DEV Community

Andrés Villarreal
Andrés Villarreal

Posted on • Originally published at kaeruct.github.io on

How to use Let's Encrypt certificates with Keycloak

Let's Encrypt + Keycloak

Keycloak provides user federation, strong authentication, user management, fine-grained authorization, and more.

Here is a guide to enable HTTPS access to your Keycloak server using a free Let's Encrypt SSL certificate. The beauty of Let's Encrypt is its ease of use and the fact that it's free!

This guide assumes you have already installed Keycloak at /opt/keycloak/ using the official guide for bare metal installs, and now you want to enable HTTPS access. You need to have version 20 or higher.

In all the instructions below, be sure to replace <DOMAIN> with the actual domain you will be using. All commands in this guide must be run as root.

1. Install certbot

First you will need to install certbot. This depends on the Linux distro you are using.

For example, for apt-based distros such as Debian or Ubuntu, you can just run the following:

apt install certbot

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

2. Create HTTPS certificates

  • Set up certificates:
$ certbot certonly --standalone --preferred-challenges http -d <DOMAIN>

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

3. Configure Keycloak to use Let's Encrypt certificates

  • Change configuration:
vi /opt/keycloak/conf/keycloak.conf

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • Add or update the following lines in that file:
https-certificate-file=/etc/letsencrypt/live/<DOMAIN>/cert.pem
https-certificate-key-file=/etc/letsencrypt/live/<DOMAIN>/privkey.pem
hostname=<DOMAIN>

https-port=443
http-port=80

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • Update keycloak config:
$ /opt/keycloak/bin/kc.sh build

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • You're done! Now you can run the following command and Keycloak should now be accessible from the browser via HTTPS:
$ /opt/keycloak/bin/kc.sh start

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

4. Optional: Set up Keycloak as a systemd service

The official guide purposely leaves this open-ended because there are many ways in which you might want to handle the lifecycle of the Keycloak server. However, I think a good approach is to just use systemd.

4.1. Set up systemd service

  • Create user and group:
$ useradd -g keycloak keycloak

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • Give access to certificates:
$ chmod 0755 /etc/letsencrypt/{live,archive}
$ chgrp keycloak /etc/letsencrypt/{live,archive}
$ chgrp -h keycloak /etc/letsencrypt/live/<DOMAIN>/privkey.pem

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • Give access to Keycloak directory:
$ chown -R keycloak:keycloak /opt/keycloak/

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • Create systemd service:
$ vi /etc/systemd/system/keycloak.service

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • Write the following contents into the file. You might need to add your chosen database service to the After line, for example postgresql.service or mysql.service.
[Unit]
Description=Keycloak Application Server
After=syslog.target network.target

[Service]
Type=idle
User=keycloak
Group=keycloak
LimitNOFILE=102642
ExecStart=/opt/keycloak/bin/kc.sh start --optimized
StandardOutput=append:/var/log/keycloak.log
StandardError=inherit
RestartSec=2s
Restart=always
AmbientCapabilities=CAP\_NET\_BIND\_SERVICE

[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • Reload systemd config and start service:
$ systemctl daemon-reload
$ systemctl start keycloak.service

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

4.2. Automatic Keycloak server restart when certificates are updated

  • Make certbot restart Keycloak after updating certificates:
$ cd /etc/letsencrypt/renewal-hooks/deploy
$ vi restart-keycloak.sh

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • Write these contents:
#!/bin/sh
systemctl restart keycloak

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode
  • Make the script executable:
$ chmod +x restart-keycloak.sh

Enter fullscreen mode Exit fullscreen mode

You're done! Now Keycloak is set up as a systemd service and will start when your machine boots up.

Top comments (0)