Manual Chapter : Single Sign-On Methods

Applies To:

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BIG-IP APM

  • 11.5.10, 11.5.9, 11.5.8, 11.5.7, 11.5.6, 11.5.5, 11.5.4, 11.5.3, 11.5.2
Manual Chapter

What are the supported SSO methods?

Access Policy Manager supports the following SSO authentication methods.

SSO method Description
HTTP Basic Access Policy Manager uses the cached user identity and sends the request with the authorization header. This header contains the token Basic and the base64-encoded for the user name, colon, and the password.
HTTP Forms Upon detection of the start URL match, Access Policy Manager uses the cached user identity to construct and send the HTTP form-based post request on behalf of the user.
HTTP Forms - Client Initiated Upon detection of the request for logon page (URI, header, or cookie that is configured for matching the request), Access Policy Manager generates JavaScript code, inserts it into the logon page and returns the logon page to the client, where it is automatically submitted by inserted JavaScript. APM processes the submission and uses the cached user identity to construct and send the HTTP form-based post request on behalf of the user.
HTTP NTLM Auth v1 NTLM employs a challenge-response mechanism for authentication, where the users can prove their identities without sending a password to the server.
HTTP NTLM Auth v2 NTLM employs a challenge-response mechanism for authentication, where the users can prove their identities without sending a password to the server. This version of NTLM is an updated version from NTLM v1.
Kerberos This provides transparent authentication of users to Windows Web application servers (IIS) joined to Active Directory domain. It is used when IIS servers request Kerberos authentication; this SSO mechanism allows the user to get a Kerberos ticket and have Access Policy Manager present it transparently to the IIS application.
SAML A SAML IdP service is a type of single sign-on (SSO) authentication service in Access Policy Manager that provides SSO authentication for external SAML service providers (SPs). You configure a SAML IdP service when you use a BIG-IP system as a SAML identity provider (IdP).

About the Single Sign-On configuration object

Access Policy Manager supports various SSO methods. Each method contains a number of attributes that you need to configure properly to support SSO.

Mis-configuring SSO objects for any of these authentication methods (HTTP Basic, NTLM v1 and v2, and Kerberos) could disable SSO for all authentication methods for a user's session when the user accesses a resource with the mis-configured object. The exceptions are Forms and Forms - Client Initiated, which are the only SSO methods that are not disabled when any other method fails due to a mis-configured SSO object.

Creating an HTTP Basic SSO configuration

With the HTTP Basic method of authentication, the SSO plug-in uses the cached user identity and sends the request with the authorization header. This header contains the Basic token and the base64-encoding of the user name, colon, and the password.
  1. On the Main tab, click Access Policy > SSO Configurations > HTTP Basic. The SSO Configurations screen opens for HTTP Basic type.
  2. Click Create. The New SSO Configuration screen opens.
  3. In the Name field, type a name for the SSO configuration.
  4. In the Credentials Source area, specify the credentials that you want cached for Single Sign-On.
  5. In the SSO Method Configuration area, specify the relevant settings.
  6. Click Finished.

HTTP Basic SSO configuration settings

These settings are available when you create an HTTP Basic SSO configuration.

General Properties settings for HTTP Basic SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
General Properties Basic or Advanced. Defaults to Basic. Additional settings are available when you select Advanced.
Name Name of the SSO configuration. The name must begin with a letter, or underscore, and contain only letters, numbers, underscores, dashes, and periods. Avoid using global reserved words in the name, such as all, delete, disable, enable, help, list, none, show, or None.
Headers Header name-value pairs to send with the SSO method. Available when you select Advanced from the General Properties list.

Credentials Source settings for HTTP Basic SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
Username Source Specifies the user name to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.sso.token.last.username
Password Source Specifies the password to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.sso.token.last.password

SSO configuration settings for HTTP Basic SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
Username Conversion This check box is clear by default. Select the check box to convert the PREWIN2k/UPN user name input format to the format you want to use for SSO. For example, convert domain\username or username@domain to username.

Creating an HTTP forms-based SSO configuration

With the HTTP forms method of authentication, upon detection of the start URL match, the SSO plug-in uses the cached user identity to construct and send the HTTP form-based POST request on behalf of the user.
  1. On the Main tab, select Access Policy > SSO Configurations > Forms. The SSO Configurations screen opens for the form-based type.
  2. Click Create. The New SSO Configuration screen opens.
  3. In the Name field, type a name for the SSO configuration.
  4. From the Use SSO Template list, select the template you want to use. The screen refreshes to show additional settings applicable to the specific template.
  5. In the Credentials Source area, specify the credentials that you want cached for Single Sign-On.
  6. If you selected None from the Use SSO Template list, fill in the relevant settings in the SSO Method Configuration area. Otherwise, these settings are taken from the template that you selected.
  7. Click Finished.

HTTP Form SSO configuration settings

These settings are available when you create an HTTP form-based SSO configuration.

General Properties settings for HTTP form-based SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
General Properties Basic or Advanced. Defaults to Basic. Additional settings are available when you select Advanced.
Name Name of the SSO configuration. The name must begin with a letter, or underscore, and contain only letters, numbers, underscores, dashes, and periods. Avoid using global reserved words in the name, such as all, delete, disable, enable, help, list, none, show, or None.
Use SSO Template If you select None, you must fill in the SSO Method Configuration area. Otherwise, the SSO Method Configuration area is not available; settings are configured with data supplied by the template you select.
Headers Header name-value pairs to send with the SSO method. Available when you select Advanced from the General Properties list.

