Upgrading Keycloak
This guide describes how to upgrade Keycloak. Use the following procedures in this order:
-
Review the migration changes from the previous version of Keycloak.
-
Upgrade the Keycloak server.
-
Upgrade the Keycloak adapters.
-
Upgrade the Keycloak Admin Client.
Migration Changes
Migrating to 26.0.0
Infinispan marshalling changes
Marshalling is the process of converting Java objects into bytes to send them across the network between Keycloak servers. With Keycloak 26, the marshalling library has changed from JBoss Marshalling to Infinispan Protostream. The libraries are not compatible between each other and, it requires some steps to ensure the session data is not lost.
JBoss Marshalling and Infinispan Protostream are not compatible with each other and incorrect usage may lead to data loss. Consequently, all caches are cleared when upgrading to this version. |
To prevent losing user sessions upgrade to Keycloak 25 first and enable the persistent sessions feature as outlined in the migration guide for Keycloak 25.
Operator no longer defaults to proxy=passthrough
The Operator will no longer default to the hostname v1 setting of proxy=passthrough. This allows deployments using hostname v2 for a fixed edge hostname to work as desired without additional options.
New method in ClusterProvider
API
The following method was added to org.keycloak.cluster.ClusterProvider
:
-
void notify(String taskKey, Collection<? extends ClusterEvent> events, boolean ignoreSender, DCNotify dcNotify)
When multiple events are sent to the same taskKey
, this method batches events and just perform a single network call.
This is an optimization to reduce traffic and network related resources.
In Keycloak 26, the new method has a default implementation to keep backward compatibility with custom implementation. The default implementation performs a single network call per an event, and it will be removed in a future version of Keycloak.
Group-related events no longer fired when removing a realm
With the goal of improving the scalability of groups, they are now removed directly from the database when removing a realm.
As a consequence, group-related events like the GroupRemovedEvent
are no longer fired when removing a realm.
If you have extensions handling any group-related event when a realm is removed, make sure to use the RealmRemovedEvent
instead
to perform any cleanup or custom processing when a realm, and their groups, are removed.
The GroupProvider
interface is also updated with a new preRemove(RealmModel)
method to force implementations to properly
handle the removal of groups when a realm is removed.
Automatic redirect from root to relative path
User is automatically redirected to the path where Keycloak is hosted when the http-relative-path
property is specified.
It means when the relative path is set to /auth
, and the user access localhost:8080/
, the page is redirected to localhost:8080/auth
.
The same applies to the management interface when the http-management-relative-path
or http-relative-path
property is specified.
It improves user experience as users no longer need to set the relative path to the URL explicitly.
Operator scheduling defaults
Keycloak Pods will now have default affinities to prevent multiple instances from the same CR from being deployed on the same node, and all Pods from the same CR will prefer to be in the same zone to prevent stretch cache clusters.
Operator’s default CPU and memory limits/requests
In order to follow the best practices, the default CPU and memory limits/requests for the Operator were introduced. It affects both non-OLM and OLM installs. To override the default values for the OLM install, edit the resources
section in the operator’s subscription.
Deprecations in keycloak-common
module
The following items have been deprecated for removal in upcoming Keycloak versions with no replacement:
-
org.keycloak.common.util.reflections.Reflections.newInstance(java.lang.Class<T>)
-
org.keycloak.common.util.reflections.Reflections.newInstance(java.lang.Class<?>, java.lang.String)
-
org.keycloak.common.util.reflections.SetAccessiblePrivilegedAction
-
org.keycloak.common.util.reflections.UnSetAccessiblePrivilegedAction
Consistent usage of UTF-8 charset for URL encoding
org.keycloak.common.util.Encode
now always uses the UTF-8
charset for URL encoding instead relying implicitly on the file.encoding
system property.
Configuring the LDAP Connection Pool
In this release, the LDAP connection pool configuration relies solely on system properties. The main reason is that the LDAP connection pool configuration is a JVM-level configuration rather than specific to an individual realm or LDAP provider instance.
Compared to previous releases, any realm configuration related to the LDAP connection pool will be ignored. If you are migrating from previous versions where any of the following settings are set to your LDAP provider(s), consider using system properties instead:
-
connectionPoolingAuthentication
-
connectionPoolingInitSize
-
connectionPoolingMaxSize
-
connectionPoolingPrefSize
-
connectionPoolingTimeout
-
connectionPoolingProtocol
-
connectionPoolingDebug
For more details, see Configuring the connection pool.
Custom Footer in Login Theme
This release introduced the capability to easily add a custom footer to the login pages for the base/login
and keycloak.v2/login
theme.
In order to use a custom footer, create a footer.ftl
file in your custom login theme with the desired content.
For more details, see Adding a custom footer to a login theme.
Persisting revoked access tokens across restarts
In this release, revoked access tokens are written to the database and reloaded when the cluster is restarted by default when using the embedded caches.
To disable this behavior, use the SPI option spi-single-use-object-infinispan-persist-revoked-tokens
as outlined in the All provider configuration guide.
The SPI behavior of SingleUseObjectProvider
has changed that for revoked tokens only the methods put
and contains
must be used.
This is enforced by default, and can be disabled using the SPI option spi-single-use-object-infinispan-persist-revoked-tokens
.
Highly available multi-site deployments
Keycloak 26 introduces significant improvements to the recommended HA multi-site architecture, most notably:
-
Keycloak deployments are now able to handle user requests simultaneously in both sites. Previous load balancer configurations handling requests only in one site at a time will continue to work.
-
Active monitoring of the connectivity between the sites is now required to the replication between the sites in case of a failure. The blueprints describe a setup with Alertmanager and AWS Lambda.
-
The loadbalancer blueprint has been updated to use the AWS Global Accelerator as this avoids prolonged fail-over times caused by DNS caching by clients.
-
Persistent user sessions are now a requirement of the architecture. Consequently, user sessions will be kept on Keycloak or Infinispan upgrades.
-
External Infinispan request handling has been improved to reduce memory usage and request latency.
As a consequence of the above changes, the following changes are required to your existing Keycloak deployments.
-
distributed-cache
definitions provided by a cache configuration file are ignored when themulti-site
feature is enabled, so you must configure the connection to the external Infinispan deployment via thecache-remote-*
command line arguments or Keycloak CR as outlined in the blueprints. Allremote-store
configurations must be removed from the cache configuration file. -
Review your current cache configurations in the external Infinispan and update them with those outlined in the latest version of the Keycloak’s documentation. While previous versions of the cache configurations only logged warnings when the backup replication between sites failed, the new configurations ensure that the state in both sites stays in sync: When the transfer between the two sites fails, the caller will see an error. Due to that, you need to set up monitoring to disconnect the two sites in case of a site failure. The Keycloak High Availability Guide contains a blueprint on how to set this up.
-
While previous load balancer configurations will continue to work with Keycloak, consider upgrading an existing Route53 configuration to avoid prolonged failover times due to client side DNS caching.
-
If you have updated your cache configuration XML file with remote-store configurations, those will no longer work. Instead, enable the
multi-site
feature and use thecache-remove-*
options.
External Infinispan in a single-site setup
If you are using an external Infinispan in a single-site setup, this was not supported in earlier versions of Keycloak and it is not supported in Keycloak 26.
To protect users from using it accidentally via a manual configuration in Keycloak’s cache XML or via the CLI options, this is now guarded with a feature flag cache-embedded-remote-store
. It is marked as experimental and is therefore not supported. Keycloak 26 will not start with such a configuration and show an error instead unless this experimental feature is enabled.
If you have been using an external Infinispan to keep users logged in between restarts and upgrades, use the persistent-user-sessions
feature instead which is enabled by default. The external Infinispan is then no longer necessary.
The experimental feature cache-embedded-remote-store
will be removed in a future minor release.
Admin Bootstrapping and Recovery
It used to be difficult to regain access to a Keycloak instance when all admin users were locked out. The process required multiple advanced steps, including direct database access and manual changes. In an effort to improve the user experience, Keycloak now provides multiple ways to bootstrap a new admin account, which can be used to recover from such situations.
Consequently, the environment variables KEYCLOAK_ADMIN
and KEYCLOAK_ADMIN_PASSWORD
have been deprecated. You should use KC_BOOTSTRAP_ADMIN_USERNAME
and KC_BOOTSTRAP_ADMIN_PASSWORD
instead. These are also general options, so they may be specified via the cli or other config sources, for example --bootstrap-admin-username=admin
. For more information, see the new Bootstrap admin and recovery guide.
Application Initiated Required Action redirect now contains kc_action Parameter
The required action provider name is now returned via the kc_action
parameter when redirecting back from an application initiated required action execution.
This eases the detection of which required action was executed for a client. The outcome of the execution can be determined via the kc_action_status
parameter.
Note: This feature required changes to the Keycloak JS adapter, therefore it is recommended to upgrade to the latest version of the adapter if you want to make use of this feature.
Deprecations in keycloak-services
module
The class UserSessionCrossDCManager
is deprecated and planned to be removed in a future version of Keycloak.
Read the UserSessionCrossDCManager
Javadoc for the alternative methods to use.
Identity Providers no longer available from the realm representation
As part of the improvements around the scalability of realms and organizations when they have many identity providers, the realm representation no longer holds the list of identity providers. However, they are still available from the realm representation when exporting a realm.
To obtain the query the identity providers in a realm, prefer using the /realms/{realm}/identity-provider/instances
endpoint.
This endpoint supports filters and pagination.
CLI import placeholder replacement
The CLI command kc.[sh|bat] import
now has placeholder replacement enabled. Previously placeholder replacement was only enabled for realm import at startup.
If you wish to disable placeholder replacement for the import
command, add the system property -Dkeycloak.migration.replace-placeholders=false
New Java API to search realms by name
The RealmProvider
Java API now contains a new method Stream<RealmModel> getRealmsStream(String search)
which allows searching for a realm by name.
While there is a default implementation which filters the stream after loading it from the provider, implementations are encouraged to provide this with more efficient implementation.
Keystore and trust store default format change
Keycloak now determines the format of the keystore and trust store based on the file extension. If the file extension is .p12
, .pkcs12
or .pfx
, the format is PKCS12. If the file extension is .jks
, .keystore
or .truststore
, the format is JKS. If the file extension is .pem
, .crt
or .key
, the format is PEM.
You can still override automatic detection by specifying the https-key-store-type
and https-trust-store-type
explicitly. The same applies to the management interface and its https-management-key-store-type
. Restrictions for the FIPS strict mode stay unchanged.
The spi-truststore-file-* options and the truststore related options https-trust-store-* are deprecated, we strongly recommend to use System Truststore. For more details refer to the relevant guide.
|
Improving performance for selection of identity providers
New indexes were added to the IDENTITY_PROVIDER
table to improve the performance of queries that fetch the IDPs associated with an organization, and fetch IDPs that are available for login (those that are enabled
, not link_only
, not marked as hide_on_login
).
If the table currently contains more than 300.000 entries, Keycloak will skip the creation of the indexes by default during the automatic schema migration, and will instead log the SQL statements on the console during migration. In this case, the statements must be run manually in the DB after Keycloak’s startup.
Also, the kc.org
and hideOnLoginPage
configuration attributes were migrated to the identity provider itself, to allow for more efficient queries when searching for providers. As such, API clients should use the getOrganizationId/setOrganizationId
and isHideOnLogin/setHideOnLogin
methods in the IdentityProviderRepresentation
, and avoid setting these properties using the legacy config attributes that are now deprecated.
Removal of GELF logging handler
GELF support has been deprecated for a while now, and with this release it has been finally removed from Keycloak. Other log handlers are available and fully supported to be used as a replacement of GELF, for example Syslog. For details see the Logging guide.
Paths for common
theme resources have changed
Some of the paths for the common
resources of the keycloak
theme have changed, specifically the resources for third-party libraries. Make sure to update your custom themes accordingly:
-
node_modules/patternfly/dist
is nowvendor/patternfly-v3
-
node_modules/@patternfly/patternfly
is nowvendor/patternfly-v4
-
node_modules/@patternfly-v5/patternfly
is nowvendor/patternfly-v5
-
node_modules/rfc4648/lib
is nowvendor/rfc4648
Additionally, the following resources have been removed from the common
theme:
-
node_modules/alpinejs
-
node_modules/jquery
If you previously used any of the removed resources in your theme, make sure to add them to your own theme resources instead.
Additional datasources now require using XA
Keycloak by default does not use XA datasources. However, this is considered unsafe if more than one datasource is used.
Starting with this release, you need to use XA datasources if you are adding additional datasources to Keycloak.
If the default datasource supports XA, you can do this by setting the --transaction-xa-enabled=true
option. For additional datasources, you need to use
the quarkus.datasource.<your-datasource-name>.jdbc.transactions=xa
option in your quarkus.properties
file.
At most one datasource can be non-XA.
Recovery isn’t supported when you don’t have persistent storage for the transaction store.
Hostname v1 feature removed
The deprecated hostname v1 feature was removed. This feature was deprecated in Keycloak 25 and replaced by hostname v2. If you are still using this feature, you must migrate to hostname v2. For more details, see the Configuring the hostname (v2) and the initial migration guide.
Proxy option removed
The deprecated proxy
option was removed. This option was deprecated in Keycloak 24 and replaced by the proxy-headers
option in combination with hostname options as needed. For more details, see using a reverse proxy and the initial upgrading guide.
All user sessions are persisted by default
Since the database is now the source of truth for user sessions, it is possible to restrict the size of the session caches to reduce memory usage.
If you use the default conf/cache-ispn.xml
file the caches for storing user and client sessions are by default configured to store only 10000 sessions and one owner for each entry.
Update your custom embedded Infinispan cache configuration file with configuration similar to one shown below for caches sessions
, clientSessions
, offlineSessions
, and offlineClientSessions
:
<distributed-cache name="sessions" owners="1"> <!-- other configuration --> <memory max-count="10000"/> </distributed-cache>
For more details proceed to the Configuring distributed caches guide.
Grace period for idle sessions removed when persistent sessions are enabled
Previous versions of Keycloak added a grace period of two minutes to idle times of user and client sessions. This was added due to a previous architecture where session refresh times were replicated asynchronously in a cluster. With persistent user sessions, this is no longer necessary, and therefore the grace period is now removed.
To keep the old behavior, update your realm configuration and extend the session and client idle times by two minutes.
Support for legacy redirect_uri
parameter and SPI options has been removed
Previous versions of Keycloak had supported automatic logout of the user and redirecting to the application by opening logout endpoint URL such as
http(s)://example-host/auth/realms/my-realm-name/protocol/openid-connect/logout?redirect_uri=encodedRedirectUri
. This functionality was deprecated in Keycloak 18 and has been removed in this version in favor of following the OpenID Connect specification.
As part of this change the following related configuration options for the SPI have been removed:
-
--spi-login-protocol-openid-connect-legacy-logout-redirect-uri
-
--spi-login-protocol-openid-connect-suppress-logout-confirmation-screen
If you were still making use these options or the redirect_uri
parameter for logout you should implement the OpenID Connect RP-Initiated Logout specification instead.
Additional validations on the --optimized
startup option
The --optimized
startup option now requires the optimized server image to be built first. This can be achieved
either by running kc.sh|bat build
first or by any other server commands (like start
, export
, import
)
without the --optimized
flag.
Adapter and misc BOM files are removed
The org.keycloak.bom:keycloak-adapter-bom
and org.keycloak.bom:keycloak-misc-bom
BOM files are removed. The adapter BOM was no longer useful because most of the Java adapters
are removed. The misc BOM had contained only one artifact, keycloak-test-helper
, and that artifact is also removed in this release.
keycloak-test-helper is removed
The maven artifact org.keycloak:keycloak-test-helper
is removed in this release. The artifact provided a few helper methods for dealing with a Java admin client. If you use the
helper methods, it is possible to fork them into your application if needed.
