Ruby SAML
Minor and patch versions of Ruby SAML may introduce breaking changes. Please read
UPGRADING.md for guidance on upgrading to new Ruby SAML versions.
Pay it Forward: Support RubySAML and Strengthen Open-Source Security
RubySAML is a trusted authentication library used by startups and enterprises alike.
But security doesn’t happen in a vacuum. Vulnerabilities in authentication libraries can
have widespread consequences. Maintaining open-source security requires continuous
effort, expertise, and funding. By supporting RubySAML, you’re not just securing your
own systems—you’re strengthening auth security globally.
How you can help
- Sponsor RubySAML: GitHub Sponsors
- Contribute to secure-by-design improvements
- Responsibly report vulnerabilities (see “Vulnerability Reporting” above)
Security is a shared responsibility. If RubySAML has helped your organization, please
consider giving back. Together, we can keep authentication secure.
Sponsors
Thanks to the following sponsors for securing the open source ecosystem,
Vulnerabilities
There are critical vulnerabilities affecting ruby-saml < 1.18.0, two of them allows SAML authentication bypass (CVE-2025-25291, CVE-2025-25292, CVE-2025-25293). Please upgrade to a fixed version (1.18.0)
Overview
The Ruby SAML library is for implementing the client side of a SAML authorization,
i.e. it provides a means for managing authorization initialization and confirmation
requests from identity providers.
SAML authorization is a two-step process and you are expected to implement support for both.
We created a demo project for Rails 4 that uses the latest version of this library:
ruby-saml-example
Supported Ruby Versions
The following Ruby versions are covered by CI testing:
- Ruby (MRI) 2.1 to 3.3
- JRuby 9.1 to 9.4
- TruffleRuby (latest)
Adding Features, Pull Requests
- Fork the repository
- Make your feature addition or bug fix
- Add tests for your new features. This is important so we don’t break any features in a future version unintentionally.
- Ensure all tests pass by running
bundle exec rake test
. - Do not change Rakefile, version, or history.
- Open a pull request, following this template.
Security Guidelines
If you believe you have discovered a security vulnerability in this gem, please report it
by mail to the maintainer: sixto.martin.garcia+security@gmail.com
Security Warning
Some tools may incorrectly report ruby-saml is a potential security vulnerability.
ruby-saml depends on Nokogiri, and it is possible to use Nokogiri in a dangerous way
(by enabling its DTDLOAD option and disabling its NONET option).
This dangerous Nokogiri configuration, which is sometimes used by other components,
can create an XML External Entity (XXE) vulnerability if the XML data is not trusted.
However, ruby-saml never enables this dangerous Nokogiri configuration;
ruby-saml never enables DTDLOAD, and it never disables NONET.
The OneLogin::RubySaml::IdpMetadataParser class does not validate the provided URL before parsing.
Usually, the same administrator who handles the Service Provider also sets the URL to
the IdP, which should be a trusted resource.
But there are other scenarios, like a SaaS app where the administrator of the app
delegates this functionality to other users. In this case, extra precautions should
be taken in order to validate such URL inputs and avoid attacks like SSRF.
Getting Started
In order to use Ruby SAML you will need to install the gem (either manually or using Bundler),
and require the library in your Ruby application:
Using Gemfile
# latest stable gem 'ruby-saml', '~> 1.17.0' # or track master for bleeding-edge gem 'ruby-saml', :github => 'saml-toolkit/ruby-saml'
Using RubyGems
gem install ruby-saml
You may require the entire Ruby SAML gem:
require 'onelogin/ruby-saml'
or just the required components individually:
require 'onelogin/ruby-saml/authrequest'
Installation on Ruby 1.8.7
This gem uses Nokogiri as a dependency, which dropped support for Ruby 1.8.x in Nokogiri 1.6.
When installing this gem on Ruby 1.8.7, you will need to make sure a version of Nokogiri
prior to 1.6 is installed or specified if it hasn’t been already.
