I think this perspective has a lot to do with your idea of OAuth's
deployment model. You're right in that many people bundle the RS and the
AS very tightly, but that's not always case, nor is it desirable. We're
increasingly seeing cases where a group (often an enterprise) has their
own AS on premises and wants to stand up an RS from a vendor. Without a
means to connect the RS to the AS in a standard way, you're stuck with
using whatever AS the RS vendor wants to sell you along side their RS.
But with the right mechanisms (like JWT and token introspection), you're
able to connect the RS from one vendor to the AS from another vendor,
and it works together. I'm not sure what's unclear, but this is the very
definition of interoperability.
This is to say nothing of simply being able to locate the RS remotely
from the AS within a particular security domain and still use
artifact-style tokens (ie, tokens that don't encode everything within
them).
I have already had to deal directly with several cases of RS'es and
AS'es from different vendors doing effectively the token introspection
thing in different ways, in protecting vanilla OAuth within a single
security domain. They were doing it slightly differently for no
compelling reason other than having to invent the "I have a token and
need to look it up" mechanism independently. When both sides were able
to speak the same token introspection protocol (based on the individual
draft I'd submitted), then we could actually make things work. And none
of this was running UMA, which also makes use of this.
I really don't see JWT as any different. To borrow your statement: In
OAuth, a site may never implement JWT nor may it do it in the way that
JWT describes. Why would that be a problem? (Hint: it isn't, they're
free to do whatever token they want. Same with introspection, it's a
tool that you can use if it makes sense for you to use it. So far a
whole bunch of people have said it makes sense.)
-- Justin
On 7/28/2014 8:59 PM, Phil Hunt wrote:
That doesn’t explain the need for inter-operability. What you’ve
described is what will be common practice.
It’s a great open source technique, but that’s not a standard.
JWT is much different. JWT is a foundational specification that
describes the construction and parsing of JSON based tokens. There is
inter-op with token formats that build on top and there is inter-op
between every communicating party.
In OAuth, a site may never implement token introspection nor may it do
it the way you describe. Why would that be a problem? Why should the
group spend time on something where there may be no inter-op need.
Now that said, if you are in the UMA community. Inter-op is quite
foundational. It is very very important. But then maybe the spec
should be defined within UMA?
Phil
@independentid
www.independentid.com <http://www.independentid.com>
phil.h...@oracle.com <mailto:phil.h...@oracle.com>
On Jul 28, 2014, at 5:39 PM, Justin Richer <jric...@mit.edu
<mailto:jric...@mit.edu>> wrote:
It's analogous to JWT in many ways: when you've got the AS and the RS
separated somehow (different box, different domain, even different
software vendor) and you need to communicate a set of information
about the approval delegation from the AS (who has the context to
know about it) through to the RS (who needs to know about it to make
the authorization call). JWT gives us an interoperable way to do this
by passing values inside the token itself, introspection gives a way
to pass the values by reference via the token as an artifact. The two
are complementary, and there are even cases where you'd want to
deploy them together.
-- Justin
On 7/28/2014 8:11 PM, Phil Hunt wrote:
Could we have some discussion on the interop cases?
Is it driven by scenarios where AS and resource are separate
domains? Or may this be only of interest to specific protocols like UMA?
From a technique principle, the draft is important and sound. I am
just not there yet on the reasons for an interoperable standard.
Phil
On Jul 28, 2014, at 17:00, Thomas Broyer <t.bro...@gmail.com
<mailto:t.bro...@gmail.com>> wrote:
Yes. This spec is of special interest to the platform we're
building for http://www.oasis-eu.org/
On Mon, Jul 28, 2014 at 7:33 PM, Hannes Tschofenig
<hannes.tschofe...@gmx.net <mailto:hannes.tschofe...@gmx.net>> wrote:
Hi all,
during the IETF #90 OAuth WG meeting, there was strong consensus in
adopting the "OAuth Token Introspection"
(draft-richer-oauth-introspection-06.txt) specification as an
OAuth WG
work item.
We would now like to verify the outcome of this call for
adoption on the
OAuth WG mailing list. Here is the link to the document:
http://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-richer-oauth-introspection/
If you did not hum at the IETF 90 OAuth WG meeting, and have an
opinion
as to the suitability of adopting this document as a WG work item,
please send mail to the OAuth WG list indicating your opinion
(Yes/No).
The confirmation call for adoption will last until August 10,
2014. If
you have issues/edits/comments on the document, please send these
comments along to the list in your response to this Call for
Adoption.
Ciao
Hannes & Derek
_______________________________________________
OAuth mailing list
OAuth@ietf.org <mailto:OAuth@ietf.org>
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth
--
Thomas Broyer
/tɔ.ma.bʁwa.je/ <http://xn--nna.ma.xn--bwa-xxb.je/>
_______________________________________________
OAuth mailing list
OAuth@ietf.org <mailto:OAuth@ietf.org>
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth
_______________________________________________
OAuth mailing list
OAuth@ietf.org
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth
_______________________________________________
OAuth mailing list
OAuth@ietf.org <mailto:OAuth@ietf.org>
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth
_______________________________________________
OAuth mailing list
OAuth@ietf.org
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/oauth