JEE admin-client is removed
The JEE admin-client is removed in this release. We still keep supporting Jakarta admin-client.
New generalized event types for credentials
There are now generalized events for updating (UPDATE_CREDENTIAL
) and removing (REMOVE_CREDENTIAL
) a credential. The credential type is described in the credential_type
attribute of the events.
The new event types are supported by the Email Event Listener.
The following event types are now deprecated and will be removed in a future version: UPDATE_PASSWORD
, UPDATE_PASSWORD_ERROR
, UPDATE_TOTP
, UPDATE_TOTP_ERROR
, REMOVE_TOTP
, REMOVE_TOTP_ERROR
--import-realm
option can import the master realm
When running a start
or start-dev
command with the --import-realm
option before the master realm exists, it will be imported if it exists in the import material. The previous behavior was that the master realm was created first, then its import skipped.
BouncyCastle FIPS updated
Our FIPS 140-2 integration is now tested and supported with version 2 of BouncyCastle FIPS libraries. This version is certified with Java 21. If you use FIPS 140-2 integration, it is recommended to upgrade BouncyCastle FIPS library to the versions mentioned in the latest documentation.
The BouncyCastle FIPS version 2 is certified with FIPS 140-3. So Keycloak can be FIPS 140-3 compliant as long as it is used on the FIPS 140-3 compliant system. This might be the RHEL 9 based system, which itself is compliant with the FIPS 140-3. But note that RHEL 8 based system is only certified for the FIPS 140-2.
setOrCreateChild()
method removed from JavaScript Admin Client
The groups.setOrCreateChild()
method has been removed from that JavaScript-based Admin Client. If you are still using this method then use the createChildGroup()
or updateChildGroup()
methods instead.
Keycloak JS
This release includes several changes to Keycloak JS library that should be taken into account. The main motivation for these changes is to de-couple the library from the Keycloak server, so that it can be refactored independently, simplifing the code and making it easier to maintain in the future. The changes are as follows:
The library is no longer served statically from the server
The Keycloak JS library is no longer served statically from the Keycloak server. This means that the following URLs are no longer available:
-
/js/keycloak-authz.js
-
/js/keycloak-authz.min.js
-
/js/keycloak.js
-
/js/keycloak.min.js
-
/js/{version}/keycloak-authz.js
-
/js/{version}/keycloak-authz.min.js
-
/js/{version}/keycloak.js
-
/js/{version}/keycloak.min.js
Additionally, the keycloakJsUrl
property that linked to the library on these URLs has been removed from the the admin console theme. If your custom theme was using this property to include the library, you should update your theme to include the library using a different method.
If you are not already you should include the library in your project using a package manager like NPM. The library is available on the NPM registry as keycloak-js
. You can install it using the following command:
npm install keycloak-js
Alternatively, the distribution of the server includes a copy of the library in the keycloak-js-26.0.0.tgz
archive. You can copy the library from there into your project. If you are using the library directly in the browser without a build, you’ll need to host the library yourself. A package manager is still the recommended way to include the library in your project, as it will make it easier to update the library in the future.
Support for the UMD distribution has been removed
The UMD distribution Universal Module Definition of the Keycloak JS library has been removed. This means that the library is no longer exposed as a global variable, and instead must be imported as a module. This change is in line with modern JavaScript development practices, and allows for a more consitent experience between browsers and build tooling, and generally results in more predictable code with less side-effects.
If you are using a bundler like Vite or Webpack nothing changes, you’ll have the same experience as before. If you are using the library directly in the browser, you’ll need to update your code to import the library as a module:
<!-- Before -->
<script src="/path/to/keycloak.js"></script>
<script>
const keycloak = new Keycloak();
</script>
<!-- After -->
<script type="module">
import Keycloak from '/path/to/keycloak.js';
const keycloak = new Keycloak();
</script>
You can also opt to use an import map make the import of the library less verbose:
<script type="importmap">
{
"imports": {
"keycloak-js": "/path/to/keycloak.js"
}
}
</script>
<script type="module">
// The library can now be imported without specifying the full path, providing a similar experience as with a bundler.
import Keycloak from 'keycloak-js';
const keycloak = new Keycloak();
</script>
If you are using TypeScript you may need to update your tsconfig.json
to be able to resolve the library:
{
"compilerOptions": {
"moduleResolution": "Bundler"
}
}
The configuration for the Keycloak
instance is now required
Previously it was possible to construct a Keycloak
instance without passing any configuration. The configuration would then automatically be loaded from the server from a keycloak.json
file based on the path of the included keycloak.js
script. Since the library is no longer statically served from the server this feature has been removed. You now need to pass the configuration explicitly when constructing a Keycloak
instance:
// Before
const keycloak = new Keycloak();
// After
const keycloak = new Keycloak({
url: "http://keycloak-server",
realm: "my-realm",
clientId: "my-app"
});
// Alternatively, you can pass a URL to a `keycloak.json` file.
// Note this is not reccomended as it creates additional network requests, and is prone to change in the future.
const keycloak = new Keycloak('http://keycloak-server/path/to/keycloak.json');
Methods for login are now async
Keycloak JS now utilizes the Web Crypto API for various cryptographic functions. Due to the asynchronous nature of this API the following public methods will now always return a Promise
:
-
login()
-
createLoginUrl()
-
createRegisterUrl()
Make sure to update your code to await
these methods:
// Before
keycloak.login();
const loginUrl = keycloak.createLoginUrl();
const registerUrl = keycloak.createRegisterUrl();
// After
await keycloak.login();
const loginUrl = await keycloak.createLoginUrl();
const registerUrl = await keycloak.createRegisterUrl();
Make sure to update your code to await
these methods.
A secure context is now required
Keycloak JS now requires a secure context to run. The reason for this is that the library now uses the Web Crypto API for various cryptographic functions. This API is only available in secure contexts, which are contexts that are served over HTTPS, localhost
or a .localhost
domain. If you are using the library in a non-secure context you’ll need to update your development environment to use a secure context.
Migrating to 25.0.3
Concurrent login requests are blocked by default when brute force is enabled
If an attacker launched many login attempts in parallel then the attacker could have more guesses at a password than the brute force protection configuration permits. This was due to the brute force check occurring before the brute force protector has locked the user. To prevent this race the Brute Force Protector now rejects all login attempts that occur while another login is in progress in the same server.
If, for whatever reason, the new feature wants to be disabled there is a startup factory option:
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-brute-force-protector-default-brute-force-detector-allow-concurrent-requests=true
Migrating to 25.0.2
Improving performance for deletion of user consents
When a client scope or the full realm are deleted the associated user consents should also be removed. A new index over the table USER_CONSENT_CLIENT_SCOPE
has been added to increase the performance.
Note that, if the table contains more than 300.000 entries, by default Keycloak skips the creation of the indexes during the automatic schema migration and logs the SQL statements to the console instead. The statements must be run manually in the DB after Keycloak’s startup. Check the Upgrading Guide for details on how to configure a different limit.
Migrating to 25.0.0
New Hostname options
Hostname v2 options are supported by default, as the old hostname options are deprecated and will be removed in the following releases. New options are activated by default, so Keycloak will not recognize the old options.
List of necessary migrations:
Old options | New options |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
As you can see, the *-url
suffixes were removed for hostname
and hostname-admin
options.
Option hostname
accepts both hostname and URL, but hostname-admin
accepts only full URL now.
Additionally, there is no way to set path
or port
separately.
You can achieve it by providing the full URL for the hostname
and hostname-admin
options.
If the port is not part of the URL, it is dynamically resolved from the incoming request headers.
HTTPS is no longer enforced unless it is part of hostname
and hostname-admin
URLs.
If not specified, the used protocol (http/https
) is dynamically resolved from the incoming request.
The hostname-strict-https
option is removed.
Removed options |
---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
In order to use the old hostname options to have more time for migration, turn on the feature hostname:v1 , e.g. features=hostname:v1 .
Be aware, that either hostname:v1 or hostname:v2 can be enabled, not both at the same time.
|
Examples
# Hostname v1
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --hostname=mykeycloak.org --https-port=8543 --hostname-path=/auth --hostname-strict-https=true
# Hostname v2
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --hostname=https://mykeycloak.org:8543/auth
As you can see in the example, all the parts of a URL can be now specified via single hostname
option, which simplifies the hostname setup process.
Notice that HTTPS is not enforced by the hostname-strict-https
option, but by specifying it in the hostname URL.
# Hostname v1
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --hostname=mykeycloak.org --hostname-strict-backchannel=true
# Hostname v2
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --hostname=mykeycloak.org --hostname-backchannel-dynamic=false
Be aware that there is a change in behavior if the same URL is to be used for both backend and frontend endpoints.
Previously, in hostname v1, the backchannel URL was dynamically resolved from request headers.
Therefore, to achieve the required results, you had to specify the hostname-strict-backchannel=true
.
For hostname v2, the backchannel URLs are already the same as the frontend ones.
In order to dynamically resolve it from request headers, you need to set the hostname-backchannel-dynamic=true
and provide a full URL for the hostname
option.
For more details and more comprehensive scenarios, see Configuring the hostname (v2).
security-admin-console
Client Redirect URIs
The handling of the ${authAdminUrl}
has changed in hostname v1. Previously with hostname v1 the admin URL was resolved dynamically from the request if the hostname-admin
or hostname-admin-url
options were not set. With hostname v2 the admin URL will default instead to the frontend URL.
If the hostname
option is set and hostname-strict
is true, this change will prevent redirect URIs with alternative hostnames from working for Clients using the Root URL ${authAdminUrl}
.
You should consider using the hostname-admin
option instead of the redirect URIs to allow a single alternative hostname. Alternative hostname redirects should be removed as the security-admin-console
Client only needs the default redirect URI of /admin/master/console/*
with Root URL of ${authAdminUrl}
.
Persistent user sessions
Previous versions of Keycloak stored only offline user and offline client sessions in the databases.
The new feature persistent-user-sessions
stores online user sessions and online client sessions not only in memory, but also in the database.
This will allow a user to stay logged in even if all instances of Keycloak are restarted or upgraded.
Enabling persistent user sessions
The feature is a preview feature and disabled by default. To use it, add the following to your build command:
bin/kc.sh build --features=persistent-user-sessions ...
For more details see the Enabling and disabling features guide. The sizing guide contains a new paragraph describing the updated resource requirements when this feature is enabled.
If this feature is enabled for an existing deployment that is using only the embedded Infinispan for storing sessions, the existing online user and client sessions will not be migrated to the database. It will only affect newly created online user and online client sessions. |
With persistent sessions enabled, the in-memory caches for online user sessions, offline user sessions, online client sessions and offline client sessions are limited to 10000 entries per node by default which will reduce the overall memory usage of Keycloak for larger installations.
Items which are evicted from memory will be loaded on-demand from the database when needed.
To set different sizes for the caches, edit Keycloak’s cache config file to set a <memory max-count="..."/>
for those caches.
Once this feature is enabled, expect an increased database utilization on each login, logout and refresh token request.
To configure the cache size in an external Infinispan in a Keycloak multi-site setup, consult the updated Deploy Infinispan for HA with the Infinispan Operator guide.
With this feature enabled, the options spi-user-sessions-infinispan-offline-session-cache-entry-lifespan-override
and spi-user-sessions-infinispan-offline-client-session-cache-entry-lifespan-override
are no longer available, as they were previously used to override the time offline sessions were kept in-memory.
Migrating user sessions during the upgrade
When upgrading from Keycloak 24 or earlier, admins can choose to migrate existing online user and client sessions to persistent sessions. For this to work, those existing sessions need to be stored in either a remote Infinispan or in a database configured as JDBC persistence for Keycloak’s embedded cache. Migrating in-memory sessions for Keycloak 24 is not supported as all Keycloak instances need to be shut down before the upgrade due to a major version upgrade of the embedded Infinispan.
The migration of user sessions only works when the persistent user sessions is enabled when upgrading to Keycloak 25. If you chose to upgrade to 25 without enabling persistent user sessions, there is currently no possibility to trigger the migration of existing sessions at a later point in time. Enabling this feature later, by a configuration change, can result in an undefined behavior of Keycloak related to sessions if both persisted and non-persisted sessions co-exist. To prevent that, remove all existing online user and client sessions before the first node is started with the feature enabled. This means all Keycloak nodes need to be stopped and, if used, Infinispan remote cache store and embedded Infinispan JDBC persistence need to be cleared. |
To migrate the user sessions during an upgrade of Keycloak, perform the following steps:
-
Stop all running old instances of Keycloak.
-
Create backups:
-
Create a backup Keycloak’s database.
-
If JDBC persistence is used, create a backup of that database if you want to be able to retry the migration of the sessions.
-
If an external Infinispan is used, create a backup of its data if you want to be able to retry the migration of the sessions.
-
-
Start the new instances Keycloak with the persistent user sessions feature enabled.
The first starting node will:
-
Migrate the database to the schema version 25.
-
Copy all session information from either the remote Infinispan or the JDBC persistence configured for Keycloak’s embedded cache to the database of Keycloak.
The data will be stored in the tables
offline_user_session
andoffline_client_session
withoffline_flag
set tofalse
. -
Clear the caches.
This includes clearing the caches of the external Infinispan if one is used, and clearing the JDBC persistence if one is used.
-
-
Update the cache configuration XML of Keycloak for caches
sessions
andclientSessions
:-
If JDBC persistence is used, remove the configuration for JDBC persistence.
-
If the remote Infinispan has been used in a single-site setup solely for keeping user sessions across Keycloak restarts, remove the remote Infinispan configuration for those caches.
If the remote Infinispan is used in a multi-site setup, you can reduce the resource consumption by the external Infinispan by configuring the number of entries in memory. Use the settings outlined in Deploy Infinispan for HA with the Infinispan Operator guide. -
-
Rolling restart of Keycloak to activate the new cache configuration XML.
Signing out existing users
In previous versions and when the feature is disabled, a restart of all Keycloak nodes logged out all users.
To sign out all online users sessions of a realm with the persistent-user-sessions
feature enabled, use the following steps as before:
-
Log in to the Admin Console.
-
Select the menu entry Sessions.
-
Select the action Sign out all active sessions.
Metrics for embedded caches enabled by default
Metrics for the embedded caches are now enabled by default.
To enable histograms for latencies, set the option cache-metrics-histograms-enabled
to true
.
Metrics for HTTP endpoints enabled by default
The metrics provided by Keycloak now include HTTP server metrics starting with http_server
.
See below for some examples.
http_server_active_requests 1.0
http_server_requests_seconds_count{method="GET",outcome="SUCCESS",status="200",uri="/realms/{realm}/protocol/{protocol}/auth"} 1.0
http_server_requests_seconds_sum{method="GET",outcome="SUCCESS",status="200",uri="/realms/{realm}/protocol/{protocol}/auth"} 0.048717142
Use the new options http-metrics-histograms-enabled
and http-metrics-slos
to enable default histogram buckets or specific buckets for service level objectives (SLOs).
Read more about histograms in the Prometheus documentation about histograms on how to use the additional metrics series provided in http_server_requests_seconds_bucket
.
Argon2 password hashing
In Keycloak 24 release, we had a change in the password hashing algorithm which resulted in an increased CPU usage. To address that, we opted to a different default hashing algorithm Argon2 for non-FIPS environments which brings the CPU usage back to where it was prior to the Keycloak 24 release.