Using Gemfile
gem 'nokogiri', '~> 1.5.10'
Using RubyGems
gem install nokogiri --version '~> 1.5.10'
Configuring Logging
When troubleshooting SAML integration issues, you will find it extremely helpful to examine the
output of this gem’s business logic. By default, log messages are emitted to RAILS_DEFAULT_LOGGER
when the gem is used in a Rails context, and to STDOUT
when the gem is used outside of Rails.
To override the default behavior and control the destination of log messages, provide
a ruby Logger object to the gem’s logging singleton:
OneLogin::RubySaml::Logging.logger = Logger.new('/var/log/ruby-saml.log')
The Initialization Phase
This is the first request you will get from the identity provider. It will hit your application
at a specific URL that you’ve announced as your SAML initialization point. The response to
this initialization is a redirect back to the identity provider, which can look something
like this (ignore the saml_settings method call for now):
def init request = OneLogin::RubySaml::Authrequest.new redirect_to(request.create(saml_settings)) end
If the SP knows who should be authenticated in the IdP, it can provide that info as follows:
def init request = OneLogin::RubySaml::Authrequest.new saml_settings.name_identifier_value_requested = "testuser@example.com" saml_settings.name_identifier_format = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:emailAddress" redirect_to(request.create(saml_settings)) end
Once you’ve redirected back to the identity provider, it will ensure that the user has been
authorized and redirect back to your application for final consumption.
This can look something like this (the authorize_success
and authorize_failure
methods are specific to your application):
def consume response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse], :settings => saml_settings) # We validate the SAML Response and check if the user already exists in the system if response.is_valid? # authorize_success, log the user session[:userid] = response.nameid session[:attributes] = response.attributes else authorize_failure # This method shows an error message # List of errors is available in response.errors array end end
In the above there are a few assumptions, one being that response.nameid
is an email address.
This is all handled with how you specify the settings that are in play via the saml_settings
method.
That could be implemented along the lines of this:
response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse]) response.settings = saml_settings
If the assertion of the SAMLResponse is not encrypted, you can initialize the Response
without the :settings
parameter and set it later. If the SAMLResponse contains an encrypted
assertion, you need to provide the settings in the initialize method in order to obtain the
decrypted assertion, using the service provider private key in order to decrypt.
If you don’t know what expect, always use the former (set the settings on initialize).
def saml_settings settings = OneLogin::RubySaml::Settings.new settings.assertion_consumer_service_url = "http://#{request.host}/saml/consume" settings.sp_entity_id = "http://#{request.host}/saml/metadata" settings.idp_entity_id = "https://app.onelogin.com/saml/metadata/#{OneLoginAppId}" settings.idp_sso_service_url = "https://app.onelogin.com/trust/saml2/http-post/sso/#{OneLoginAppId}" settings.idp_sso_service_binding = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:bindings:HTTP-POST" # or :post, :redirect settings.idp_slo_service_url = "https://app.onelogin.com/trust/saml2/http-redirect/slo/#{OneLoginAppId}" settings.idp_slo_service_binding = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:bindings:HTTP-Redirect" # or :post, :redirect settings.idp_cert_fingerprint = OneLoginAppCertFingerPrint settings.idp_cert_fingerprint_algorithm = "http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#sha1" settings.name_identifier_format = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:emailAddress" # Optional for most SAML IdPs settings.authn_context = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:ac:classes:PasswordProtectedTransport" # or as an array settings.authn_context = [ "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:ac:classes:PasswordProtectedTransport", "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:ac:classes:Password" ] # Optional bindings (defaults to Redirect for logout POST for ACS) settings.single_logout_service_binding = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:bindings:HTTP-Redirect" # or :post, :redirect settings.assertion_consumer_service_binding = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:bindings:HTTP-POST" # or :post, :redirect settings end
The use of settings.issuer
is deprecated in favor of settings.sp_entity_id
since version 1.11.0
Some assertion validations can be skipped by passing parameters to OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new()
.
