Hi George, The IANA registry does not indicate in what context these parameters are supposed to be used. To me it feels totally normal to use the audience parameter instead of the resource parameter when I have a logical name.
Stuffing everything into a URI is possible but in certain scenarios may feel quite unnatural. It must have felt unnatural already to the group when working on the token exchange spec… Ciao Hannes From: George Fletcher <gffle...@aol.com> Sent: Donnerstag, 7. Februar 2019 17:06 To: Hannes Tschofenig <hannes.tschofe...@arm.com>; Ludwig Seitz <ludwig.se...@ri.se>; a...@ietf.org; oauth@ietf.org Subject: Re: [Ace] [OAUTH-WG] Shepherd write-up for draft-ietf-oauth-resource-indicators-01 This is true... however, to my knowledge there is no support for this parameter outside of the token-exchange spec. Just because it is documented as an OAuth parameter I don't consider it usable in other contexts unless spec'd to do so. If we want to use 'audience' for logical audience names when binding audiences to tokens, then we need a spec for that (or add it to the resource-indicators spec). Personally, I see a lot of overlap even between the 'audience' and 'resource' parameters. I'd really prefer we just have one parameter that can be either logical or specific. As outlined in this thread, 'https://api.exampl.com' to me is a logical representation of the resource if the "real" endpoint(s) are "https://api.example.com/mail/user/inbox"<https://api.example.com/mail/user/inbox>, ... Thanks, George On 2/7/19 10:16 AM, Hannes Tschofenig wrote: Hi George, * I believe that since the latest draft of the resource indicators spec [1] allows for abstract identifiers, and since a URN is also a URI, you could easily use a URN syntax to accomplish the use case outlined in your email. After re-reading the token exchange draft I realized that we have already defined a separate parameter for “abstract”, or logical, names via the audience parameter. Here is the definition: audience OPTIONAL. The logical name of the target service where the client intends to use the requested security token. This serves a purpose similar to the "resource" parameter, but with the client providing a logical name rather than a location. Interpretation of the name requires that the value be something that both the client and the authorization server understand. An OAuth client identifier, a SAML entity identifier [OASIS.saml-core-2.0-os<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-token-exchange-16#ref-OASIS.saml-core-2.0-os>], an OpenID Connect Issuer Identifier [OpenID.Core<https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-token-exchange-16#ref-OpenID.Core>], or a URI are examples of things that might be used as "audience" parameter values. Multiple "audience" parameters may be used to indicate that the issued token is intended to be used at the multiple audiences listed. The "audience" and "resource" parameters may be used together to indicate multiple target services with a mix of logical names and locations. Ciao Hannes From: Ace <ace-boun...@ietf.org><mailto:ace-boun...@ietf.org> On Behalf Of George Fletcher Sent: Dienstag, 29. Januar 2019 14:15 To: Ludwig Seitz <ludwig.se...@ri.se><mailto:ludwig.se...@ri.se>; a...@ietf.org<mailto:a...@ietf.org>; oauth@ietf.org<mailto:oauth@ietf.org> Subject: Re: [Ace] [OAUTH-WG] Shepherd write-up for draft-ietf-oauth-resource-indicators-01 Thank you so much for the background! I believe that since the latest draft of the resource indicators spec [1] allows for abstract identifiers, and since a URN is also a URI, you could easily use a URN syntax to accomplish the use case outlined in your email. resource=urn:x-mydevices:temperatureSensorGroup4711 The spec currently outlines examples where the "resource identifier" is not a "single resource" in the context of a fully qualified API endpoint. Another example, for an API like SCIM [RFC7644<https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc7644>] that has multiple endpoints such as "https://apps.example.com/scim/Users"<https://apps.example.com/scim/Users>, "https://apps.example.com/scim/Groups"<https://apps.example.com/scim/Groups>, and "https://apps.example.com/scim/Schemas"<https://apps.example.com/scim/Schemas> The client would use "https://apps.example.com/scim/"<https://apps.example.com/scim/> as the resource so that the issued access token is valid for all the endpoints of the SCIM API. Using "https://apps.example.com/scim"<https://apps.example.com/scim> is semantically equivalent to using "temperatureSensorGroup4711", at least to me:) Thanks, George [1] https://tools.ietf.org/html/draft-ietf-oauth-resource-indicators-02 On 1/29/19 2:56 AM, Ludwig Seitz wrote: On 28/01/2019 23:12, George Fletcher wrote: I also don't know that this raises to the level of "concern" but I find the parameter name of "req_aud" odd. Given that the parameter in the resource-indicators spec is 'resource' why not use a parameter name of 'audience'. That said, I have not read the thread on the ACE working group list so there could be very good reasons for the chosen name:) I do think that there is a lot of overlap (in most cases) between 'resource' and 'audience' and having two parameters that cover a lot of the same semantics is going to be confusing for developers. When calling an API at a resource server, the 'audience' and the 'resource' are pretty equivalent. Maybe in other use cases they are distinctly separate? To give you all the background of "req_aud" from ACE (sorry for the long text): Originally in ACE we had defined the "aud" parameter for requests to the token endpoint with the semantics that the client was requesting a token for a certain audience (i.e. requesting that the AS copy the "aud" parameter value into the "aud" claim value of the token). We were then told that this collided with a use of "aud" in OAuth, that specifies the intended audience of Authorization Servers (if I remember correctly), so we decided to rename our parameter to "req_aud" for "requested audience". Mike Jones then made us aware of the work on resource indicators, but upon closer examination I found the "resource" parameter to be more limited than the "req_aud", since resource specifically states: "Its value MUST be an absolute URI ... the "resource" parameter URI value is an identifier representing the identity of the resource" My interpretation of this is that "resource" refers to a single resource, which is more constrained than the definition of the "aud" claim from 7519, which uses a StringOrURI value. For example my intent was to use "aud" and "req_aud" for group identifiers ("temperatureSensorGroup4711") and other non-uri strings (hash-of-public-key), which I cannot do with "resource". We therefore decided to keep the "req_aud" parameter in draft-ietf-ace-oauth-params, even though is clearly overlaps with "resource". Any comments and suggestions about that line of reasoning (especially from the OAuth point of view) are very welcome. /Ludwig IMPORTANT NOTICE: The contents of this email and any attachments are confidential and may also be privileged. If you are not the intended recipient, please notify the sender immediately and do not disclose the contents to any other person, use it for any purpose, or store or copy the information in any medium. Thank you.
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