mcget {perflow.scratchpad}]
- subsession.custom.jwt_duo = return [mcget {perflow.custom}]
Figure 12: Variable Assign agent in Visual Policy Editor
Configuring the OAuth Client agent
An OAuth Client agent requests authorization and tokens from the Duo server. Specify OAuth parameters as shown in Figure 13.
- In the Server list, select the Duo server to which the OAuth client directs requests.
- In the Authentication Redirect Request list, select the auth-redirect-request configured earlier.
- In the Token Request list, select the token-request configured earlier.
- Some deployments may not need the additional information provided by OpenID Connect. You could, in that case, disable it.
Figure 13: OAuth Client agent in Visual Policy Editor
Per-session policy
Configure the Per Session policy as appropriate for your chosen deployment type.
- Per-request: The per-session policy must contain at least one logon page to set the username variable in the user’s session. Preferably it should also perform some type of primary authentication. This validated username is used later in the per-request policy.
- Per-session: The per-session policy is used for all authentication. A per-request policy is not used.
Figures 14a and 14b show a per-session policy that runs when a client initiates a session. Depending on the actions you include in the access policy, it can authenticate the user and perform actions that populate session variables with data for use throughout the session.
Figure 14a: Per-session policy in Visual Policy Editor performs both primary authentication and Duo authentication (for per-session use case)
Figure 14b: Per-session policy in Visual Policy Editor performs primary authentication only (for per-request use case)
Apply policy/policies and iRule to the APM virtual server
Finally, apply the per-request policy, per-session policy, and iRule to the APM virtual server. You assign iRules as a resource to the virtual server that users connect. Configure the virtual server’s default pool to the protected local web resource.
Apply policy/policies to the virtual server
Per-request policy
To attach policies to the virtual server:
1. On the Main tab, click Local Traffic > Virtual Servers.
2. Select the Virtual Server.
3. In the Access Policy section, select the policy you created.
4. Click Finished.
Figure 15: Access Policy section in Virtual Server (per-request policy)
Per-session policy
Figure 16 shows the Access Policy section in Virtual Server when the per-session policy is deployed.
Figure 16: Access Policy section in Virtual Server (per-session policy)
Apply iRule to the virtual server
To attach the iRule to the virtual server:
1. On the Main tab, click Local Traffic > Virtual Servers.
2. Select the Virtual Server.
3. Select the Resources tab.
4. Click Manage in the iRules section.
5. Select an iRule from the Available list and add it to the Enabled list.
6. Click Finished.
Hi ScottE,
I found that simply switching the variables from global to local seemed to work. So far I have only tested this integration with the per-session APM setup and not per-flow, so I'm not 100% clear if there could be a limitation there.
Thanks,
JoshI was with JoshBecigneul in wondering if we could change the iRule so that it didn't demote the VS from CMP.
I came up with the following change to the last two sections:
when ACCESS_POLICY_AGENT_EVENT {
set irname [ACCESS::policy agent_id]
if { $irname eq "JWT_CREATE" } {
table set duo_uname [ACCESS::session data get "session.logon.last.username"] 604800
ACCESS::session data set session.custom.jwt_duo [call createJwt [table lookup duo_uname] ]
ACCESS::session data set session.custom.jwt_duo_token [call createJwtToken]
}
}
when ACCESS_PER_REQUEST_AGENT_EVENT {
set irname [ACCESS::perflow get perflow.irule_agent_id]
if { $irname eq "JWT_CREATE" } {
table set duo_uname [ACCESS::session data get "session.logon.last.username"] 604800
ACCESS::perflow set perflow.custom [call createJwt [table lookup duo_uname] ]
ACCESS::perflow set perflow.scratchpad [call createJwtToken]
}
}It seems to be working as expected for me and I no longer receive the CMP warnings. I have not done a lot of work with the table command or global tables in iRules so if someone with more knowledge sees a flaw in this code please let me know.
I did not want the records left in the table forever so I chose a timeout (604800) that works for me and my usual session lengths.
Thanks
Scott
- enzoAltostratus
When I first set it up I used my own naming convention . So I started over following the steps and naming convention above to configure a Per-session policy since the iRule references the names used in the config. I also found my DNS Resolver was not setup correctly so that might be something to check as well
- KyrimNimbostratus
Hi All,
After completing Primary Authentication, I got this error
{"error": "invalid_request", "error_description": "request: ['Length must be between 1 and 4096.'], "}
Please tell me why and how to resolve it!
Thanks!
- Luis_MelendrezAltostratus
Hello Kyrim,
Were you able to find a solution?
Thanks
- enzoAltostratus
I know this is an old post but was curious if anyone has run into this issue. My APM policy was failing at the OAuth branch rule expression. To fix it I had to change the OAuth branch rule
Expression: expr {[mcget {session.oauth.client.last.authresult}] == 1} <-- Changed to 0
Is this a valid fix or im I bypassing any security controls by chaging this branch Expression
Thank You
Enzo
Several tools that I found helpful were browser developer tools as well as https://jwt.io/ for decoding the JWT tokens to ensure their data was correct. Other tools include dig (to verify good DNS lookups to get the Duo address), curl (to verify connectivity), and tcpdump (to verify connectivity). One way to validate connection would be to build a simple vip and pool with the Duo server in the pool, then see if you can make connections to that VIP. I would probably keep a basic pool with a health check handy to be able to log if there is a connection issue to the Duo cloud.
- Pat_KrogelNimbostratus
A follow up on my issue with the iPhone F5 Access app not handling the redirect properly. It turns out you need to include the redirect_uri parameter in the auth-redirect-request.
- Manuel_Cristob1Nimbostratus
Hi is there a way to troubleshoot this instead of just debugging the session it the APM level?
thanks
Manuel
Is there a specific reason to use global variables to store the Duo username? I see that attaching the iRule demotes the virtual from CMP.
- Patrick_CampbelRet. Employee
Can you elaborate on the use case to understand this issue in a better way? it will help our engineers to reproduce this issue locally and also, good to have if any supporting F5Acces logs collected from the iOS device where we see this issue.
You can email me directly p.campbell@f5.com. Thanks