For example, you can skip the AuthnStatement
, Conditions
, Recipient
, or the SubjectConfirmation
validations by initializing the response with different options:
response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse], {skip_authnstatement: true}) # skips AuthnStatement response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse], {skip_conditions: true}) # skips conditions response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse], {skip_subject_confirmation: true}) # skips subject confirmation response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse], {skip_recipient_check: true}) # doesn't skip subject confirmation, but skips the recipient check which is a sub check of the subject_confirmation check response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse], {skip_audience: true}) # skips audience check
All that’s left is to wrap everything in a controller and reference it in the initialization and
consumption URLs in OneLogin. A full controller example could look like this:
# This controller expects you to use the URLs /saml/init and /saml/consume in your OneLogin application. class SamlController < ApplicationController def init request = OneLogin::RubySaml::Authrequest.new redirect_to(request.create(saml_settings)) end def consume response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse]) response.settings = saml_settings # We validate the SAML Response and check if the user already exists in the system if response.is_valid? # authorize_success, log the user session[:userid] = response.nameid session[:attributes] = response.attributes else authorize_failure # This method shows an error message # List of errors is available in response.errors array end end private def saml_settings settings = OneLogin::RubySaml::Settings.new settings.assertion_consumer_service_url = "http://#{request.host}/saml/consume" settings.sp_entity_id = "http://#{request.host}/saml/metadata" settings.idp_sso_service_url = "https://app.onelogin.com/saml/signon/#{OneLoginAppId}" settings.idp_cert_fingerprint = OneLoginAppCertFingerPrint settings.name_identifier_format = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:emailAddress" # Optional for most SAML IdPs settings.authn_context = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:ac:classes:PasswordProtectedTransport" # Optional. Describe according to IdP specification (if supported) which attributes the SP desires to receive in SAMLResponse. settings.attributes_index = 5 # Optional. Describe an attribute consuming service for support of additional attributes. settings.attribute_consuming_service.configure do service_name "Service" service_index 5 add_attribute :name => "Name", :name_format => "Name Format", :friendly_name => "Friendly Name" end settings end end
Signature Validation
Ruby SAML allows different ways to validate the signature of the SAMLResponse:
- You can provide the IdP X.509 public certificate at the
idp_cert
setting. - You can provide the IdP X.509 public certificate in fingerprint format using the
idp_cert_fingerprint
setting parameter and additionally theidp_cert_fingerprint_algorithm
parameter.
When validating the signature of redirect binding, the fingerprint is useless and the certificate
of the IdP is required in order to execute the validation. You can pass the option
:relax_signature_validation
to SloLogoutrequest
and Logoutresponse
if want to avoid signature
validation if no certificate of the IdP is provided.
In production also we highly recommend to register on the settings the IdP certificate instead
of using the fingerprint method. The fingerprint, is a hash, so at the end is open to a collision
attack that can end on a signature validation bypass. Other SAML toolkits deprecated that mechanism,
we maintain it for compatibility and also to be used on test environment.
Handling Multiple IdP Certificates
If the IdP metadata XML includes multiple certificates, you may specify the idp_cert_multi
parameter. When used, the idp_cert
and idp_cert_fingerprint
parameters are ignored.
This is useful in the following scenarios:
- The IdP uses different certificates for signing versus encryption.
- The IdP is undergoing a key rollover and is publishing the old and new certificates in parallel.
The idp_cert_multi
must be a Hash
as follows. The :signing
and :encryption
arrays below,
add the IdP X.509 public certificates which were published in the IdP metadata.
{ :signing => [], :encryption => [] }
Metadata Based Configuration
The method above requires a little extra work to manually specify attributes about both the IdP and your SP application.
There’s an easier method: use a metadata exchange. Metadata is an XML file that defines the capabilities of both the IdP
and the SP application. It also contains the X.509 public key certificates which add to the trusted relationship.
The IdP administrator can also configure custom settings for an SP based on the metadata.