Expected improvement in overall CPU usage and temporary increased database activity
The Concepts for sizing CPU and memory resources in the Keycloak High Availability guide have been updated to reflect the new hashing defaults.
After the upgrade, during a password-based login, the user’s passwords will be re-hashed with the new hash algorithm and hash iterations as a one-off activity and updated in the database. As this clears the user from Keycloak’s internal cache, you’ll also see an increased read activity on the database level. This increased database activity will decrease over time as more and more user’s passwords have been re-hashed.
Updated JVM garbage collection settings
To support the memory intensive nature of Argon2, we have updated the default GC from ParallelGC to G1GC for a better heap utilization. Please monitor the JVM heap utilization closely after this upgrade. Additional tuning may be necessary depending on your specific workload.
Limiting memory usage when consuming HTTP responses
In some scenarios like brokering Keycloak uses HTTP to talk to external servers. To avoid a denial of service when those providers send too much data, Keycloak now restricts responses to 10 MB by default.
Users can configure this limit by setting the provider configuration option spi-connections-http-client-default-max-consumed-response-size
:
bin/kc.[sh|bat] --spi-connections-http-client-default-max-consumed-response-size=1000000
Hostname Verification Policy
The default for spi-truststore-file-hostname-verification-policy
and the new tls-hostname-verifier
option is now DEFAULT, rather than WILDCARD. The WILDCARD and STRICT option values have been deprecated - you should simply rely upon DEFAULT instead.
Behavior supported by WILDCARD, that is not supported by DEFAULT: * allows wildcards in subdomain names (e.g. *.foo.com) to match anything, including multiple levels (e.g. a.b.foo.com). * allows matching against well known public suffixes - e.g. foo.co.gl may match *.co.gl
Behavior supported by STRICT, that is not supported by DEFAULT: * STRICT uses a small exclusion list for 2 or 3 letter domain names ending in a 2 letter top level (*.XXX.YY) when determining if a wildcard matches. Instead DEFAULT uses a more complete list of public suffix rules and exclusions from https://publicsuffix.org/list/
It is not expected that you should be relying upon these behaviors from the WILDCARD or STRICT options.
Addressed 'You are already logged in' for expired authentication sessions
Keycloak now does not display the message You are already logged in to the end user when an authentication session expires and user is already logged-in. Instead it redirects the error about the expired authentication session to the client application, so the client can act on it and restart authentication as described in the Server Administration Guide authentication sessions chapter. You may consider updating your applications to being able to handle this error.
Removed a model module
The module org.keycloak:keycloak-model-legacy
module was deprecated in a previous release and is removed in this release. Use the org.keycloak:keycloak-model-storage
module instead.
XA Transaction Changes
-
The option
transaction-xa-enabled
will default to false, rather than true. If you want XA transaction support you will now need to explicitly set this option to true. -
XA Transaction recovery support is enabled by default. Transaction logs will be stored at KEYCLOAK_HOME/data/transaction-logs.
Removed offline session preloading
The old behavior to preload offline sessions at startup is now removed after it has been deprecated in the previous release.
Specify cache
options at runtime
Options cache
, cache-stack
, and cache-config-file
are no longer build options, and they can be specified only during runtime.
This eliminates the need to execute the build phase and rebuild your image due to them.
Be aware that they will not be recognized during the build
phase, so you need to remove them.
kcadm and kcreg changes
How kcadm and kcreg parse and handle options and parameters has changed. Error messages from usage errors, the wrong option or parameter, may be slightly different than previous versions. Also usage errors will have an exit code of 2 instead of 1.
Removing custom user attribute indexes
When searching for users by user attribute, Keycloak no longer searches for user attribute names forcing lower case comparisons. This means Keycloak’s native index on the user attribute table will now be used when searching. If you have created your own index based on `lower(name)`to speed up searches, you can now remove it.
New default client scope basic
The new client scope named basic
is added as a realm "default" client scope and hence will be added to all newly created OIDC clients. The client scope is also automatically added to all existing OIDC clients during migration.
This scope contains preconfigured protocol mappers for the following claims:
-
sub
(See the details below in the dedicated section) -
auth_time
This provides additional help to reduce the number of claims in a lightweight access token, but also gives the chance to configure claims that were always added automatically.
In case you already have client scope named basic in some of your realms, then the new client scope basic will not be added to your realm and will not be added to any clients. The
migration would be ignored for this particular case. In that case, you either need to make sure to rename your client scope to something different than basic before you migrate to this
Keycloak version or you need to manually deal with missing sub and auth_time claims in case you need them in your tokens and you may need to manually add corresponding protocol mappers
to some of your client scopes.
|
Removed session_state
claim
The session_state
claim, which contains the same value as the sid
claim, is now removed from all tokens as it is not required according to the OpenID Connect Front-Channel Logout and OpenID Connect Back-Channel Logout specifications. The session_state
claim remains present in the Access Token Response in accordance with OpenID Connect Session Management specification.
Note that the setSessionState()
method is also removed from the IDToken
class in favor of the setSessionId()
method, and the getSessionState()
method is now deprecated.
A new Session State (session_state)
mapper is also included and can be assigned to client scopes (for instance basic
client scope) to revert to the old behavior.
If an old version of the JS adapter is used, the Session State (session_state)
mapper should also be used by using client scopes as described above.
sub
claim is added to access token via protocol mapper
The sub
claim, which was always added to the access token, is now added by default but using a new Subject (sub)
protocol mapper.
The Subject (sub)
mapper is configured by default in the basic
client scope. Therefore, no extra configuration is required after upgrading to this version.
If you are using the Pairwise subject identifier
mapper to map a sub
claim for an access token, you can consider disabling or removing the Subject (sub)
mapper, however it is not strictly needed
as the Subject (sub)
protocol mapper is executed before the Pairwise subject identifier
mapper and hence the pairwise
value will override the value added by Subject (sub)
mapper.
This may apply also to other custom protocol mapper implementations, which override the sub
claim, as the Subject (sub)
mapper is currently executed as first protocol mapper.
You can use the Subject (sub)
mapper to configure the sub
claim only for access token, lightweight access token, and introspection response. IDToken and Userinfo always contain sub
claim.
The mapper has no effects for service accounts, because no user session exists, and the sub
claim is always added to the access token.
Nonce claim is only added to the ID token
The nonce claim is now only added to the ID token strictly following the OpenID Connect Core 1.0 specification. As indicated in the specification, the claim is compulsory inside the ID token when the same parameter was sent in the authorization request. The specification also recommends to not add the nonce
after a refresh request. Previously, the claim was set to all the tokens (Access, Refresh and ID) in all the responses (refresh included).
A new Nonce backwards compatible
mapper is also included in the software that can be assigned to client scopes to revert to the old behavior. For example, the JS adapter checked the returned nonce
claim in all the tokens before fixing issue #26651 in version 24.0.0. Therefore, if an old version of the JS adapter is used, the mapper should be added to the required clients by using client scopes.
Changed userId
for events related to refresh token
The userId
in the REFRESH_TOKEN
event is now always taken from user session instead of sub
claim in the refresh token. The userId
in the REFRESH_TOKEN_ERROR
event is now always null.
The reason for this change is that the value of the sub
claim in the refresh token may be null with the introduction of the optional sub
claim or even different from the real user id when using pairwise subject identifiers or other ways to override the sub
claim.
However a refresh_token_sub
detail is now added as backwards compatibility to have info about the user in the case of missing userId in the REFRESH_TOKEN_ERROR
event.
Using older javascript adapter
If you use the latest Keycloak server with older versions of the javascript adapter in your applications, you may be affected by the token changes mentioned above as previous versions of javascript adapter rely on the claims, which were added by Keycloak, but not supported by the OIDC specification. This includes:
-
Adding the
Session State (session_state)
mapper in case of using the Keycloak Javascript adapter 24.0.3 or older -
Adding the
Nonce backwards compatible
mapper in case of using a Keycloak Javascript adapter that is older than Keycloak 24
You can add the protocol mappers directly to the corresponding client or to some client scope, which can be used by your client applications relying on older versions of the Keycloak Javascript adapter.
Some more details are in the previous sections dedicated to session_state
and nonce
claims.
Default http-pool-max-threads
reduced
http-pool-max-threads
if left unset will default to the greater of 50 or 4 x (available processors). Previously it defaulted to the greater of 200 or 8 x (available processors). Reducing the number or task threads for most usage scenarios will result in slightly higher performance due to less context switching among active threads.
Management port for metrics and health endpoints
The /health
and /metrics
endpoints are accessible on the management port 9000
, which is turned on by default.
That means these endpoints are no longer exposed to the standard Keycloak ports 8080
and 8443
.
In order to reflect the old behavior, use the property --legacy-observability-interface=true
, which will not expose these endpoints on the management port.
However, this property is deprecated and will be removed in future releases, so it is recommended not to use it.
The management interface uses a different HTTP server than the default Keycloak HTTP server, and it is possible to configure them separately. Beware, if no values are supplied for the management interface properties, they are inherited from the default Keycloak HTTP server.
For more details, see Configuring the Management Interface.
Escaping slashes in group paths
Keycloak has never escaped slashes in the group paths. Because of that, a group named group/slash
child of top
uses the full path /top/group/slash
, which is clearly misleading. Starting with this version, the server can be started to perform escaping of those slashes in the name:
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-group-jpa-escape-slashes-in-group-path=true
The escape char is the tilde character ~
. The previous example results in the path /top/group~/slash
. The escape marks the last slash is part of the name and not a hierarchy separator.
The escaping is currently disabled by default because it represents a change in behavior. Nevertheless enabling escaping is recommended and it can be the default in future versions.
Change to class EnvironmentDependentProviderFactory
The method EnvironmentDependentProviderFactory.isSupported()
was deprecated for several releases and has now been removed.
Instead, implement isSupported(Config.Scope config)
.
Removal of the deprecated LinkedIn provider
In version 22.0.2 the OAuh 2.0 social provider for LinkedIn was replaced by a new OpenId Connect implementation. The legacy provider was deprecated but not removed, just in case it was still functional in some existing realms. Keycloak 25.0.0 is definitely removing the old provider and its associated linkedin-oauth
feature. From now on, the default LinkedIn
social provider is the only option available.
Improved performance of findGrantedResources
and findGrantedOwnerResources
queries
These queries performed poorly when the RESOURCE_SERVER_RESOURCE
and RESOURCE_SERVER_PERM_TICKET
tables had over 100k entries
and users were granted access to over 1k resources. The queries were simplified and new indexes for the requester
and owner
columns were introduced.
The new indexes are both applied to the RESOURCE_SERVER_PERM_TICKET
table. If the table currently contains more than 300.000 entries,
Keycloak will skip the creation of the indexes by default during the automatic schema migration, and will instead log the SQL statements
on the console during migration. In this case, the statements must be run manually in the DB after Keycloak’s startup.
See the Upgrading Guide for details on how to configure a different limit.
Removing deprecated methods from AccessToken
, IDToken
, and JsonWebToken
classes
The following methods were removed from the AccessToken
class:
-
expiration
. Use theexp
method instead. -
notBefore
. Use thenbf
method instead. -
issuedAt
. Use theiat
method instead.
The following methods were removed from the IDToken
class:
-
getAuthTime
andsetAuthTime
. Use thegetAuth_time
andsetAuth_time
methods, respectively. -
notBefore
. Use thenbf
method instead. -
issuedAt
. Use theiat
method instead. -
setSessionState
. Use thesetSessionId
method instead (See the details above in the section aboutsession_state
claim)
The following methods were removed from the JsonWebToken
class:
-
expiration
. Use theexp
method instead. -
notBefore
. Use thenbf
method instead. -
issuedAt
. Use theiat
method instead.
You should also expect both exp
and nbf
claims not set in tokens as they are optional. Previously, these claims were
being set with a value of 0
what does not make mush sense because their value should be a valid NumericDate
.
Method getExp
added to SingleUseObjectKeyModel
As a consequence of the removal of deprecated methods from AccessToken
, IDToken
, and JsonWebToken
,
the SingleUseObjectKeyModel
also changed to keep consistency with the method names related to expiration values.
The previous getExpiration
method is now deprecated and you should prefer using new newly introduced getExp
method
to avoid overflow after 2038.
Method encode deprecated on PasswordHashProvider
Method String encode(String rawPassword, int iterations)
on the interface org.keycloak.credential.hash.PasswordHashProvider
is deprecated. The method will be removed in
one of the future Keycloak releases. It might be Keycloak 27 release.
CollectionUtil intesection method removed
The method org.keycloak.common.util.CollectionUtil.intersection
has been removed. You should use the 'java.util.Collection.retainAll' instead on an existing collection.
Resteasy util class is deprecated
org.keycloak.common.util.Resteasy
has been deprecated. You should use the org.keycloak.util.KeycloakSessionUtil
to obtain the KeycloakSession
instead.
It is highly recommended to avoid obtaining the KeycloakSession
by means other than when creating your custom provider.
Small changes in session lifespan and idle calculations
In previous versions the session max lifespan and idle timeout calculation was slightly different when validating if a session was still valid. Since now that validation uses the same code than the rest of the project.
If the session is using the remember me feature, the idle timeout and max lifespan are the maximum value between the common SSO and the remember me configuration values.
External Infinispan requirements
Keycloak now requires a Infinispan server version of at least 15.0.0 for external Infinispan deployments. An external Infinispan deployment is supported for multi-site setups as outlined in the HA guide.
Oracle Database driver not part of the distribution
The Oracle Database JDBC driver is no longer part of the Keycloak distribution. If you wish to use Oracle DB, you must manually install a version of the Oracle Driver that is compatible with your specific environment. Instructions for this process can be found in the Configuring the database guide.
Deprecated theme variables
The following variables were deprecated in the Admin theme and will be removed in a future version:
-
authServerUrl
. UseserverBaseUrl
instead. -
authUrl
. UseadminBaseUrl
instead.
The following variables were deprecated in the Account theme and will be removed in a future version:
-
authServerUrl
. UseserverBaseUrl
instead, noteserverBaseUrl
does not include trailing slash. -
authUrl
. UseserverBaseUrl
instead, noteserverBaseUrl
does not include trailing slash.
Methods to get and set current refresh token in client session are now deprecated
The methods String getCurrentRefreshToken()
, void setCurrentRefreshToken(String currentRefreshToken)
, int getCurrentRefreshTokenUseCount()
, and void setCurrentRefreshTokenUseCount(int currentRefreshTokenUseCount)
in the interface org.keycloak.models.AuthenticatedClientSessionModel
are deprecated. They have been replaced by similar methods that require an identifier as a parameter such as getRefreshToken(String reuseId)
to manage multiple refresh tokens within a client session.
The methods will be removed in one of the future Keycloak releases. It might be Keycloak 27 release.
Migrating to 24.0.4
Partial update to user attributes when updating users through the Admin User API is no longer supported
When updating user attributes through the Admin User API, you cannot execute partial updates when updating the
user attributes, including the root attributes like username
, email
, firstName
, and lastName
.
If you are updating user attributes through the Admin User API without passing all the attributes that the administrator has write permissions, the missing attributes will be removed. On the other hand, if an attribute is marked as read-only for administrators, not sending the attribute won’t remove it.
See the User Profile Documentation for the details about the user profile settings.
Migrating to 24.0.3
Changes to the org.keycloak.userprofile.UserProfileDecorator
interface
To properly support multiple user storage providers within a realm, the org.keycloak.userprofile.UserProfileDecorator
interface has changed.
