Book Image

Keycloak - Identity and Access Management for Modern Applications - Second Edition

By : Stian Thorgersen, Pedro Igor Silva
4.8 (5)
Book Image

Keycloak - Identity and Access Management for Modern Applications - Second Edition

4.8 (5)
By: Stian Thorgersen, Pedro Igor Silva

Overview of this book

The second edition of Keycloak - Identity and Access Management for Modern Applications is an updated, comprehensive introduction to Keycloak and its updates. In this new edition, you will learn how to use the latest distribution of Keycloak. The recent versions of Keycloak are now based on Quarkus, which brings a new and improved user experience and a new admin console with a higher focus on usability. You will see how to leverage Spring Security, instead of the Keycloak Spring adapter while using Keycloak 22. As you progress, you’ll understand the new Keycloak distribution and explore best practices in using OAuth. Finally, you'll cover general best practices and other information on how to protect your applications. By the end of this new edition, you’ll have learned how to install and manage the latest version of Keycloak to secure new and existing applications using the latest features.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
16
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17
Index

Installing and running Keycloak

In this section, you will quickly learn how to install and run Keycloak. Once you have Keycloak up and running, we will take a look at the Keycloak admin console and the Keycloak account console.

Keycloak provides a few options on how it can be installed, including the following:

  • Running as a container on Docker
  • Installing and running Keycloak locally (which will require a Java virtual machine, such as OpenJDK)
  • Running Keycloak on Kubernetes
  • Using the Keycloak Kubernetes Operator

If you already have Docker installed on your workstation, this is the recommended approach as it is simpler to get up and running this way.

If you don’t have Docker installed, it is easier to get started by installing and running it locally. The only dependency required is a Java virtual machine.

Keycloak can also be easily deployed to Kubernetes, where you have the option of using the Keycloak Kubernetes Operator, which...