Using IdpMetadataParser#parse_remote
, the IdP metadata will be added to the settings.
def saml_settings idp_metadata_parser = OneLogin::RubySaml::IdpMetadataParser.new # Returns OneLogin::RubySaml::Settings pre-populated with IdP metadata settings = idp_metadata_parser.parse_remote("https://example.com/auth/saml2/idp/metadata") settings.assertion_consumer_service_url = "http://#{request.host}/saml/consume" settings.sp_entity_id = "http://#{request.host}/saml/metadata" settings.name_identifier_format = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:emailAddress" # Optional for most SAML IdPs settings.authn_context = "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:ac:classes:PasswordProtectedTransport" settings end
The following attributes are set:
- idp_entity_id
- name_identifier_format
- idp_sso_service_url
- idp_slo_service_url
- idp_attribute_names
- idp_cert
- idp_cert_fingerprint
- idp_cert_multi
Retrieve one Entity Descriptor when many exist in Metadata
If the Metadata contains several entities, the relevant Entity
Descriptor can be specified when retrieving the settings from the
IdpMetadataParser by its Entity Id value:
validate_cert = true settings = idp_metadata_parser.parse_remote( "https://example.com/auth/saml2/idp/metadata", validate_cert, entity_id: "http//example.com/target/entity" )
Retrieve one Entity Descriptor with a specific binding and nameid format when several are available
If the metadata contains multiple bindings and NameID formats, the relevant ones
can be specified when retrieving the settings from the IdpMetadataParser
by the values of binding and NameID:
validate_cert = true options = { entity_id: "http//example.com/target/entity", name_id_format: "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:emailAddress", sso_binding: "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:bindings:HTTP-POST", slo_binding: "urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:bindings:HTTP-POST" } settings = idp_metadata_parser.parse_remote( "https://example.com/auth/saml2/idp/metadata", validate_cert, options )
Parsing Metadata into an Hash
The OneLogin::RubySaml::IdpMetadataParser
also provides the methods #parse_to_hash
and #parse_remote_to_hash
.
Those return an Hash instead of a Settings
object, which may be useful for configuring
omniauth-saml, for instance.
Validating Signature of Metadata and retrieve settings
Right now there is no method at ruby_saml to validate the signature of the metadata that gonna be parsed,
but it can be done as follows:
- Download the XML.
- Validate the Signature, providing the cert.
- Provide the XML to the parse method if the signature was validated
require "xml_security" require "onelogin/ruby-saml/utils" require "onelogin/ruby-saml/idp_metadata_parser" url = "" idp_metadata_parser = OneLogin::RubySaml::IdpMetadataParser.new uri = URI.parse(url) raise ArgumentError.new("url must begin with http or https") unless /^https?/ =~ uri.scheme http = Net::HTTP.new(uri.host, uri.port) if uri.scheme == "https" http.use_ssl = true http.verify_mode = OpenSSL::SSL::VERIFY_PEER end get = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri.request_uri) get.basic_auth uri.user, uri.password if uri.user response = http.request(get) xml = response.body errors = [] doc = XMLSecurity::SignedDocument.new(xml, errors) cert_str = "" cert = OneLogin::RubySaml::Utils.format_cert("cert_str") metadata_sign_cert = OpenSSL::X509::Certificate.new(cert) valid = doc.validate_document_with_cert(metadata_sign_cert, true) if valid settings = idp_metadata_parser.parse( xml, entity_id: "" ) else print "Metadata Signature failed to be verified with the cert provided" end
Retrieving Attributes
If you are using saml:AttributeStatement
to transfer data, such as the username, you can access all the attributes through response.attributes
. It contains all the saml:AttributeStatement
s with its ‘Name’ as an indifferent key and one or more saml:AttributeValue
s as values. The value returned depends on the value of the
single_value_compatibility
(when activated, only the first value is returned)
response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse]) response.settings = saml_settings response.attributes[:username]
Imagine this saml:AttributeStatement
demo value1 value2 role1 role2 role3 valuePresent usersName
