Authentication and Authorization
Understand Intelligent Risk authentication and authorization
Overview
The Intelligent Risk Platform restricts access to protected API resources by means of security credentials. A client applications must pass valid security credentials in every request it makes to the API. These credentials enable the platform to authenticate the identity of the client application and confirm that the client application is authorized to access and leverage the requested resources.
Intelligent Risk Platform supports two authentication methods:
- The API key identifies a project or client application that is entitled to call the API. The API key provides the client with long-term access to API resources.
- The access token identifies a user account that is entitled to call the API. The access token provides the client with temporary access to API resources. OAuth access tokens are generated "on a per-session basis."
The client must pass an API key or access token in the Authorization
header of every request made to the API. If the API cannot authenticate the client, the API rejects the request.
The API key or access token encodes access rights and permissions granted to that application client. The application client as the bearer of the security credentials may access resources and perform operations that consistent with the access rights and permission encoded in the API key or access token. For details, see Access Controls.
Recommendation
RMS recommends that tenants use API keys to authenticate application clients connecting to the Intelligent Risk Platform. API keys provide client applications with long-term access to API resources and do not require refreshing. Token-based authentication is an appropriate solution for evaluating and testing, but should not be used in production.
API key authentication
An API key is an encrypted string that identifies an application client that is entitled to access protected API resources. Unlike a web token, the API key is not tied to a particular user account.
The API key enables API to authenticate the client and authorize requests from that application client based on access rights and permissions granted to that API key. The client application as the bearer of the API key has all access rights and permissions encoded in that key.
The client application passes the API key in the Authorization
header of every request it makes to the API.
Obtain API keys
Developers must contact their tenant administrator to acquire an API key.
All Intelligent Risk Platform API keys are created and managed by tenant administrators in Admin Center. The API key is mapped to one or more groups and is granted access rights and permissions as a member of those groups.
For more information on the administration of API keys, see the Intelligent Risk Platform Administrator Guide.
Submit API keys in requests
The client must provide credentials whenever it makes a request using Intelligent Risk Platform API. The API key may be specified in the HTTP Authorization
request header:
curl --location --request GET 'https://{{host}/riskmodelerv1/datasources' \
--header 'Authorization: {api_key}'
The API key enables the API to authenticate the client and determine if the client is authorized to perform the requested operation.
Web token authentication
An access token is a type of web token that provides client applications with temporary access to API resources. The client uses the access token as a bearer token that it passes as a credential in the HTTP Authorization
header of every request.
In token-based authentication, the client accesses the API on behalf of a user account and utilizes that user account's credentials to identify itself. The access token encodes the access rights and permissions of a specific user account.
For security purposes, access tokens are issued on a per-session basis. When the access token expires, the client must re-authenticate with the API Server to obtain a new access token using ID tokens and refresh tokens.
RECOMMENDATION
Token-based authentication is not supported for tenants using a single sign-on (SSO) authentication service. Client applications cannot retrieve web tokens from the RMS Authentication Service because Intelligent Risk Platform user authorization is managed by the tenant's IdP. Tenants that have implemented SSO, must use API keys to authenticate their client applications. For more information on SSO, see the Intelligent Risk Platform Administrator Guide.
Web tokens must be periodically requested or renewed by making calls to the RMS Authentication Service. RMS Authentication Service API services specify the tenant's host in endpoint path. The {host}
variable identifies the data center (EU or US) that has provisioned the tenant.
- EU host:
api-euw1.rms.com
- US host:
api-use1.rms.com
Obtain web tokens
Client applications may obtain web tokens from the RMS Authentication Service by providing a valid tenant name, user name and password.
The POST /login/implicit
service requires that three request parameters are defined in the request body: a tenantName
, username
, and password
.
curl --location --request POST 'https://{host}/sml/auth/v1/login/implicit' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data-raw '{
"tenantName": "{tenantName}",
"username": "{username}",
"password": "{password}"
}'
The client application uses the login credentials of a user account whenever it requests web tokens. The access token returned by the RMS Authentication Service encodes the access rights and permissions granted to that user account.
If the request is successful, the response returns an access token, ID token, and refresh token:
- The
accessToken
is a bearer token that identifies the client application. The client passes the access token in the HTTPAuthorization
header whenever it requests access to API resources. The access token is valid for one hour. - The
idToken
is a web token that enables the client application to identify the user account represented by the client. The ID token enables the service to cache information about the user including the user's access rights and permissions. - The
refreshToken
is a web token that enables the client to refresh an access token.
Refresh access tokens
Access tokens provide client applications with temporary access to API resources. When an access token expires, the client application may obtain a new set of web tokens (access token, ID token, and refresh token) or refresh the existing access token.
The POST /login/refresh
service requires that the current refreshToken
be specified in request body.
curl --location --request POST 'https://{host}/sml/auth/v1/login/refresh' \
--header 'Content-Type: application/json' \
--data-raw '{
"refreshToken": "{refreshToken}"}'
A successful request renews the client's connection and returns a new set of web tokens.
Submit access tokens in requests
The client must pass a valid access token or API key with every request. If you are using token-based authentication, specify the access token in the HTTP Authorization
header of the request:
curl --location --request GET 'https://{host}/riskmodeler/datasources' \
--header 'Authorization: Bearer {accessToken}'
Updated 11 months ago