The decorateUserProfile
method is no longer invoked when parsing the user profile configuration for the first time (and caching it),
but every time a user is being managed through the user profile provider. As a result, the method changed its contract to:
List<AttributeMetadata> decorateUserProfile(String providerId, UserProfileMetadata metadata)
Differently than the previous contract and behavior, this method is only invoked for the user storage provider from where the user was loaded from.
Changes in redirect URI verification when using wildcards
Because of security concerns, the redirect URI verification now performs a exact string matching (no wildcard involved) if the passed redirect uri contains a userinfo
part or its path
accesses parent directory (/../
).
The full wildcard *
can still be used as a valid redirect in development for http(s) URIs with those characteristics. In production environments a exact valid redirect URI without wildcard needs to be configured for any URI of that type.
Please note that wildcard valid redirect URIs are not recommended for production and not covered by the OAuth 2.0 specification.
Deprecated Account REST endpoint for removing credential
The Account REST endpoint for removing the credential of the user is deprecated. Starting at this version, the Account Console no longer uses this endpoint. It is replaced by the Delete Credential
application-initiated
action, which is triggered by the Account Console when a user want to remove the credential of a user.
Migrating to 24.0.0
Changes to the Welcome theme
The 'welcome' theme has has been updated to use a new layout and now uses PatternFly 5, rather than PatternFly 3. If you are extending the theme, or providing your own, you may need to update it as follows:
Migrate from PatternFly 3 to PatternFly 5
The welcome theme was one of the more outdated themes in Keycloak. It was originally based on PatternFly 3, but has now been updated to use PatternFly 5, skipping a major version in the process. If your custom theme extends the built-in theme, you will need to update it to use PatternFly 5 syntax. Consult the PatternFly 5 documentation for details.
If you are still using PatternFly 3 in your own custom theme (not extending the built-in one), you can continue to use it, but PatternFly 3 support will be removed in a future release, so you should consider migrating to PatternFly 5 as soon as possible.
Automatic redirect to the Admin Console
If the Admin Console is enabled, the welcome page will automatically redirect to it if the administrative user already exists. This behavior can be modified by setting the redirectToAdmin
in your theme.properties
file. By default, the property is set to false
, unless you are extending the built-in theme, in which case, the property is set to true
.
The documentationUrl
and displayCommunityLinks
properties have been removed.
These properties were previously used for navigational elements that are now no longer present. If you are extending the built-in theme, you will need to remove these properties from your theme.properties
file, as they no longer have any effect.
Assets are now loaded from 'common' resources
Images such as the background, logo and favicon are now loaded from the 'common' resources, rather than the theme resources. This change means that if you are extending the built-in theme, and are overwriting these images, you will need to move them to the 'common' resources of your theme, and update your theme.properties
file to include the new paths:
# This defaults to 'common/keycloak' if not set.
import=common/your-theme-name
Changes to the Account Console theme customization
If you were previously extending the now deprecated version 2 of the Account Console theme, you will need to update your theme to use the new version 3 of the Account Console theme. The new version of the Account Console theme comes with some changes in regards to how it is customized. To start with a clean slate, you can follow the new customization quickstart.
To move your custom theme start by changing the parent
to the new theme:
# Before
parent=keycloak.v2
# After
parent=keycloak.v3
If you have any custom React components, you will import React directly, rather than using a relative path:
// Before
import * as React from "../../../../common/keycloak/web_modules/react.js";
// After
import React from "react";
If you are using content.json
to customize the theme there are some changes to the structure of the file, specifically:
-
The
content
property has been renamed tochildren
. -
The
id
,icon
andcomponentName
properties have been removed, asmodulePath
provides the same functionality.
Keycloak JS imports might need to be updated
If you are loading Keycloak JS directly from the Keycloak server, this section can be safely ignored. If you are loading Keycloak JS from the NPM package and are using a bundler like Webpack, Vite, and so on, you might need to make some changes to your code. The Keycloak JS package now uses the exports
field in the package.json file. This means that you might have to change your imports:
// Before
import Keycloak from 'keycloak-js/dist/keycloak.js';
import AuthZ from 'keycloak-js/dist/keycloak-authz.js';
// After
import Keycloak from 'keycloak-js';
import AuthZ from 'keycloak-js/authz';
Features Changes
It is no longer allowed to have the same feature in both the --features
and --features-disabled
list. The feature should appear in only one list.
The usage of unversioned feature names, such as docker
, in the --features
list will allow for the most supported / latest feature version to be enabled for you.
If you need more predictable behavior across releases, reference the particular version you want instead, such as docker:v1
.
User Profile Changes
User profile enabled by default
The user profile feature is now enabled by default. The `declarative-user-profile`feature is no longer available, because the user profile is assumed to be enabled. Therefore, the User Profile Enabled switch is removed from the Realm Settings and replaced by Unmanaged attributes. When migrating from previous version, the behavior is as follows:
-
For the deployments where User Profile Enabled was set to ON, Unmanaged attributes will be set to OFF after the upgrade. As a result, only user attributes supported explicitly by user profile will be allowed.
-
For the deployments where the User Profile Enabled was set to OFF (which was also the default settings for the deployments with
declarative-user-profile
feature disabled, which was the default), Unmanaged attributes will be set to ON` after the upgrade. As a result, the behavior should be basically the same as in previous versions with the user profile disabled. The Attributes tab will remain in the user details part of the Admin Console. Also users can now set arbitrary attributes through UI pages such as the registration page and update profile page as long as a particular custom theme supports it. The custom themes should work as before as well. However, consider updating your themes to use the user-profile and maybe even remove your custom themes if those themes were need to add custom attributes. See the subsequent section on themes. Also, consider toggling Unmanaged attributes to OFF or enable this switch only for administrators so that you can rely on mainly on using managed attributes.
See the User Profile Documentation for the details about the Unmanaged attributes.
Default validations
Default user profile configuration comes with a set of default validations for the basic predefined fields. Those validations were not present in previous versions when the declarative-user-profile
feature was disabled by default.
If you have issues due to backward compatibility, you can change the default validators according to your needs. The default validators are as follows:
-
The`username`,
email
,firstName
andlastName
attributes have a maximum length of 255 characters. These validations were indirectly present in previous versions as well because of the database constraint on the tableUSER_ENTITY
for those fields with a maximum length of 255 characters. However, when using user storage providers, it might be possible before to use longer values. -
The
username
attribute has a minimum length of three characters. Username has alsousername-prohibited-characters
andup-username-not-idn-homograph
validator by default, which were not present in previous versions. See the Validation section of the User Profile Documentation for the details about those attributes. Note that username is not editable by default unless you have the realm switchEdit username enabled
. This change means that existing users with incorrect usernames should still work and they will not be enforced to update their usernames. But new users will be enforced to use correct usernames during their registration or creation by the admin REST API. -
The
firstName
andlastName
attributes have theperson-name-prohibited-characters
validator on them, which were not present in previous versions. See the Validation section of the User Profile Documentation for the details about those attributes. Note that both first name and last name are editable by default, so users, who already have such incorrect first/last name from a previous version will be forced to update them when updating their user profiles.
User attribute names with strange characters
In previous versions, you could create a user with attribute names such as some:attribute
or some/attribute
. The user profile intentionally does not allow you to create
attributes with such strange names in the user profile configuration. So you may need to configure Unmanaged attributes
for your realm and enable unmanaged attributes for administrators
(ideally) or for end users (if really needed). Although it is strongly preferred to avoid using such attribute names.
Verify Profile required action enabled by default
The verify-profile
required action is enabled by default for new realms. However, when you migrate from a previous version, your existing realms will have the same state of this verify-profile
action as before, which
usually means disabled as it was disabled by default in previous versions. For the details about this required action, see the User Profile Documentation.
Breaking changes to the User Profile SPI
If you are using the User Profile SPI in your extension, you might be impacted by the API changes introduced in this release.
The org.keycloak.userprofile.Attributes
interface includes the following changes:
-
Method
getValues
was renamed toget
to make it more aligned with the same operation from a regular JavaMap
-
Method
isRootAttribute
was moved to the utility classorg.keycloak.userprofile.UserProfileUtil.isRootAttribute
-
Method
getFirstValue
was renamed togetFirst
to make it less verbose -
Method
getReadable(boolean)
was removed and now all attributes (including root attributes) are returned whenever they have read rights.
Changes to Freemarker templates to render pages based on the user profile and realm
In this release, the following templates were updated to make it possible to dynamically render attributes based on the user profile configuration set to a realm:
-
login-update-profile.ftl
-
register.ftl
-
update-email.ftl
These templates are responsible for rendering the update profile (when the Update Profile required action is enabled for a user), the registration, and the update email (when the UPDATE_EMAIL feature is enabled) pages, respectively.
If you use a custom theme to change these templates, they will function as expected because only the content is updated. However, we recommend you to take a look at how to configure a {declarative user profile} and possibly avoid changing the built-in templates by using all the capabilities provided by this feature.
Also, the templates used by the declarative-user-profile
feature to render the pages for the same flows are longer necessary and removed in this release:
-
update-user-profile.ftl
-
register-user-profile.ftl
If you were using the declarative-user-profile
feature in a previous release with customizations to the above templates,
update the login-update-profile.ftl
and register.ftl
accordingly.
New Freemarker template for the update profile page at first login through a broker
In this release, the server will render the update profile page when the user is authenticating through a broker for the
first time using the idp-review-user-profile.ftl
template.
In previous releases, the template used to update the profile during the first broker login flow was the login-update-profile.ftl
, the same used
to update the profile when users are authenticating to a realm.
By using separate templates for each flow, a more clear distinction exist as to which flow a template is actually used rather than sharing a same template, and potentially introduce unexpected changes and behavior that should only affect pages for a specific flow.
If you have customizations to the login-update-profile.ftl
template to customize how users update their profiles when authenticating through a broker, make sure to move your changes
to the new template.
Truststore Changes
The spi-truststore-file-*
options and the truststore related options https-trust-store-*
are deprecated. Therefore, use the new default location for truststore material, conf/truststores
, or specify your desired paths by using the truststore-paths
option. For details, see the relevant guide.
The tls-hostname-verifier
property should be used instead of the spi-truststore-file-hostname-verification-policy
property.
A collateral effect of the changes is that now the truststore provider is always configured with some certificates (at least the default java trusted certificates are present). This new behavior can affect other parts of Keycloak.
For example, webauthn registration can fail if attestation conveyance was configured to Direct validation. Previously, if the truststore provider was not configured the incoming certificate was not validated. But now this validation is always performed. The registration fails with invalid cert path
error as the certificate chain sent by the dongle is not trusted by Keycloak. The Certificate Authorities of the authenticator need to be present in the truststore provider to correctly perform the attestation.
Deprecated --proxy
option
The --proxy
option has been deprecated and will be removed in a future release. The following table explains how the deprecated option maps to supported options.
Deprecated usage | New usage |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
For hardened security, the --proxy-headers option does not allow selecting both forwarded and xforwarded values at the same time (as it was
the case before for --proxy edge and --proxy reencrypt ).
|
When using the proxy headers option, make sure your reverse proxy properly sets and overwrites the Forwarded or X-Forwarded-* headers respectively.
To set these headers, consult the documentation for your reverse proxy. Misconfiguration will leave Keycloak exposed to security vulnerabilities.
|
You can also set the proxy headers when using the Operator:
apiVersion: k8s.keycloak.org/v2alpha1
kind: Keycloak
metadata:
name: example-kc
spec:
...
proxy:
headers: forwarded|xforwarded
If the proxy.headers field is not specified, the Operator falls back to the previous behavior by implicitly setting
proxy=passthrough by default. This results in deprecation warnings in the server log. This fallback will be removed
in a future release.
|
Changes to the user representation in both Admin API and Account contexts
Both org.keycloak.representations.idm.UserRepresentation
and org.keycloak.representations.account.UserRepresentation
representation classes have changed
so that the root user attributes (such as username
, email
, firstName
, lastName
, and locale
) have a consistent representation when fetching or sending
the representation payload to the Admin and Account APIS, respectively.
The username
, email
, firstName
, lastName
, and locale
attributes were moved to a new org.keycloak.representations.idm.AbstractUserRepresentation
base class.
Also the getAttributes
method is targeted for representing only custom attributes, so you should not expect any root attribute in the map returned by this method. This method is
mainly targeted for clients when updating or fetching any custom attribute for a give user.
In order to resolve all the attributes including the root attributes, a new getRawAttributes
method was added so that the resulting map also includes the root attributes. However,
this method is not available from the representation payload and it is targeted to be used by the server when managing user profiles.
https-client-auth
is a build time option
Option https-client-auth
had been treated as a run time option, however this is not supported by Quarkus. The option needs to be handled at build time instead.
Sequential loading of offline sessions and remote sessions
Starting with this release, the first member of a Keycloak cluster will load remote sessions sequentially instead of in parallel. If offline session preloading is enabled, those will be loaded sequentially as well.
The previous code led to high resource-consumption across the cluster at startup and was challenging to analyze in production environments and could lead to complex failure scenarios if a node was restarted during loading. Therefore, it was changed to sequential session loading.
For offline sessions, the default in this and previous versions of Keycloak is to load those sessions on demand, which scales better with a lot of offline sessions than the attempt to preload them in parallel. Setups that use this default setup are not affected by the change of the loading strategy for offline sessions. Setups that have offline session preloading enabled should migrate to a setup where offline-session preloading is disabled.
Deprecated offline session preloading
The default behavior of Keycloak is to load offline sessions on demand. The old behavior to preload them at startup is now deprecated, as preloading them at startup does not scale well with a growing number of sessions, and increases Keycloak memory usage. The old behavior will be removed in a future release.
To re-enable old behavior while it is deprecated and not removed yet, use the feature flag and the SPI option as shown below:
bin/kc.[sh|bat] start --features-enabled offline-session-preloading --spi-user-sessions-infinispan-preload-offline-sessions-from-database=true
The API of UserSessionProvider
deprecated the method getOfflineUserSessionByBrokerSessionId(RealmModel realm, String brokerSessionId)
.
Instead of this method, use getOfflineUserSessionByBrokerUserIdStream(RealmModel, String brokerUserId)
to first get the sessions of a user, and then filter by the broker session ID as needed.
Infinispan metrics use labels for cache manager and cache names
When enabling metrics for Keycloak’s embedded caches, the metrics now use labels for the cache manager and the cache names.
vendor_cache_manager_keycloak_cache_sessions_statistics_approximate_entries_in_memory{cache="sessions",node="..."}
vendor_statistics_approximate_entries_in_memory{cache="sessions",cache_manager="keycloak",node="..."}
To revert the change for an installation, use a custom Infinispan XML configuration and change the configuration as follows:
<metrics names-as-tags="false" />
User attribute value length extension
As of this release, Keycloak supports storing and searching by user attribute values longer than 255 characters, which was previously a limitation.
In setups where users are allowed to update attributes, for example, via the account console, prevent denial of service attacks by adding validations. Ensure that no unmanaged attributes are allowed and all editable attributes have a validation that limits the input length.
For unmanaged attributes, the maximum length is 2048 characters.
For managed attributes, the default maximum length is 2048 characters. Administrator can change this by adding a validator of type length
.
Keycloak caches user-related objects in its internal caches. Using longer attributes increases the memory that is consumed by the cache. Therefore, limiting the size of the length attributes is recommended. Consider storing large objects outside Keycloak and reference them by ID or URL. |
This change adds new indexes on the tables USER_ATTRIBUTE
and FED_USER_ATTRIBUTE
.
If those tables contain more than 300000 entries, Keycloak will skip the index creation by default during the automatic schema migration and instead log the SQL statement on the console during migration to be applied manually after Keycloak’s startup.