pp(response.attributes) # is an OneLogin::RubySaml::Attributes object # => @attributes= {"uid"=>["demo"], "another_value"=>["value1", "value2"], "role"=>["role1", "role2", "role3"], "attribute_with_nil_value"=>[nil], "attribute_with_nils_and_empty_strings"=>["", "valuePresent", nil, nil] "http://schemas.xmlsoap.org/ws/2005/05/identity/claims/givenname"=>["usersName"]}> # Active single_value_compatibility OneLogin::RubySaml::Attributes.single_value_compatibility = true pp(response.attributes[:uid]) # => "demo" pp(response.attributes[:role]) # => "role1" pp(response.attributes.single(:role)) # => "role1" pp(response.attributes.multi(:role)) # => ["role1", "role2", "role3"] pp(response.attributes.fetch(:role)) # => "role1" pp(response.attributes[:attribute_with_nil_value]) # => nil pp(response.attributes[:attribute_with_nils_and_empty_strings]) # => "" pp(response.attributes[:not_exists]) # => nil pp(response.attributes.single(:not_exists)) # => nil pp(response.attributes.multi(:not_exists)) # => nil pp(response.attributes.fetch(/givenname/)) # => "usersName" # Deprecated single_value_compatibility OneLogin::RubySaml::Attributes.single_value_compatibility = false pp(response.attributes[:uid]) # => ["demo"] pp(response.attributes[:role]) # => ["role1", "role2", "role3"] pp(response.attributes.single(:role)) # => "role1" pp(response.attributes.multi(:role)) # => ["role1", "role2", "role3"] pp(response.attributes.fetch(:role)) # => ["role1", "role2", "role3"] pp(response.attributes[:attribute_with_nil_value]) # => [nil] pp(response.attributes[:attribute_with_nils_and_empty_strings]) # => ["", "valuePresent", nil, nil] pp(response.attributes[:not_exists]) # => nil pp(response.attributes.single(:not_exists)) # => nil pp(response.attributes.multi(:not_exists)) # => nil pp(response.attributes.fetch(/givenname/)) # => ["usersName"]
The saml:AuthnContextClassRef
of the AuthNRequest can be provided by settings.authn_context
; possible values are described at [SAMLAuthnCxt]. The comparison method can be set using settings.authn_context_comparison
parameter. Possible values include: ‘exact’, ‘better’, ‘maximum’ and ‘minimum’ (default value is ‘exact’).
To add a saml:AuthnContextDeclRef
, define settings.authn_context_decl_ref
.
In a SP-initiated flow, the SP can indicate to the IdP the subject that should be authenticated. This is done by defining the settings.name_identifier_value_requested
before
building the authrequest object.
Service Provider Metadata
To form a trusted pair relationship with the IdP, the SP (you) need to provide metadata XML
to the IdP for various good reasons. (Caching, certificate lookups, relaying party permissions, etc)
The class OneLogin::RubySaml::Metadata
takes care of this by reading the Settings and returning XML. All you have to do is add a controller to return the data, then give this URL to the IdP administrator.
The metadata will be polled by the IdP every few minutes, so updating your settings should propagate
to the IdP settings.
class SamlController < ApplicationController # ... the rest of your controller definitions ... def metadata settings = Account.get_saml_settings meta = OneLogin::RubySaml::Metadata.new render :xml => meta.generate(settings), :content_type => "application/samlmetadata+xml" end end
You can add ValidUntil
and CacheDuration
to the SP Metadata XML using instead:
# Valid until => 2 days from now # Cache duration = 604800s = 1 week valid_until = Time.now + 172800 cache_duration = 604800 meta.generate(settings, false, valid_until, cache_duration)
Signing and Decryption
Ruby SAML supports the following functionality:
- Signing your SP Metadata XML
- Signing your SP SAML messages
- Decrypting IdP Assertion messages upon receipt (EncryptedAssertion)
- Verifying signatures on SAML messages and IdP Assertions
In order to use functions 1-3 above, you must first define your SP public certificate and private key:
settings.certificate = "CERTIFICATE TEXT WITH BEGIN/END HEADER AND FOOTER" settings.private_key = "PRIVATE KEY TEXT WITH BEGIN/END HEADER AND FOOTER"
Note that the same certificate (and its associated private key) are used to perform
all decryption and signing-related functions (1-4) above. Ruby SAML does not currently allow
to specify different certificates for each function.
