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
Other Books You May Enjoy
17
Index

Configuring a reverse proxy

When running in production, a reverse proxy is a key component to enable high availability. A reverse proxy provides a single and public access point for the different Keycloak instances, distributing the load across them using a set of policies. These instances are usually running in a private network so that they are only reachable through the proxy.

By distributing the load across instances, a reverse proxy helps you to scale your deployment by adding or removing more instances as needed, as well as helping to survive failures when specific nodes are failing to serve requests.

Keycloak can be used with any reverse proxy vendor, so you are free to use whatever you are comfortable with. Examples of widely used reverse proxies are Apache HTTP Server, Nginx, F5, and HAProxy.

Regardless of your preference, there is a set of basic requirements that you should be aware of when setting up a proxy:

  • TLS termination and re-encryption
  • ...