Credentials Source settings for HTTP form-based SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
Username Source Specifies the user name to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.sso.token.last.username
Password Source Specifies the password to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.sso.token.last.password

SSO configuration settings for HTTP form-based SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
Start URI Defines the start URI value. HTTP form-based authentication executes for SSO if the HTTP request URI matches the start URI value. Multiple start URI values in multiple lines can be entered for this attribute.

Supported session variable: start_uri

Pass Through If you select the Enable check box, cookies presented in the form propagate to the client browser. Defaults to cleared.
Form Method Defines the SSO authentication method : GET or POST. Defaults to POST. If you specify GET, the SSO authentication method is an HTTP GET request.
Form Action Defines the form action URL used for HTTP authentication request for SSO. For example, /access/oblix/apps/webgate/bin/webgate.dll. If left blank, the original request URL is used for SSO authentication.

Supported session variable: form_action

Form Parameter For User Name Defines the parameter name of the logon user name. For example, the user ID is specified as the attribute value if the HTTP server expects the user name in the form of userid=.

Supported session variable: form_parameter

Form Parameter for Password Defines the name of the logon password. For example, Pass is specified as the attribute value if the HTTP server expects the password in the form of Pass.
Hidden Form Parameters/Values Defines the hidden form parameters required by the authentication server logon form at your location. Hidden parameters must be formatted as shown in this example:

param1 value1
param2 value2

Separate each parameter name and value by a space. Each parameter must start on a new line.
Successful Logon Detection Match Type Defines how Access Policy Manager detects whether the user was successfully authenticated by the server. Defaults to None. You can select one option.
  • None No check is made for authentication success.
  • By Resulting Redirect URL Authentication success is checked for by examining the redirect URL from the HTTP response. Multiple values can be specified for this option.
  • By Presence Of Specific Cookie Authentication success is checked for by searching for the named cookie in the response.

    Supported session variable: success_match_value

Successful Logon Detection Match Value Defines the value for the specific success detection type: the redirect URL or cookie name.

Creating an NTLMV1 SSO configuration

The NTLM authentication method employs a challenge-response mechanism for authentication, where the users can prove their identities without sending a password to a server.
  1. On the Main tab, click Access Policy > SSO Configurations > NTLMV1. The SSO Configurations screen opens for the NTLMV1 type.
  2. Click Create. The New SSO Configuration screen opens.
  3. Specify all relevant parameters.
  4. Click Finished.

NTLMV1 SSO configuration settings

These configuration settings are available when you configure an NTLMV1 SSO method.

General Properties settings for NTLMV1 SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
General Properties Basic or Advanced. Defaults to Basic . Additional settings are available when you select Advanced.
Name Name of the SSO configuration. The name must begin with a letter, or underscore, and contain only letters, numbers, underscores, dashes, and periods. Avoid using global reserved words in the name, such as all, delete, disable, enable, help, list, none, show, or None.
Headers Header name-value pairs to send with the SSO method. Displayed when you select Advanced from the General Properties list.

Credentials Source settings for NTLMV1 SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
Username Source Specifies the user name to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.sso.token.last.username
Password Source Specifies the password to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.sso.token.last.password
Domain Source Specifies the domain to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.logon.last.domain

SSO configuration settings for NTLMV1 SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
Username Conversion Check box is cleared by default. Select the check box to convert the PREWIN2k/UPN user name input format to the format you want to use for SSO. For example, convert domain\username or username@domain to username.
NTLM Domain Specifies the location of the domain where all users and groups are authenticated. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.logon.last.domain

Creating an NTLMV2 SSO configuration

With this method of authentication, NTLM employs a challenge-response mechanism for authentication, where the users can prove their identities without sending a password to a server. This version of NTLM has been updated from version 1.
  1. On the Main tab, click Access Policy > SSO Configurations > NTLMV2. The SSO Configurations screen opens for the NTLMV2 type.
  2. Click Create. The New SSO Configuration screen opens.
  3. In the Name field, type a name for the SSO configuration.
  4. In the Credentials Source area, specify the credentials that you want cached for Single Sign-On.
  5. In the SSO Method Configuration area, specify the relevant settings.
  6. Click Finished.

NTLMV2 SSO configuration settings

These configuration settings are available when you configure an NTLMV2 SSO method.

General Properties settings for NTLMV2 SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
General Properties Basic or Advanced. Defaults to Basic. Additional settings are available when you select Advanced.
Name Name of the SSO configuration. The name must begin with a letter, or underscore, and contain only letters, numbers, underscores, dashes, and periods. Avoid using global reserved words in the name, such as all, delete, disable, enable, help, list, none, show, or None.
Headers Header name-value pairs to send with the SSO method. Displayed when you select Advanced from the General Properties list.

Credentials Source settings for NTLMV2 SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
Username Source Specifies the user name to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.sso.token.last.username
Password Source Specifies the password to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.sso.token.last.password
Domain Source Specifies the domain to cache for single sign-on. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.logon.last.domain

SSO configuration settings for NTLMV2 SSO configuration

Setting Value Additional Information
Username Conversion Check box is cleared by default. Select the check box to convert the PREWIN2k/UPN user name input format to the format you want to use for SSO. For example, convert domain\username or username@domain to username.
NTLM Domain Specifies the location of the domain where all users and groups are authenticated. Defaults to a session variable. Supported session variable: session.logon.last.domain