You may also globally set the SP signature and digest method, to be used in SP signing (functions 1 and 2 above):
settings.security[:digest_method] = XMLSecurity::Document::SHA1 settings.security[:signature_method] = XMLSecurity::Document::RSA_SHA1
Signing SP Metadata
You may add a “ digital signature element to your SP Metadata XML using the following setting:
settings.certificate = "CERTIFICATE TEXT WITH BEGIN/END HEADER AND FOOTER" settings.private_key = "PRIVATE KEY TEXT WITH BEGIN/END HEADER AND FOOTER" settings.security[:metadata_signed] = true # Enable signature on Metadata
Signing SP SAML Messages
Ruby SAML supports SAML request signing. The Service Provider will sign the
request/responses with its private key. The Identity Provider will then validate the signature
of the received request/responses with the public X.509 cert of the Service Provider.
To enable, please first set your certificate and private key. This will add ”
to your SP Metadata XML, to be read by the IdP.
settings.certificate = "CERTIFICATE TEXT WITH BEGIN/END HEADER AND FOOTER" settings.private_key = "PRIVATE KEY TEXT WITH BEGIN/END HEADER AND FOOTER"
Next, you may specify the specific SP SAML messages you would like to sign:
settings.security[:authn_requests_signed] = true # Enable signature on AuthNRequest settings.security[:logout_requests_signed] = true # Enable signature on Logout Request settings.security[:logout_responses_signed] = true # Enable signature on Logout Response
Signatures will be handled automatically for both HTTP-Redirect
and HTTP-POST
Binding.
Note that the RelayState parameter is used when creating the Signature on the HTTP-Redirect
Binding.
Remember to provide it to the Signature builder if you are sending a GET RelayState
parameter or the
signature validation process will fail at the Identity Provider.
Decrypting IdP SAML Assertions
Ruby SAML supports EncryptedAssertion. The Identity Provider will encrypt the Assertion with the
public cert of the Service Provider. The Service Provider will decrypt the EncryptedAssertion with its private key.
You may enable EncryptedAssertion as follows. This will add “ to your
SP Metadata XML, to be read by the IdP.
settings.certificate = "CERTIFICATE TEXT WITH BEGIN/END HEADER AND FOOTER" settings.private_key = "PRIVATE KEY TEXT WITH BEGIN/END HEADER AND FOOTER" settings.security[:want_assertions_encrypted] = true # Invalidate SAML messages without an EncryptedAssertion
Verifying Signature on IdP Assertions
You may require the IdP to sign its SAML Assertions using the following setting.
With will add to your SP Metadata XML.
element
The signature will be checked against the
present in the IdP’s metadata.
settings.security[:want_assertions_signed] = true # Require the IdP to sign its SAML Assertions
Certificate and Signature Validation
You may require SP and IdP certificates to be non-expired using the following settings:
settings.security[:check_idp_cert_expiration] = true # Raise error if IdP X.509 cert is expired settings.security[:check_sp_cert_expiration] = true # Raise error SP X.509 cert is expired
By default, Ruby SAML will raise a OneLogin::RubySaml::ValidationError
if a signature or certificate
validation fails. You may disable such exceptions using the settings.security[:soft]
parameter.
settings.security[:soft] = true # Do not raise error on failed signature/certificate validations
Advanced SP Certificate Usage & Key Rollover
Ruby SAML provides the settings.sp_cert_multi
parameter to enable the following
advanced usage scenarios:
- Rotating SP certificates and private keys without disruption of service.
- Specifying separate SP certificates for signing and encryption.
The sp_cert_multi
parameter replaces certificate
and private_key
(you may not specify both pparameters at the same time.) sp_cert_multi
has the following shape:
settings.sp_cert_multi = { signing: [ { certificate: cert1, private_key: private_key1 }, { certificate: cert2, private_key: private_key2 } ], encryption: [ { certificate: cert1, private_key: private_key1 }, { certificate: cert3, private_key: private_key1 } ], }
Certificate rotation is acheived by inserting new certificates at the bottom of each list,
and then removing the old certificates from the top of the list once your IdPs have migrated.
