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This repo is meant to serve as sample source code for how customer developers building an API in AWS API Gateway can leverage Entrust Identity as a Service (IDaaS) for API authorization.

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EntrustCorporation/aws-api-gateway-authorizer-sample

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AWS API Gateway Custom JWT Authorizer

A custom authorizer for AWS REST API Gateways that will authorize requests to protected endpoints by validating a signed JWT access token. The token should be included in the Authorization header in requests to the API in the form Bearer accessToken, and will be validated using the public key available at the configured JWKS endpoint.

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Prerequisites

You will need:

  • An AWS account
  • A token issuer (e.g. an IDaaS account with an OIDC application)

When using an IDaaS OIDC application, ensure that the appropriate APIs/URLs resource servers have been configured as well.

Setup

Install dependencies:

npm i

Build the sample code:

npm run build

Testing Locally

  1. Obtain a valid JWT access token from IDaaS for the relevant audience.

  2. Create a local event.json file containing the access token. You can use sample-event.json as a template:

    cp sample-event.json event.json
    

    Add your JWT token to authorizationToken. You can also replace methodArn with a method ARN of your API that you intend to protect (optional for local tests).

  3. Create a local .env file containing the JWKS_URI, ISSUER, and AUDIENCE. You can use .sample-env as a template:

    cp .sample-env .env
    
    Parameter Value
    ISSUER The issuer of the token. If IDaaS is the token issuer, use https://{yourIdaasDomain}/api/oidc.
    JWKS_URI The URL of the JWKS endpoint. If IDaaS is the token issuer, use https://{yourIdaasDomain}/api/oidc/jwks.
    AUDIENCE The URL of the domain of the endpoint you are trying to secure. E.g. https://{yourApiGateway}.
  4. Run the test using npm run test. If successful, you should see an output similar to the following:

    info: START RequestId: 3df095ef-8876-c996-919f-cca592e01a62
    info: End - Result:
    info: {
            "principalId": "userId",
            "policyDocument": {
                    "Version": "2012-10-17",
                    "Statement": [
                            {
                                    "Action": "execute-api:Invoke",
                                    "Effect": "Allow",
                                    "Resource": "arn:aws:execute-api:us-east-1:1234567890:apiId/stage/method/resourcePath"
                            }
                    ]
            }
    }
    info: Lambda successfully executed in 316ms.
    

Deploying Sample to AWS

To use this sample to protect your AWS REST API Gateway:

  1. Bundle the sample code into an upload-able zip by running npm run bundle. It will be located in the /dist directory.

  2. Navigate to the AWS Lambda console, and click Create function.

  3. The default should be Author from scratch to create a blank function. Under Basic information, provide values for the following parameters:

    Parameter Value
    Function Name A name for your Lambda function, such as jwtCustomAuthorizer
    Runtime Select Node.js 20.x
  4. Click Create Function to continue.

  5. On the Code page of your function, select the Upload From dropdown menu and select .zip file.

  6. Click Upload and select the token-authorizer.zip bundle you created earlier.

  7. Then creat the following three Environment variables. Note that this information is identical to the contents of .env file:

    Parameter Value
    ISSUER The issuer of the token. If IDaaS is the token issuer, use https://{yourIdaasDomain}/api/oidc.
    JWKS_URI The URL of the JWKS endpoint. If IDaaS is the token issuer, use https://{yourIdaasDomain}/api/oidc/jwks.
    AUDIENCE The URL of the domain of the endpoint you are trying to secure. E.g. https://{yourApiGateway}.
  8. To test the Lambda function you just created, click the Test tab.

  9. Copy the contents of your event.json file into the Event JSON form. You can use the default "Hello World" event template. The methodArn must be set to a valid method ARN in your gateway.

  10. Click Save.

  11. Run your test by selecting it and clicking Test. If the test was successful, you'll see: "Execution result: succeeded". Expanding the output window should show a message similar to the one you received after your successful local test.

Next Steps

Scope Limited Access

After adding this custom authorizer to protect your AWS API Gateway endpoints, you might want to limit access to individual endpoints based on the allowed scopes of the authorized party (e.g. read:resource). To do this, leverage the authorizationScopes property of each gateway method to define the scopes required to invoke the method.

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This repo is meant to serve as sample source code for how customer developers building an API in AWS API Gateway can leverage Entrust Identity as a Service (IDaaS) for API authorization.

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