See the Upgrading Guide for details on how to configure a different limit.
The newly added indexes USER_ATTR_LONG_VALUES_LOWER_CASE and FED_USER_ATTR_LONG_VALUES_LOWER_CASE may exceed the maximum limit of 30 characters set by Oracle,
in case the database is running in compatibility mode. Since Oracle version 12.2, there is a support for longer index names.
|
Additional migration steps for LDAP
This is for installations that match all the following criteria:
-
User attributes in the LDAP directory are larger than 2048 characters or binary attributes that are larger than 1500 bytes.
-
The attributes are changed by admins or users via the admin console, the APIs or the account console.
To be able to enable changing those attributes via UI and REST APIs, perform the following steps:
-
Declare the attributes identified above as managed attributes in the user profile of the realm.
-
Define a
length
validator for each attribute added in the previous step specifying the desired minimum and maximum length of the attribute value. For binary values, add 33 percent to the expected binary length to count in the overhead for Keycloak’s internal base64 encoding of binary values.
Additional migration steps for custom user storage providers
This is for installations that match all the following criteria:
-
Running MariaDB or MySQL as a database for Keycloak.
-
Entries in table
FED_USER_ATTRIBUTE
with contents in theVALUE
column that are larger than 2048 characters. This table is used for custom user providers which have federation enabled. -
The long attributes are changed by admins or users via the admin console or the account console.
To be able to enable changing those attributes via UI and REST APIs, perform the following steps:
-
Declare the attributes identified above as managed attributes in the user profile of the realm.
-
Define a
length
validator for each attribute added in the previous step specifying the desired minimum and maximum length of the attribute value.
The Admin send-verify-email API now uses the same email verification template
PUT /admin/realms/{realm}/users/{id}/send-verify-email
In this release, the API will use the email-verification.ftl
template instead of executeActions.ftl
.
Perform the following action(s): Verify Email
Confirm validity of e-mail address email@example.org.
If you have customized the executeActions.ftl
template to modify how users verify their email using this API, ensure that you transfer your modifications to the new template.
A new parameter called lifespan
will be introduced to allow overriding of the default lifespan value (12 hours).
If you prefer the previous behavior, use the execute-actions-email
API as follows.
PUT /admin/realms/{realm}/users/{id}/execute-actions-email ["VERIFY_EMAIL"]
Removal of the deprecated mode for SAML encryption
The compatibility mode for SAML encryption introduced in version 21 is now removed. The system property keycloak.saml.deprecated.encryption
is not managed anymore by the server. The clients which still used the old signing key for encryption should update it from the new IDP configuration metadata.
Changes to Password Hashing
In this release, we adapted the password hashing defaults to match the OWASP recommendations for Password Storage.
As part of this change, the default password hashing provider has changed from pbkdf2-sha256
to pbkdf2-sha512
.
Also, the number of default hash iterations for pbkdf2
based password hashing algorithms changed as follows:
Provider ID | Algorithm | Old Iterations | New Iterations |
---|---|---|---|
|
|
20.000 |
1.300.000 |
|
|
27.500 |
600.000 |
|
|
30.000 |
210.000 |
If a realm does not explicitly configure a password policy with hashAlgorithm
and hashIterations
, then
the new configuration will take effect on the next password based login, or when a user password is created or updated.
Performance of new password hashing configuration
Tests on a machine with an Intel i9-8950HK CPU (12) @ 4.800GHz yielded the following ⌀ time differences for hashing 1000 passwords (averages from 3 runs).
Note that the average duration for the PBKDF2WithHmacSHA1
was computed with a lower number of passwords due to the long runtime.
Provider ID | Algorithm | Old duration | New duration | Difference |
---|---|---|---|---|
|
|
122ms |
3.114ms |
+2.992ms |
|
|
20ms |
451ms |
+431ms |
|
|
33ms |
224ms |
+191ms |
Users of the pbkdf2
provider might need to explicitly reduce the
number of hash iterations to regain acceptable performance.
This can be done by configuring the hash iterations explicitly in the password policy of the realm.
Expected increased overall CPU usage and temporary increased database activity
The Concepts for sizing CPU and memory resources in the Keycloak High Availability guide have been updated to reflect the new hashing defaults. The CPU usage per password-based login in our tests increased by the factor of five, which includes both the changed password hashing and unchanged TLS connection handling. The overall CPU increase should be around the factor of two to three due to the averaging effect of Keycloak’s other activities like refreshing access tokens and client credential grants. Still, this depends on the unique workload of an installation.
After the upgrade, during a password-based login, the user’s passwords will be re-hashed with the new hash algorithm and hash iterations as a one-off activity and updated in the database. As this clears the user from Keycloak’s internal cache, you will also see an increased read activity on the database level. This increased database activity will decrease over time as more and more user’s passwords have been re-hashed.
Operator Referenced Resource Polling
Secrets and ConfigMaps referenced via the Keycloak CR will now be polled for changes, rather than watched via the api server. It may take around 1 minute for changes to be detected.
This was done so to not require label manipulation on those resources. After upgrading if any Secret still has the operator.keycloak.org/component label, it may be removed or ignored.
Renaming JPA provider configuration options for migration
After removal of the Map Store the following configuration options were renamed:
-
spi-connections-jpa-legacy-initialize-empty
tospi-connections-jpa-quarkus-initialize-empty
-
spi-connections-jpa-legacy-migration-export
tospi-connections-jpa-quarkus-migration-export
-
spi-connections-jpa-legacy-migration-strategy
tospi-connections-jpa-quarkus-migration-strategy
Renaming model modules
After removal of the Map Store the following modules were renamed:
-
org.keycloak:keycloak-model-legacy-private
toorg.keycloak:keycloak-model-storage-private
-
org.keycloak:keycloak-model-legacy-services
toorg.keycloak:keycloak-model-storage-services
and org.keycloak:keycloak-model-legacy
module was deprecated and will be removed in the next release in favour of org.keycloak:keycloak-model-storage
module.
Temporary lockout log replaced with event
There is now a new event USER_DISABLED_BY_TEMPORARY_LOCKOUT
when a user is temporarily locked out by the brute force protector.
The log with ID KC-SERVICES0053
has been removed as the new event offers the information in a structured form.
As it is a success event, the new event is logged by default at the DEBUG
level.
Use the setting spi-events-listener-jboss-logging-success-level
as described in the Event listener chapter in the Server Administration Guide to change the log level of all success events.
To trigger custom actions or custom log entries, write a custom event listener as described in the Event Listener SPI in the Server Developer Guide.
Operator Customization Property Keys
The property keys used by the operator for advanced configuration have changed from operator.keycloak
to kc.operator.keycloak
.
Keycloak CR resources options
When no resources
options are specified in the Keycloak CR and KeycloakRealmImport CR, default values are used.
The default requests
memory for Keycloak deployment and the realm import Job is set to 1700MiB
, and the limits
memory is set to 2GiB
.
Updates to cookies
As part of refactoring cookie handling in Keycloak there are some changes to how cookies are set:
-
All cookies will now have the secure attribute set if the request is through a secure context
-
WELCOME_STATE_CHECKER
cookies now setSameSite=Strict
For custom extensions there may be some changes needed:
-
LocaleSelectorProvider.KEYCLOAK_LOCALE
is deprecated as cookies are now managed through the CookieProvider -
HttpResponse.setWriteCookiesOnTransactionComplete
has been removed -
HttpCookie
is deprecated, please useNewCookie.Builder
instead -
ServerCookie
is deprecated, please useNewCookie.Builder
instead
Internal algorithm changed from HS256 to HS512
The algorithm that Keycloak uses to sign internal tokens (a JWT which is consumed by Keycloak itself, for example a refresh or action token) is being changed from HS256
to the more secure HS512
. A new key provider named hmac-generated-hs512
is now added for realms. Note that in migrated realms the old hmac-generated
provider and the old HS256
key are maintained and still validate tokens issued before the upgrade. The HS256
provider can be manually deleted when no more old tokens exist following the rotating keys guidelines.
Different JVM memory settings when running in a container
The JVM options -Xms
and -Xmx
were replaced by -XX:InitialRAMPercentage
and -XX:MaxRAMPercentage
when running in a container.
Instead of the static maximum heap size settings, Keycloak specifies the maximum as 70% of the total container memory.
As the heap size is dynamically calculated based on the total container memory, you should always set the memory limit for the container.
If the memory limit is not set, the memory consumption rapidly increases as the maximum heap size grows up to 70% of the total container memory. |
For more details, see the Running Keycloak in a container guide.
GELF log handler has been deprecated
With sunsetting of the underlying library providing integration with GELF, Keycloak will no longer support the GELF log handler out-of-the-box. This feature will be removed in a future release. If you require an external log management, consider using file log parsing.
Migrating to 23.0.5
Changes in jboss-logging event messages
Because of issue #25078, the jboss-logging
message values are now quoted (character "
by default) and sanitized to prevent any line break. There are two new options in the provider (spi-events-listener-jboss-logging-sanitize
and spi-events-listener-jboss-logging-quotes
) that allow you to customize the new behavior. For example, to avoid both sanitization and quoting, the server can be started in this manner:
./kc.sh start --spi-events-listener-jboss-logging-sanitize=false --spi-events-listener-jboss-logging-quotes=none ...
For more information about the options, see all provider configuration guide.
Migrating to 23.0.4
Fix handling of Groups.getSubGroups briefRepresentation parameter
Version 23.0.0 introduced a new endpoint getSubGroups ("children") on the Groups resource, where the meaning of the parameter briefRepresentation meant the retrieval of full representations of the sub groups. The meaning is now changed to return the brief representation.
Migrating to 23.0.2
Valid redirect URIs for clients are always compared with exact string matching
Version 1.8.0 introduced a lower-case for the hostname and scheme when comparing a redirect URI with the specified valid redirects for a client. Unfortunately it did not fully work in all the protocols, and, for example, the host was lower-cased for http
but not for https
. As OAuth 2.0 Security Best Current Practice advises to compare URIs using exact string matching, Keycloak will follow the recommendation and for now on valid redirects are compared with exact case even for the hostname and scheme.
For realms relying on the old behavior, the valid redirect URIs for their clients should now hold separate entries for each URI that should be recognized by the server.
Although it introduces more steps and verbosity when configuring clients, the new behavior enables more secure deployments as pattern-based checks are frequently the cause of security issues. These issues are due to how they are implemented and how they are configured.
Operator -secrets-store Secret
Older versions of the operator created a Secret to track watched Secrets. Newer versions of the operator no longer use the -secrets-store Secret, so it may be deleted.
If you are on 23.0.0 or 23.0.1 and see "org.keycloak.operator.controllers.KeycloakAdminSecretDependentResource → java.lang.IllegalStateException: More than 1 secondary resource related to primary" in the operator log then either delete the -secrets-store Secret, or upgrade to 23.0.2 where this is no longer an issue.
Migrating to 23.0.0
Added iss parameter to OAuth 2.0/OpenID Connect Authentication Response
RFC 9207 OAuth 2.0 Authorization Server Issuer Identification specification adds the parameter iss
in the OAuth 2.0/OpenID Connect Authentication Response for realizing secure authorization responses.
In past releases, we did not have this parameter, but now Keycloak adds this parameter by default, as required by the specification.
However, some OpenID Connect / OAuth2 adapters, and especially older Keycloak adapters, may have issues with this new parameter.
For example, the parameter will be always present in the browser URL after successful authentication to the client application.
In these cases, it may be useful to disable adding the iss
parameter to the authentication response. This can be done
for the particular client in the Keycloak Admin Console, in client details in the section with OpenID Connect Compatibility Modes
,
described in Compatibility with older adapters. Dedicated Exclude Issuer From Authentication Response
switch exists,
which can be turned on to prevent adding the iss
parameter to the authentication response.
Wildcard characters handling
JPA allows wildcards %
and _
when searching, while other providers like LDAP allow only *
.
As *
is a natural wildcard character in LDAP, it works in all places, while with JPA it only
worked at the beginning and the end of the search string. Starting with this release the only
wildcard character is *
which work consistently across all providers in all places in the search
string. All special characters in a specific provider like %
and _
for JPA are escaped. For exact
search, with added quotes such as "w*ord"
, the behavior remains the same as in previous releases.
Language files for themes default to UTF-8 encoding
This release now follows the standard mechanisms of Java and later, which assumes resource bundle files to be encoded in UTF-8.
Previous versions of Keycloak supported specifying the encoding in the first line with a comment like # encoding: UTF-8
, which is no longer supported and is ignored.
Message properties files for themes are now read in UTF-8 encoding, with an automatic fallback to ISO-8859-1 encoding. If you are using a different encoding, convert the files to UTF-8.
Changes to the value format of claims mapped by the realm and client role mappers
Before this release, both realm (User Realm Role
) and client (User Client Role
) protocol mappers
were mapping a stringfied JSON array when the Multivalued
setting was disabled.
However, the Multivalued
setting indicates whether the claim should be mapped as a list or, if disabled, only a single value
from the same list of values.
In this release, the role and client mappers now map to a single value from the effective roles of a user when
they are marked as single-valued (Multivalued
disabled).
Changes to password fields in Login UI
In this version we want to introduce a toggle to hide/show password inputs.
-
login.ftl
-
login-password.ftl
-
login-update-password.ftl
-
register.ftl
-
register-user-profile.ftl
In general all <input type="password" name="password" />
are encapsulated within a div now. The input element is followed by a button which toggles the visibility of the password input.
Old code example:
<input type="password" id="password" name="password" autocomplete="current-password" style="display:none;"/>
New code example:
<div class="${properties.kcInputGroup!}">
<input type="password" id="password" name="password" autocomplete="current-password" style="display:none;"/>
<button class="pf-c-button pf-m-control" type="button" aria-label="${msg('showPassword')}"
aria-controls="password" data-password-toggle
data-label-show="${msg('showPassword')}" data-label-hide="${msg('hidePassword')}">
<i class="fa fa-eye" aria-hidden="true"></i>
</button>
</div>
Default Keycloak CR Hostname
When running on OpenShift, with ingress enabled, and with the spec.ingress.classname set to openshift-default, you may leave the spec.hostname.hostname unpopulated in the Keycloak CR. The operator will assign a default hostname to the stored version of the CR similar to what would be created by an OpenShift Route without an explicit host - that is ingress-namespace.appsDomain If the appsDomain changes, or should you need a different hostname for any reason, then update the Keycloak CR.
The deprecated auto-build
CLI option was removed
The auto-build
CLI option has been marked as deprecated for a long time.
In this release, it was completely removed, and it is no longer supported.
When executing the start
command, the server is automatically built based on the configuration.
In order to prevent this behavior, set the --optimized
flag.
kc.sh and shell metacharacters
The kc.sh no longer uses an additional shell eval on parameters and the environment variables JAVA_OPTS_APPEND and JAVA_ADD_OPENS, thus the continued use of double escaping/quoting will result in the parameter being misunderstood. For example instead of
bin/kc.sh start --db postgres --db-username keycloak --db-url "\"jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/keycloak?ssl=false&connectTimeout=30\"" --db-password keycloak --hostname localhost
Use a single escape:
bin/kc.sh start --db postgres --db-username keycloak --db-url "jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/keycloak?ssl=false&connectTimeout=30" --db-password keycloak --hostname localhost
This change also means you cannot invoke kc.sh using a single quoted value of all arguments. For example you can no longer use
bin/kc.sh "start --help"
it must instead be individual arguments
bin/kc.sh start --help
Similarly instead of
bin/kc.sh build "--db postgres"
it must instead be individual arguments
bin/kc.sh build --db postgres
The usage of individual arguments is also required in Dockerfile run commands.