A common practice is for apps to publish the current SP metadata at a URL endpoint and have
the IdP regularly poll for updates.
Note the following:
- You may re-use the same certificate and/or private key in multiple places, including for both signing and encryption.
- The IdP should attempt to verify signatures with all
:signing
certificates, and permit if any one succeeds. When signing, Ruby SAML will use the first SP certificate in thesp_cert_multi[:signing]
array. This will be the first active/non-expired certificate in the array ifsettings.security[:check_sp_cert_expiration]
is true. - The IdP may encrypt with any of the SP certificates in the
sp_cert_multi[:encryption]
array. When decrypting, Ruby SAML attempt to decrypt with each SP private key insp_cert_multi[:encryption]
until the decryption is successful. This will skip private keys for inactive/expired certificates if:check_sp_cert_expiration
is true. - If
:check_sp_cert_expiration
is true, the generated SP metadata XML will not include inactive/expired certificates. This avoids validation errors when the IdP reads the SP metadata.
Audience Validation
A service provider should only consider a SAML response valid if the IdP includes an
element containing an element that uniquely identifies the service provider. Unless you specify
the skip_audience
option, Ruby SAML will validate that each SAML response includes an element
whose contents matches settings.sp_entity_id
.
By default, Ruby SAML considers an element containing only empty elements
to be valid. That means an otherwise valid SAML response with a condition like this would be valid:
You may enforce that an element containing only empty elements
is invalid using the settings.security[:strict_audience_validation]
parameter.
settings.security[:strict_audience_validation] = true
Single Log Out
Ruby SAML supports SP-initiated Single Logout and IdP-Initiated Single Logout.
Here is an example that we could add to our previous controller to generate and send a SAML Logout Request to the IdP:
# Create a SP initiated SLO def sp_logout_request # LogoutRequest accepts plain browser requests w/o paramters settings = saml_settings if settings.idp_slo_service_url.nil? logger.info "SLO IdP Endpoint not found in settings, executing then a normal logout'" delete_session else logout_request = OneLogin::RubySaml::Logoutrequest.new logger.info "New SP SLO for userid '#{session[:userid]}' transactionid '#{logout_request.uuid}'" if settings.name_identifier_value.nil? settings.name_identifier_value = session[:userid] end # Ensure user is logged out before redirect to IdP, in case anything goes wrong during single logout process (as recommended by saml2int [SDP-SP34]) logged_user = session[:userid] logger.info "Delete session for '#{session[:userid]}'" delete_session # Save the transaction_id to compare it with the response we get back session[:transaction_id] = logout_request.uuid session[:logged_out_user] = logged_user relayState = url_for(controller: 'saml', action: 'index') redirect_to(logout_request.create(settings, :RelayState => relayState)) end end
This method processes the SAML Logout Response sent by the IdP as the reply of the SAML Logout Request:
# After sending an SP initiated LogoutRequest to the IdP, we need to accept # the LogoutResponse, verify it, then actually delete our session. def process_logout_response settings = Account.get_saml_settings if session.has_key? :transaction_id logout_response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Logoutresponse.new(params[:SAMLResponse], settings, :matches_request_id => session[:transaction_id]) else logout_response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Logoutresponse.new(params[:SAMLResponse], settings) end logger.info "LogoutResponse is: #{logout_response.to_s}" # Validate the SAML Logout Response if not logout_response.validate logger.error "The SAML Logout Response is invalid" else # Actually log out this session logger.info "SLO completed for '#{session[:logged_out_user]}'" delete_session end end # Delete a user's session. def delete_session session[:userid] = nil session[:attributes] = nil session[:transaction_id] = nil session[:logged_out_user] = nil end
Here is an example that we could add to our previous controller to process a SAML Logout Request from the IdP and reply with a SAML Logout Response to the IdP:
# Method to handle IdP initiated logouts def idp_logout_request settings = Account.get_saml_settings # ADFS URL-Encodes SAML data as lowercase, and the toolkit by default uses # uppercase. Turn it True for ADFS compatibility on signature verification settings.security[:lowercase_url_encoding] = true logout_request = OneLogin::RubySaml::SloLogoutrequest.new( params[:SAMLRequest], settings: settings ) if !logout_request.is_valid? logger.error "IdP initiated LogoutRequest was not valid!" return render :inline => logger.error end logger.info "IdP initiated Logout for #{logout_request.name_id}" # Actually log out this session delete_session # Generate a response to the IdP. logout_request_id = logout_request.id logout_response = OneLogin::RubySaml::SloLogoutresponse.new.create(settings, logout_request_id, nil, :RelayState => params[:RelayState]) redirect_to logout_response end
All the mentioned methods could be handled in a unique view:
# Trigger SP and IdP initiated Logout requests def logout # If we're given a logout request, handle it in the IdP logout initiated method if params[:SAMLRequest] return idp_logout_request # We've been given a response back from the IdP, process it elsif params[:SAMLResponse] return process_logout_response # Initiate SLO (send Logout Request) else return sp_logout_request end end
Clock Drift
Server clocks tend to drift naturally. If during validation of the response you get the error "Current time is earlier than NotBefore condition”, this may be due to clock differences between your system and that of the Identity Provider.
First, ensure that both systems synchronize their clocks, using for example the industry standard Network Time Protocol (NTP).
Even then you may experience intermittent issues, as the clock of the Identity Provider may drift slightly ahead of your system clocks. To allow for a small amount of clock drift, you can initialize the response by passing in an option named :allowed_clock_drift
. Its value must be given in a number (and/or fraction) of seconds. The value given is added to the current time at which the response is validated before it’s tested against the NotBefore
assertion. For example:
response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse], :allowed_clock_drift => 1.second)
Make sure to keep the value as comfortably small as possible to keep security risks to a minimum.
Deflation Limit
To protect against decompression bombs (a form of DoS attack), SAML messages are limited to 250,000 bytes by default.
Sometimes legitimate SAML messages will exceed this limit,
for example due to custom claims like including groups a user is a member of.
If you want to customize this limit, you need to provide a different setting when initializing the response object.
Example:
def consume response = OneLogin::RubySaml::Response.new(params[:SAMLResponse], { settings: saml_settings }) ... end private def saml_settings OneLogin::RubySaml::Settings.new(message_max_bytesize: 500_000) end
Attribute Service
To request attributes from the IdP the SP must provide an attribute service within its metadata and reference the index in the assertion.
settings = OneLogin::RubySaml::Settings.new settings.attributes_index = 5 settings.attribute_consuming_service.configure do service_name "Service" service_index 5 add_attribute :name => "Name", :name_format => "Name Format", :friendly_name => "Friendly Name" add_attribute :name => "Another Attribute", :name_format => "Name Format", :friendly_name => "Friendly Name", :attribute_value => "Attribute Value" end
The attribute_value
option additionally accepts an array of possible values.
Custom Metadata Fields
Some IdPs may require SPs to add additional fields (Organization, ContactPerson, etc.)
into the SP metadata. This can be achieved by extending the OneLogin::RubySaml::Metadata
class and overriding the #add_extras
method as per the following example:
class MyMetadata < OneLogin::RubySaml::Metadata def add_extras(root, _settings) org = root.add_element("md:Organization") org.add_element("md:OrganizationName", 'xml:lang' => "en-US").text = 'ACME Inc.' org.add_element("md:OrganizationDisplayName", 'xml:lang' => "en-US").text = 'ACME' org.add_element("md:OrganizationURL", 'xml:lang' => "en-US").text = 'https://www.acme.com' cp = root.add_element("md:ContactPerson", 'contactType' => 'technical') cp.add_element("md:GivenName").text = 'ACME SAML Team' cp.add_element("md:EmailAddress").text = 'saml@acme.com' end end # Output XML with custom metadata MyMetadata.new.generate(settings)