Removed RegistrationProfile form action
The form action RegistrationProfile
(displayed in the UI of authentication flows as Profile Validation
) was removed from the codebase and also from all authentication flows. By default, it was in
the built-in registration flow of every realm. The validation of user attributes as well as creation of the user including all that user’s attributes is handled by RegistrationUserCreation
form action and
hence RegistrationProfile
is not needed anymore. There is usually no further action needed in relation to this change, unless you used RegistrationProfile
class in your own providers.
Deprecated methods from data providers and models
-
RealmModel#getTopLevelGroupsStream()
and overloaded methods are now deprecated
GroupProvider
changes
A new method has been added to allow for searching and paging through top level groups. If you implement this interface you will need to implement the following method:
Stream<GroupModel> getTopLevelGroupsStream(RealmModel realm,
String search,
Boolean exact,
Integer firstResult,
Integer maxResults)
GroupRepresentation
changes
-
new field
subGroupCount
added to inform client how many subgroups are on any given group -
subGroups
list is now only populated on queries that request hierarchy data -
This field is populated from the "bottom up" so cannot be relied on for getting all subgroups for a group. Use a
GroupProvider
or request the subgroups fromGET {keycloak server}/realms/{realm}/groups/{group_id}/children
New endpoint for Group Admin API
Endpoint GET {keycloak server}/realms/{realm}/groups/{group_id}/children
added as a way to get subgroups of specific groups that support pagination
RESTEeasy Reactive
Relying on RESTEasy Classic is not longer an option because it is not available anymore. Migration will be needed for SPI’s and code that is relying on RESTEasy Classic and related packages part of org.jboss.resteasy.spi.*
.
Partial export requires manage-realm permission
The endpoint POST {keycloak server}/realms/{realm}/partial-export
and the corresponding action in the admin console now require manage-realm
permission for execution instead of view-realm
. This endpoint exports the realm configuration into a JSON file and the new permission is more appropriate. The parameters exportGroupsAndRoles
and exportClients
, which include the realm groups/roles and clients in the export respectively, continue managing the same permissions (query-groups
and view-clients
).
Removal of the options to trim the event’s details length
Since this release, Keycloak supports long value for EventEntity
details column. Therefore, it no longer supports options for trimming event detail length --spi-events-store-jpa-max-detail-length
and --spi-events-store-jpa-max-field-length
.
User Profile updates
This release includes many fixes and updates that are related to user profile as we are working on promoting this feature from preview to officially supported.
Minor changes exist for the SPI such as the newly added method boolean isEnabled(RealmModel realm)
on UserProfileProvider
interface. Also
some user profile classes and some validator related classes (but not builtin validator implementations) were moved from keycloak-server-spi-private
to
keycloak-server-spi
module. However, the packages for java classes remain the same. You might be affected in some corner cases, such as when you
are overriding the built-in implementation with your own UserProfileProvider
implementation. However, note that UserProfileProvider
is an unsupported SPI.
Removal of the Map Store
The Map Store has been an experimental feature in previous releases. Starting with this release, it is removed and users should continue to use the current JPA store.
Since this release, it is no longer possible to use --storage
related CLI options.
The modules keycloak-model-map*
have been removed.
Removed namespaces from our translations
All translations are moved into one file for the Admin Console. If you have made your own translations or extended the Admin Console you will need to migrate them to this new format.
Also if you have "overrides" in your database, you will have to remove the namespace from the keys.
Some keys are the same only in different namespaces, this is most obvious to help.
In these cases we have postfix the key with Help
.
If you want you can use this node script to help with the migration. It will take all the single files and put them into a new one and also take care of some of the mapping:
import { readFileSync, writeFileSync, appendFileSync } from "node:fs";
const ns = [
"common",
"common-help",
"dashboard",
"clients",
"clients-help",
"client-scopes",
"client-scopes-help",
"groups",
"realm",
"roles",
"users",
"users-help",
"sessions",
"events",
"realm-settings",
"realm-settings-help",
"authentication",
"authentication-help",
"user-federation",
"user-federation-help",
"identity-providers",
"identity-providers-help",
"dynamic",
];
const map = new Map();
const dup = [];
ns.forEach((n) => {
const rawData = readFileSync(n + ".json");
const translation = JSON.parse(rawData);
Object.entries(translation).map((e) => {
const name = e[0];
const value = e[1];
if (map.has(name) && map.get(name) !== value) {
if (n.includes("help")) {
map.set(name + "Help", value);
} else {
map.set(name, value);
dup.push({
name: name,
value: map.get(name),
dup: { ns: n, value: value },
});
}
} else {
map.set(name, value);
}
});
});
writeFileSync(
"translation.json",
JSON.stringify(Object.fromEntries(map.entries()), undefined, 2),
);
const mapping = [
["common:clientScope", "clientScopeType"],
["identity-providers:createSuccess", "createIdentityProviderSuccess"],
["identity-providers:createError", "createIdentityProviderError"],
["clients:createError", "createClientError"],
["clients:createSuccess", "createClientSuccess"],
["user-federation:createSuccess", "createUserProviderSuccess"],
["user-federation:createError", "createUserProviderError"],
["authentication-help:name", "flowNameHelp"],
["authentication-help:description", "flowDescriptionHelp"],
["clientScopes:noRoles", "noRoles-clientScope"],
["clientScopes:noRolesInstructions", "noRolesInstructions-clientScope"],
["users:noRoles", "noRoles-user"],
["users:noRolesInstructions", "noRolesInstructions-user"],
["clients:noRoles", "noRoles-client"],
["clients:noRolesInstructions", "noRolesInstructions-client"],
["groups:noRoles", "noRoles-group"],
["groups:noRolesInstructions", "noRolesInstructions-group"],
["roles:noRoles", "noRoles-roles"],
["roles:noRolesInstructions", "noRolesInstructions-roles"],
["realm:realmName:", "realmNameField"],
["client-scopes:searchFor", "searchForClientScope"],
["roles:searchFor", "searchForRoles"],
["authentication:title", "titleAuthentication"],
["events:title", "titleEvents"],
["roles:title", "titleRoles"],
["users:title", "titleUsers"],
["sessions:title", "titleSessions"],
["client-scopes:deleteConfirm", "deleteConfirmClientScopes"],
["users:deleteConfirm", "deleteConfirmUsers"],
["groups:deleteConfirm_one", "deleteConfirmGroup_one"],
["groups:deleteConfirm_other", "deleteConfirmGroup_other"],
["identity-providers:deleteConfirm", "deleteConfirmIdentityProvider"],
["realm-settings:deleteConfirm", "deleteConfirmRealmSetting"],
["roles:whoWillAppearLinkText", "whoWillAppearLinkTextRoles"],
["users:whoWillAppearLinkText", "whoWillAppearLinkTextUsers"],
["roles:whoWillAppearPopoverText", "whoWillAppearPopoverTextRoles"],
["users:whoWillAppearPopoverText", "whoWillAppearPopoverTextUsers"],
["client-scopes:deletedSuccess", "deletedSuccessClientScope"],
["identity-providers:deletedSuccess", "deletedSuccessIdentityProvider"],
["realm-settings:deleteSuccess", "deletedSuccessRealmSetting"],
["client-scopes:deleteError", "deletedErrorClientScope"],
["identity-providers:deleteError", "deletedErrorIdentityProvider"],
["realm-settings:deleteError", "deletedErrorRealmSetting"],
["realm-settings:saveSuccess", "realmSaveSuccess"],
["user-federation:saveSuccess", "userProviderSaveSuccess"],
["realm-settings:saveError", "realmSaveError"],
["user-federation:saveError", "userProviderSaveError"],
["realm-settings:validateName", "validateAttributeName"],
["identity-providers:disableConfirm", "disableConfirmIdentityProvider"],
["realm-settings:disableConfirm", "disableConfirmRealm"],
["client-scopes:updateSuccess", "updateSuccessClientScope"],
["client-scopes:updateError", "updateErrorClientScope"],
["identity-providers:updateSuccess", "updateSuccessIdentityProvider"],
["identity-providers:updateError", "updateErrorIdentityProvider"],
["user-federation:orderChangeSuccess", "orderChangeSuccessUserFed"],
["user-federation:orderChangeError", "orderChangeErrorUserFed"],
["authentication-help:alias", "authenticationAliasHelp"],
["authentication-help:flowType", "authenticationFlowTypeHelp"],
["authentication:createFlow", "authenticationCreateFlowHelp"],
["client-scopes-help:rolesScope", "clientScopesRolesScope"],
["client-scopes-help:name", "scopeNameHelp"],
["client-scopes-help:description", "scopeDescriptionHelp"],
["client-scopes-help:type", "scopeTypeHelp"],
["clients-help:description", "clientDescriptionHelp"],
["clients-help:clientType", "clientsClientTypeHelp"],
["clients-help:scopes", "clientsClientScopesHelp"],
["common:clientScope", "clientScopeTypes"],
["dashboard:realmName", "realmNameTitle"],
["common:description", "description"],
];
mapping.forEach((m) => {
const key = m[0].split(":");
try {
const data = readFileSync(key[0] + ".json");
const translation = JSON.parse(data);
const value = translation[key[1]];
if (value) {
appendFileSync(
"translation.json",
'"' + m[1] + '": ' + JSON.stringify(value) + ',\n',
);
}
} catch (error) {
console.error("skipping namespace key: " + key);
}
});
Save this into a file called transform.mjs
in your public/locale/<language>
folder and run it with:
node ./transform.mjs
This might not do a complete transform, but very close to it. |
Migrating to 22.0.4
A new parameter for specify max length of email local part
A new parameter --spi-user-profile-declarative-user-profile-max-email-local-part-length
is added to set max email local part length taking backwards compatibility
into consideration. The default value is 64. Example of usage:
kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-user-profile-declarative-user-profile-max-email-local-part-length=100 ...
Migrating to 22.0.2
Never expires option removed from client advanced settings combos
The option Never expires
is now removed from all the combos of the Advanced Settings client tab. This option was misleading because the different lifespans or idle timeouts were never infinite, but limited by the general user session or realm values. Therefore, this option is removed in favor of the other two remaining options: Inherits from the realm settings
(the client uses general realm timeouts) and Expires in
(the value is overridden for the client). Internally the Never expires
was represented by -1
. Now that value is shown with a warning in the Admin Console and cannot be set directly by the administrator.
New LinkedIn OpenID Connect social provider
A new social identity provider called LinkedIn OpenID Connect has been introduced for the business and employment-focused platform. LinkedIn released recently a new product for developers called Sign In with LinkedIn using OpenID Connect. The product provides a new way to authenticate members using OpenID Connect, but the default OpenID Connect v1.0 identity provider does not work with it at present time. For that reason, Keycloak adds this new identity provider as the specific social provider for the new product.
The old LinkedIn way based on OAuth seems to be completely removed from the developer portal. How the existing LinkedIn social provider is working with current applications is not clear. Keycloak maintains the old provider renamed to LinkedIn (deprecated), but in a deprecated feature called linkedin-oauth which is disabled by default. It will be removed in future versions. Please enable it again at startup if needed:
kc.[sh|bat] start --features linkedin-oauth ...
Migrating to 22.0.0
Transition from Java EE to Jakarta EE
Keycloak migrated its codebase from Java EE (Enterprise Edition) to its successor Jakarta EE, which brings various changes into Keycloak.
We have upgraded all Jakarta EE specifications in order to support Jakarta EE 10, such as:
-
Jakarta Persistence 3.1
-
Jakarta RESTful Web Services 3.1
-
Jakarta Mail API 2.1
-
Jakarta Servlet 6.0
-
Jakarta Activation 2.1
Jakarta EE 10 provides a modernized, simplified, lightweight approach to building cloud-native Java applications.
The main changes provided within this initiative are changing the namespace from javax.*
to jakarta.*
.
It does not apply for javax.*
packages provided directly in the JDK, such as javax.security
, javax.net
, javax.crypto
, etc.
You can be affected by these changes in your custom extensions, providers or JPA entities.
Upgrade to Quarkus 3
Keycloak upgraded to version 3 of the Quarkus Java framework. Quarkus 3 continues the tradition of propelling Java development by moving fast and providing a cutting-edge user experience with the latest technologies. It continues to improve overall performance and efficiency.
Quarkus 3 is based on Jakarta EE 10, the same as Keycloak, creating smooth interoperability between them. In addition, it contains Eclipse MicroProfile 6, which aligns with Jakarta EE 10 Core Profile. The central part of the Quarkus 3 upgrade is built-in support for JPA 3.1 and Hibernate ORM 6.
quarkus.hibernate-orm.*
properties no longer working
For Quarkus 3, Hibernate ORM configurations must be specified in either the persistence.xml
file or in Quarkus properties, but not in both places.
Keycloak uses a persistence.xml
file, therefore, it is no longer possible to override Keycloak’s JPA store configurations via Quarkus’ configuration properties for the default persistence unit whose names start with quarkus.hibernate-orm
.
Upgrade to Hibernate ORM 6
Keycloak now benefits from the upgrade to Hibernate ORM 6.2, which includes improved performance, better SQL, modern JDK support, and support for modern RDBMS features. The performance improvements primarily affect JDBC, HQL Translation, and Criteria Translation.
If you have custom providers or JPA entities, these changes may affect you.
We recommend reviewing the Quarkus migration guide or the Hibernate release notes for more information.
Legacy Promise API removed from Keycloak JS adapter
The legacy Promise API methods have been removed from the Keycloak JS adapter. This means that calling .success()
and .error()
on promises returned from the adapter is no longer possible. Instead standardized Promise methods such as .then()
and .catch()
should be used.
const keycloak = new Keycloak();
keycloak.init()
.success(function(authenticated) {
alert(authenticated ? 'authenticated' : 'not authenticated');
}).error(function() {
alert('failed to initialize');
});
const keycloak = new Keycloak();
keycloak.init()
.then(function(authenticated) {
alert(authenticated ? 'authenticated' : 'not authenticated');
}).catch(function() {
alert('failed to initialize');
});
await
keyword to unwrap these promises:const keycloak = new Keycloak();
try {
const authenticated = await keycloak.init();
alert(authenticated ? 'authenticated' : 'not authenticated');
} catch (error) {
alert('failed to initialize');
}
Export and Import perform an automatic build
In previous releases, the export
and import
commands required a build
command to be run first.
Starting with this release, the export
and import
commands perform an automatic rebuild of Keycloak if a build time configuration has changed.
When migrating existing scripts that run a build
command first, migrate by adding the --optimized
command line option to the export
and import
command to avoid Keycloak automatically re-building the image.
Not adding the --optimized
option in this might make Keycloak trigger a rebuild and revert to the default values, and then connecting to the database for export and import will not work.
The following examples assume that runtime parameters like a database password are provided via a configuration file or an environment variable.
bin/kc.[sh|bat] build --db=postgres ...
bin/kc.[sh|bat] export --dir <dir>
--optimized
to the export commandbin/kc.[sh|bat] build --db=postgres ...
bin/kc.[sh|bat] export --optimized --dir <dir>
bin/kc.[sh|bat] export --dir <dir> --db=postgres ...
- NOTE
-
When the auto-build runs, the build time options will be in effect for all subsequent commands that are started with the
--optimized
flag, including thestart
command.
In previous releases the export
and import
commands allowed runtime parameters such as a database URL only in configuration files or environment variables.
Starting with this release, those runtime parameters are now available on the command line as well.
Use the --help
option to find out about the supported parameters.
Renamed Keycloak Admin client artifacts
After the upgrade to Jakarta EE, artifacts for Keycloak Admin clients were renamed to more descriptive names with consideration for long-term maintainability. We still provide two separate Keycloak Admin clients, one with Jakarta EE and the other with Java EE support.
We stopped releasing the org.keycloak:keycloak-admin-client-jakarta
artifact.
The default one for the Keycloak Admin client with Jakarta EE support is org.keycloak:keycloak-admin-client
(since version 22.0.0).
The new artifact with Java EE support is org.keycloak:keycloak-admin-client-jee
.
Jakarta EE support
<dependency>
<groupId>org.keycloak</groupId>
<artifactId>keycloak-admin-client-jakarta</artifactId>
<version>21.0.0</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.keycloak</groupId>
<artifactId>keycloak-admin-client</artifactId>
<version>22.0.0</version>
</dependency>
Java EE support
<dependency>
<groupId>org.keycloak</groupId>
<artifactId>keycloak-admin-client</artifactId>
<version>21.0.0</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.keycloak</groupId>
<artifactId>keycloak-admin-client-jee</artifactId>
<version>22.0.0</version>
</dependency>
Passthrough proxy mode changes
Keycloak’s proxy configuration setting for mode passthrough no longer parses HTTP forwarding headers in the request, as when a proxy forwards an HTTPS connection in passthrough mode, a proxy is unable to add, remove or update HTTP headers.
Installations that want the HTTP headers in the client’s request to be parsed should use the edge or reencrypt setting.
See Using a reverse proxy for details.
Consistent fallback message resolving for all themes
This change only may affect you when you are using realm localization messages.
Up to this version, the resolving of fallback messages was inconsistent across themes, when realm localization messages were used. More information can be found in the following issue.
The implementation has now been unified for all themes. In general, the message for the most specific matching language tag has the highest priority. If there are both a realm localization message and a Theme 18n message, the realm localization message has the higher priority. Summarized, the priority of the messages is as follows (RL = realm localization, T = Theme i18n files): RL <variant> > T <variant> > RL <region> > T <region> > RL <language> > T <language> > RL en > T en
.
Probably this can be better explained with an example: When the variant de-CH-1996
is requested and there is a realm localization message for the variant, this message will be used. If such a realm localization message does not exist, the Theme i18n files are searched for a corresponding message for that variant. If such a message does not exist, a realm localization message for the region (de-CH
) will be searched. If such a realm localization message does not exist, the Theme i18n files are searched for a message for that region. If still no message is found, a realm localization message for the language (de
) will be searched. If there is no matching realm localization message, the Theme i18n files are be searched for a message for that language. As last fallback, the English (en
) translation is used: First, an English realm localization will be searched - if not found, the Theme 18n files are searched for an English message.
UserQueryProvider
changes
UserQueryProvider
interface was split into two. One is UserQueryMethodsProvider
providing capabilities for querying users. Second one is UserCountMethodsProvider
which provides capability for counting number of users in particular storage.
Keycloak now has the ability to differentiate between user storage providers that can efficiently execute count queries and those that cannot. The UserQueryProvider
interface still exists and extends both new interfaces. Therefore, there is no need for any modifications in the existing implementations of UserQueryProvider
since it retains the same methods.
LDAPStorageProvider
search changes
Starting with this release Keycloak uses a pagination mechanism when querying federated LDAP database. Searching for users should be consistent with search in local database.
Since this release LDAPStorageProvider
implements only UserQueryMethodsProvider
, not UserQueryProvider
.
Deprecation of Keycloak OpenID Connect Adapters
Starting with this release, we no longer will invest our time on the following Keycloak OpenID Connect Adapters:
-
Keycloak Wildfly OpenID Connect Adapter
-
Keycloak JEE Servlet OpenID Connect Adapter
-
Keycloak Spring Boot and Spring Security OpenID Connect Adapter
This move is already reflected in our documentation and in our quickstart repository. Please, consider looking at the following references for more information:
We recommend starting to look into moving your applications to the alternatives from the references above. Those adapters should not be available anymore in future releases.
Deprecation of Keycloak JEE SAML Adapter
The Keycloak JEE SAML Adapter has been discontinued, and we will no longer invest our time on its development following this release.
The official adapter is now based on Jakarta and should be used as soon as you switch your applications to this technology.
This change is already in our documentation and in our quickstart repository. For more information, please consider looking at the following references:
If you cannot migrate your applications to Jakarta, you can still use the "legacy" SAML JEE adapter and still be able to integrate with future releases of the server. However, consider upgrading your applications as soon as possible because we are no longer providing support to JEE.
Changes for openshift-integration feature
The preview feature openshift-integration
was removed from Keycloak codebase and moved into separate extension. This includes
moving of related providers such as custom client storage provider and token review endpoint for Openshift integration.
If you used this feature, you should not use the openshift-integration
feature anymore when starting Keycloak server and instead you need to deploy
the JAR file from custom extension. You can check the Openshift extension and the instructions
in it’s README file for how to deploy the extension to your Keycloak server.
The Openshift extension is not officially supported and maintained by Keycloak team. You can use it only at your own risk. |
Http Challenge flow removed
The built-in authentication flow http challenge
was removed along with the authenticator implementations no-cookie-redirect
, basic-auth
, and basic-auth-otp
.
The http challenge
authentication flow was also intended for Openshift integration and therefore it was removed along with other related capabilities as described above.
Authenticator implementations were moved to the Openshift extension described in the previous paragraph.
If you use the http challenge
flow as a realm flow or as First Broker Login
or Post Broker Login
flow for any of your identity providers, the migration is not possible. Be sure to update
your realm configuration to eliminate the use of the http challenge
flow before migration.
If you use the http challenge
flow as Authentication Flow Binding Override
for any client, the migration would complete, but you could no longer log in to that client.
After the migration, you would need to re-create the flow and update the configuration of your clients to use the new/differentJson flow.
Removing third party dependencies
The removal of openshift-integration allows us to remove few third party dependencies from Keycloak distribution. This includes
openshift-rest-client
, okio-jvm
, okhttp
, commons-lang
, commons-compress
, jboss-dmr
and kotlin-stdlib
. This means that if you use
any of these libraries as dependencies of your own providers deployed to Keycloak server, you may also need to copy those jar
files
explicitly to the Keycloak distribution providers
directory as well.
Context and dependency injection no longer enabled to JAX-RS Resources
In order to provide a better runtime and leverage as much as possible the underlying stack,
all injection points for contextual data using the javax.ws.rs.core.Context
annotation were removed. The expected improvement
in performance involves no longer creating proxies instances multiple times during the request lifecycle, and drastically reducing the amount of reflection code at runtime.
If you are extending one of the following SPIs:
-
PolicySpi
-
AdminRealmResourceSpi
-
IdentityProviderSpi
-
RealmResourceSPI
You should review your custom JAX-RS (sub)resources in order to obtain any contextual data as follows:
KeycloakSession session = org.keycloak.common.util.Resteasy.getContextData(KeycloakSession.class);
If you need access to the current request and response objects, you can now obtain their instances directly
from the KeycloakSession
:
@Context
org.jboss.resteasy.spi.HttpRequest request;
@Context
org.jboss.resteasy.spi.HttpResponse response;
was replaced by:
KeycloakSession session = // obtain the session, which is usually available when creating a custom provider from a factory
KeycloakContext context = session.getContext();
HttpRequest request = context.getHttpRequest();
HttpResponse response = context.getHttpResponse();
In case you have no access to a KeycloakSession
instance when invoking a JAX-RS resource method, you can obtain
contextual data from the JAX-RS runtime as follows:
KeycloakSession session = org.keycloak.common.util.Resteasy.getContextData(KeycloakSession.class);
Additional contextual data can be obtained from the runtime through the KeycloakContext
instance:
KeycloakSession session = // obtain the session
KeycloakContext context = session.getContext();
MyContextualObject myContextualObject = context.getContextObject(MyContextualObject.class);
Upgrading your custom JAX-RS resources
If you are extending the server’s REST APIs through the following SPIs:
-
PolicySpi
-
AdminRealmResourceSpi
-
IdentityProviderSpi
-
RealmResourceSPI
You need to add an empty META-INF/beans.xml
to the JAR file where your custom providers are packaged. Otherwise, they are not recognized by the server
at runtime.
If you are using RealmResourceSPI
or AdminRealmResourceSpi
, you have the choice between adding an empty file named beans.xml
under META-INF
or annotating the JAX-RS resource classes with the jakarta.ws.rs.ext.Provider
annotation.
You should also make sure your JAX-RS methods are declaring the expected media types for input and output by marking them with the @Consumes
and @Produces
annotations, respectively.
Deprecated methods from data providers and models
In earlier versions of Keycloak, provider and model interfaces underwent a cleanup process that involved deprecating certain methods. In this release the methods were removed and some additional methods were deprecated. The Javadoc for these methods from Keycloak 21 included information about their corresponding replacements.
-
RealmModel#searchForGroupByNameStream(String, Integer, Integer)
was removed. -
UserProvider#getUsersStream(RealmModel, boolean)
was removed. -
UserSessionPersisterProvider#loadUserSessions(int, int, boolean, int, String)
was removed. -
Interfaces added for Streamification work were removed. Such as
RoleMapperModel.Streams
and similar. -
Streams
interfaces in federated storage provider classes were deprecated. -
KeycloakModelUtils#getClientScopeMappings
was removed. -
Deprecated methods from
KeycloakSession
were removed. -
UserQueryProvider#getUsersStream
methods were removed.
Multiple Keycloak instances
Multiple Keycloak CRs may be created in the same namespace and will be managed independently by the operator. To allow for this StatefulSets created by older versions of the operator must be re-created. This will happen automatically when the operator is upgraded and lead to small amount of downtime.
k8s.keycloak.org/v2alpha1 changes
The condition status field was changed from a boolean to a string for conformance with standard Kubernetes conditions. In the CRD it will temporarily be represented as accepting any content, but it will only ever be a string. Please make sure any of your usage of this field is updated to expect the values "True", "False", or "Unknown", rather than true or false.
Keycloak supports IPv4/IPv6 dual stack
Keycloak supports the IPv4/IPv6 dual stack and can be accessible by default via the IPv4 and IPv6 addresses. In the older versions of Keycloak, the default approach was to use only IPv4 addresses.
For more details, see Configure Keycloak Server with IPv4 or IPv6.
Migrating to 21.1.0
Javascript engine available by default on the classpath
In the previous version, when Keycloak was used on Java 17 with Javascript providers (Script authenticator, Javascript authorization policy or Script protocol mappers for OIDC and SAML clients), it was needed to copy javascript engine to the distribution. This is no longer needed as Nashorn javascript engine is available in Keycloak server by default. When you deploy script providers, it is recommended to not copy the nashorn script engine and it’s dependencies into the Keycloak distribution.
Change of the default Client ID mapper of Service Account Client
Default Client ID
mapper of Service Account Client
has been changed. Token Claim Name
field value has been changed from clientId
to client_id
.
client_id
claim is compliant with OAuth2 specifications:
clientId
userSession note still exists.
Keycloak JS adapter must be instantiated with the new
operator
Historically it has been possible to create an instance of the Keycloak JS adapter by calling the Keycloak()
function directly:
const keycloak = Keycloak();
To align this with modern conventions in the JavaScript world it has been possible to use the new
operator to create an instance instead:
const keycloak = new Keycloak();
The function-style constructor has been deprecated for a while, but starting this version we will actively log a deprecation message when it used. This style of constructor will be removed in a future version so make sure to migrate your code to use the new
operator.
Migrating to 21.0.2
Terms and Conditions user attribute migration
The terms_and_conditions
user attribute was accidentally changed in 21.0.0
to uppercase. This version reverts the user attribute back to lowercase.
The value of the attribute is set when accepting Terms and Conditions page.
If any of your custom extensions relies on this attribute, you may need to
adjust your code to check both attributes terms_and_conditions
and
TERMS_AND_CONDITIONS
.
Migrating to 21.0.0
Keycloak uses Micrometer for metrics
Keycloak provides an optional a metrics endpoint which exports metrics in the Prometheus format. In this release the implementation to provide this data switched from SmallRye to Micrometer, which is the recommended metrics library for Quarkus.
Due to this change, metrics have been renamed. The following table shows some examples.
Before upgrading it is recommended to review all metrics returned from the endpoint before and after the change, and update their usage in dashboards and alerts.
Old metric name | New metric name |
---|---|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Deprecated RSA_SHA1 and DSA_SHA1 algorithms for SAML
Algorithms RSA_SHA1
and DSA_SHA1
, which can be configured as Signature algorithms
on SAML adapters, clients and identity providers are deprecated. We recommend to use safer
alternatives based on SHA256
or SHA512
. Also, verifying signatures on signed SAML documents or assertions with these
algorithms do not work on Java 17 or higher. If you use this algorithm and the other party consuming your SAML documents is running on Java 17 or higher, verifying signatures will not work.
The possible workaround is to remove algorithms such as http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#rsa-sha1
or http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#dsa-sha1
from the list
of "disallowed algorithms" configured on property jdk.xml.dsig.secureValidationPolicy
in the file $JAVA_HOME/conf/security/java.security
.
SAML SP metadata changes
In this version, Keycloak will refuse to decrypt assertions encrypted using a realm key generated for signing purpose. This change means all encrypted communication from IDP to SP (where Keycloak acts as the SP) will stop working.
There are two ways to make this work:
-
either update the IDP configuration with the metadata generated by a newer version of Keycloak,
-
or run Keycloak in backward compatibility mode that will make Keycloak work with the metadata generated by older Keycloak versions. This mode can be enabled using
-Dkeycloak.saml.deprecated.encryption=true
flag. Note this backward compatibility mode is planned to be removed in Keycloak 24.
Deprecated methods from user session provider were removed
In Keycloak 13 there was introduced UserLoginFailureProvider
and some methods from
UserSessionProvider
were moved there. The methods in UserSessionProvider
were deprecated
and now has been removed. Javadoc of these methods contained a corresponding replacement
(see Javadoc of Keycloak 20 release).
Custom themes using old admin console won’t work
The old admin console, which was deprecated in previous versions, was finally removed. This also means that your custom themes, which were using it as parent theme or importing from it, won’t work. It is highly recommended to not deploy such themes at all as extending old admin console is not applicable anymore and there can be issues in Keycloak (at least warnings or errors in the logs) with such themes deployed.
Curl has been removed from the container
The Keycloak Container Image has been modified to enhance security. As a result, curl
and other CLI tools have been removed, which you may have been using in your customized image. See the updated container guide for information on how to handle this change.
Migrating to 20.0.0
RESTEasy Version Update
Updated the RESTEasy version of Keycloak Admin REST Client to the next major version.
H2 Version Update
Keycloak ships for development purposes with an H2 database driver. As it is intended for development purposes only, it should never be used in a production environment.
In this release, the H2 driver has been upgraded from version 1.x to version 2.x. This change might require changes to the H2 JDBC URL or migration of the H2 database files in an existing Keycloak setup.
Changes to the H2 JDBC URL
For Keycloak to run with its JPA legacy store with H2 version 2.x, the JDBC URL requires the attribute NON_KEYWORDS=VALUE
.
In a setup where H2 is initialized by Keycloak without extra parameters, Keycloak will append the attribute automatically. This is the default for development setups.
If an H2 JDBC URL is provided on the command line or in a configuration file, and it already contains the NON_KEYWORDS=
attribute in the JDBC URL, this attribute needs to be amended with the VALUE
keyword.
If the connection factory for the H2 database is initialized outside Keycloak, that initialization needs to take care of adding the NON_KEYWORDS
attribute.
See the H2 documentation on the NON_KEYWORDS
attribute for details.
Upgrade of H2 database files
H2 database base files created with H2 version 1.x should not be used with version 2.x.
Purge existing H2 database files to start with an empty database, export and import the realms using Keycloak’s export and import functionality, or refer to the migration notes on the H2 database project’s website for details on how to migrate H2 database contents.
Breaking changes in the new version of Keycloak Operator
In order to use the newest version of the Keycloak Operator, the manual reinstallation and upgrade of your CRs are required. There’s no automated migration. |
This release contains the following breaking changes in Keycloak CRs:
serverConfiguration free-form field was renamed
From now on it’s called additionalOptions
. The idea behind this decision is to align it more with the Keycloak Quarkus distribution and achieve/preserve a naming consistency.
serverConfiguration
can be still used for configuring options that haven’t got a declared alternative in Keycloak custom resources (CRs). A good example of such use can be service providers.
Ingress options were refined
In the past, it used to be defined via the disableDefaultIngress
property. We decided to clarify it a bit, thus from now on you can use the following structure to control your ingress settings:
spec:
...
ingress:
enabled: false
HTTP options were added
Similarly, like with ingress, you can define multiple HTTP options in a better structural manner:
spec:
...
http:
httpEnabled: true
httpPort: 80
httpsPort: 443
tlsSecret: my-tls-secret
Hostname options were added
Last but not least, the hostname options were also changed:
spec:
...
hostname:
hostname: [keycloak-server-hostname]
admin: [admin-console-hostname]
adminUrl: [admin-console-base-url]
strict: [true|false]
strictBackchannel: [true|false]
Some fields are no longer required
The hostname
and tlsSecret
fields are now optional to align with the Quarkus distribution configuration. With that we also removed the possibility to set INSECURE-DISABLE
special value to those fields. In order to disable hostname checks and enable HTTP, please follow the same approach as with the Quarkus distribution, i.e. set strict: false
, strictBackchannel: false
and httpEnabled: true
fields.
OLM channel was changed to fast
The default channel of Keycloak Operator Lifecycle Manager was changed to fast
.
Deprecated methods from data providers and models were removed
Prior to Keycloak 15, there was a clean-up of provider and model interfaces where we deprecated some methods. Javadoc of these methods contained a corresponding replacement method (see Javadoc of Keycloak 19 release). In this release the methods were removed. The following is a list of all changed classes.
The most common patterns for deprecating and removing the methods are the following.
-
Streamification - interfaces now contain only Stream-based methods.
For example in
GroupProvider
interface@Deprecated List<GroupModel> getGroups(RealmModel realm);
was replaced by
Stream<GroupModel> getGroupsStream(RealmModel realm);
More details on streamification work can be found in KEYCLOAK-14011.
-
Consistent parameter ordering - methods now have strict parameter ordering where
RealmModel
is always the first parameter.For example in
UserLookupProvider
interface@Deprecated UserModel getUserById(String id, RealmModel realm);
was replaced by
UserModel getUserById(RealmModel realm, String id)
List of changed interfaces
(o.k.
stands for org.keycloak.
package)
-
server-spi
module-
o.k.credential.CredentialInputUpdater
-
o.k.credential.UserCredentialStore
-
o.k.models.ClientProvider
-
o.k.models.ClientSessionContext
-
o.k.models.GroupModel
-
o.k.models.GroupProvider
-
o.k.models.KeyManager
-
o.k.models.KeycloakSessionFactory
-
o.k.models.ProtocolMapperContainerModel
-
o.k.models.RealmModel
-
o.k.models.RealmProvider
-
o.k.models.RoleContainerModel
-
o.k.models.RoleMapperModel
-
o.k.models.RoleModel
-
o.k.models.RoleProvider
-
o.k.models.ScopeContainerModel
-
o.k.models.UserCredentialManager
-
o.k.models.UserModel
-
o.k.models.UserProvider
-
o.k.models.UserSessionProvider
-
o.k.models.utils.RoleUtils
-
o.k.sessions.AuthenticationSessionProvider
-
o.k.storage.client.ClientLookupProvider
-
o.k.storage.group.GroupLookupProvider
-
o.k.storage.user.UserLookupProvider
-
o.k.storage.user.UserQueryProvider
-
-
server-spi-private
module-
o.k.events.EventQuery
-
o.k.events.admin.AdminEventQuery
-
o.k.keys.KeyProvider
-
All changes are linked to the following issue.
Migrating to 19.0.2
OpenID Connect Logout Prompt
At Keycloak 18.0.0, the logout is now compatible with the new OIDC specification, which changed the handling for the url parameters. However, to also remain compatible with earlier versions, a compatibility flag is introduced. See the Upgrading Guide for further information for the backwards compatibility option, which allows your application to still use the old format for the url parameters.
While the url parameters can now be configured to be compatible, there was still one incompatibility with keycloak 17 and earlier releases. If the user does not provide a valid idTokenHint
, a logout prompt appears instead of a successful logout redirect. Therefore, a new compatibility flag suppress-logout-confirmation-screen
is introduced to suppress the logout screen.
You can enable this parameter when you start the server by entering the following command:
bin/kc.[sh|bat] --spi-login-protocol-openid-connect-suppress-logout-confirmation-screen=true start
With this configuration, you can still use the logout endpoint without a user prompt.
The backwards compatibility switch will be removed in some future version - probably Keycloak 23. You are encouraged to update your clients as soon as possible as described above rather than rely on this switch. |
Deploying scripts through SAML javascript protocol mapper
Until now, administrators, which used SAML javascript protocol mapper on their SAML clients or client scopes, were allowed to upload scripts to the server through the Keycloak Administration Console as well as through the RESTful Admin API.
For now on, this capability is disabled and users should deploy scripts directly to the server. This behaviour is aligned with other script based providers. For more details, please take a look at JavaScript Providers.
UserInfo Endpoint Changes
- Error response changes
-
The UserInfo endpoint is now returning error responses fully compliant with RFC 6750 (The OAuth 2.0 Authorization Framework: Bearer Token Usage). Error code and description (if available) are provided as
WWW-Authenticate
challenge attributes rather than JSON object fields. The responses will be the following, depending on the error condition:-
In case no access token is provided:
401 Unauthorized WWW-Authenticate: Bearer realm="myrealm"
-
In case several methods are used simultaneously to provide an access token (for example, Authorization header + POST access_token parameter), or POST parameters are duplicated:
400 Bad Request WWW-Authenticate: Bearer realm="myrealm", error="invalid_request", error_description="..."
-
In case an access token is missing
openid
scope:403 Forbidden WWW-Authenticate: Bearer realm="myrealm", error="insufficient_scope", error_description="Missing openid scope"
-
In case of inability to resolve cryptographic keys for UserInfo response signing/encryption:
500 Internal Server Error
-
In case of a token validation error, a
401 Unauthorized
is returned in combination with theinvalid_token
error code. This error includes user and client related checks and actually captures all the remaining error cases:401 Unauthorized WWW-Authenticate: Bearer realm="myrealm", error="invalid_token", error_description="..."
-
- Other Changes
-
-
It is now required for access tokens to have the
openid
scope, which is stipulated by UserInfo being a feature specific to OpenID Connect and not OAuth 2.0. If theopenid
scope is missing from the token, the request will be denied with a403 Forbidden
(see above). -
UserInfo now checks the user status, and returns the
invalid_token
response if the user is disabled.
-
Migrating to 19.0.0
New Admin Console is now the default console
The new admin console is now the default console in Keycloak. If you are not able to start using the new admin console it is possible to continue to use the old admin console by disabling the new console, by for example running:
bin/kc.sh start-dev --features-disabled=admin2
An alternative approach to continue using the old admin console is to set the theme for the master realm or any other realm to keycloak
.
As the new admin console is significantly different to the old admin console, is now based on React and uses a newer version of PatternFly, any custom themes will most likely have to be re-implemented from scratch. To create a custom theme for the new admin console the theme should extend keycloak.v2
instead of keycloak
.
If you have explicitly set the admin console theme to keycloak
for the master realm or any other realm, it will continue to use the old admin console. To update to the new admin console you need to change the theme to keycloak.v2
.
The old admin console will be removed in Keycloak 21.
Changes to the server configuration and startup
Before this release, you would use the --auto-build
when running the start
command to tell the server to conditionally run
a build
if any build option has changed prior to starting the server.
In this release, the --auto-build
flag is deprecated and you no longer need to use it to indicate that you want to set build options when
starting the server. Instead, the server is always going to run a build
by default prior to starting the server if any build option has changed.
The new behavior improves the overall experience when configuring and starting the server by making it optional, although highly recommended,
to run a build
command beforehand in order to achieve the best startup time and memory footprint.
Now, in order to achieve the best startup time and memory footprint, set the --optimized
option to disable the new default behavior.
The --optimized
flag tells the server that checking for and running a build
directly as part of the startup is not needed:
kc.sh start --optimized
If you are already using a custom image to set build options and run an optimized Keycloak container, make sure you set the --optimized
option when invoking the
start
command.
For more details, please take a look at the Configuration Guide and the Containers Guide.
Potentially breaking changes to the health endpoints
Before Keycloak 19.0.0, the quarkus based Keycloak distribution always enabled the following non-application endpoints unintentionally:
-
/q/health
-
/q/health/live
-
/q/health/ready
-
/q/metrics
Starting in Keycloak 19.0.0, these endpoints are disabled and a request will result in a 404 HTTP status-code. If you are using the /q/…
endpoints, make sure to change your probes and monitoring systems to use the intended health endpoints instead when upgrading to Keycloak 19.0.0.
The intended health endpoints are:
-
/health
-
/health/live
-
/health/ready
-
/metrics
Apart from disabling the /q/ endpoints, these are the other improvements made to the health endpoints:
-
The
health/live
endpoint used for liveness probes is now decoupled from the database connections health, to match current good practices and to not have the same behaviour as thehealth/ready
endpoint. As a result, the database check is not shown in thechecks:
array anymore when calling/health/live
, so when there is a database hiccup, the liveness probe will still return HTTP status-code 200 and a status of UP, so no pod restart may be triggered. -
The
health/ready
endpoint used for readiness probes still checks for a working database connection. Make sure you have not onlyhealth-enabled=true
but alsometrics-enabled=true
set in your configuration, to enable the database check, resulting in an effective readiness probe. It will return HTTP status-code 503 and a status of DOWN when the database connection is not in a healthy state.
Expect more enhancements in this area in the future. For more information, see the Health guide
Changes using GELF / centralized log management
As stated in the release notes, Keycloak now supports gelf logging for centralized logging systems out of the box.
When you added the gelf related quarkus jars yourself in a prior version, make sure to switch to the supported configuration options in the logging guide and remove your jars from the providers
folder.
Changes affecting developers
Keycloak undergoes large refactoring, which impacts existing code. Some of these changes require updates to existing code. These are in more detailed described below.
Rationale for changes
Keycloak has several limitations; for example, downtime is needed for upgrading a Keycloak cluster. To address the limitations, an in-depth refactor has been initiated.
The changes in this version are mostly attached to storage refactoring and a preparation of a new storage, called map storage. This storage will eventually replace the current storage, which will be called a legacy store with this version. The legacy store will still be available in Keycloak for several more versions.
The new store imposes a strict separation of responsibility between the service and storage layers. For that reason, the service layer’s visibility of an object’s origin will be restricted, so it will not be able to discriminate between cached or non-cached objects, or objects originating from local or federated storage.
User storage SPI will become deprecated. It will be supported for several more versions, but will be eventually replaced by the Map Storage SPI, which will offer the ability to create custom storages for any recognized area, such as users, roles, clients, or groups.
Extensions that rely on the level of detail available to services in the legacy store will need adjustment to retain this ability for the full deprecation period of the legacy store. The following section describes how that adjustment is accomplished.
Using a legacy and map store is mutually exclusive; one store cannot be used while the other is active.
Changes in the module structure
As part of introducing the new storage functionality, several public APIs around storage functionality in KeycloakSession
have been consolidated, and some have been deprecated and will be removed in one of the next versions.
Three new modules have been introduced, and data-oriented code from server-spi
, server-spi-private
, and services
modules have been moved there:
org.keycloak:keycloak-model-legacy
-
Contains all public facing APIs from the legacy store, such as the User Storage API.
org.keycloak:keycloak-model-legacy-private
-
Contains private implementations that relate to user storage management, such as storage
*Manager
classes. org.keycloak:keycloak-model-legacy-services
-
Contains all REST endpoints that directly operate on the legacy store, and have no meaning in the new store.
These modules will be available as long as legacy stores will be supported. After that period, they will be removed.
This change impacts deployments of existing user storage providers in the Wildfly distribution. If your
user storage provider is deployed as a WAR archive, you need to add the META-INF/jboss-deployment-structure.xml
file into that archive
stating the modified dependencies as shown below:
<jboss-deployment-structure xmlns="urn:jboss:deployment-structure:1.2">
<deployment>
<dependencies>
<module name="org.keycloak.keycloak-model-legacy" meta-inf="import"/>
</dependencies>
</deployment>
</jboss-deployment-structure>
Changes in KeycloakSession
KeycloakSession
has been simplified.
Several methods have been deprecated in KeycloakSession
and will be removed in a future version.
KeycloakSession
session contains several methods for obtaining a provider for a particular object type, such as for a UserProvider
there are users()
, userLocalStorage()
, userCache()
, userStorageManager()
, and userFederatedStorage()
.
This situation may be confusing for the developer who has to understand the exact meaning of each method, and depends on current store layout.
The new store does not distinguish federated from local storage.
For those reasons, only the users()
method will be kept in KeycloakSession
, and should replace all other calls listed above.
The rest of the methods are deprecated, and will eventually be removed.
The same pattern of deprecation applies to methods of other object areas, such as clients()
or groups()
.
All methods ending in *StorageManager()
and *LocalStorage()
now throw an exception when being called, as there is no direct replacement in the new store.
The next section describes how to migrate those calls to the new API or use the legacy API while using the old store.
The deprecated methods in KeycloakSession will be removed in a future release.
The keycloak-model-legacy-*
modules will be available for a longer time and will eventually be removed.
Migrating existing providers that do not depend on the legacy store
The existing providers need no migration if they do not call a deprecated method, which should be the case for most providers.
If the provider uses deprecated methods, but does not rely on local versus non-local storage, changing a call from the now deprecated userLocalStorage()
to the method users()
is the best option.
Be aware that the semantics change here as the new method involves a cache if that has been enabled in the local setup.
session.userLocalStorage();
session.users();
Migrating existing providers that depend on the legacy store
In the rare case when a custom provider needs to distinguish between the mode of a particular provider, access to the deprecated objects is provided by using the LegacyStoreManagers
data store provider.
This option will be available only if the legacy modules are part of the deployment.
session.userLocalStorage();
((LegacyDatastoreProvider) session.getProvider(DatastoreProvider.class)).userLocalStorage();
Some user storage related APIs have been wrapped in org.keycloak.storage.UserStorageUtil
for convenience.
Changes to RealmModel
The methods getUserStorageProviders`, getUserStorageProvidersStream
, getClientStorageProviders
, getClientStorageProvidersStream
, getRoleStorageProviders
and getRoleStorageProvidersStream
have been removed.
Code which depends on these methods and runs with the legacy storage enabled should cast the instance as follows:
realm.getClientStorageProvidersStream()...;
((LegacyRealmModel) realm).getClientStorageProvidersStream()...;
Similarly, code that used to implement the interface RealmModel
and wants to provide these methods should implement the new interface LegacyRealmModel
. This interface is a sub-interface of RealmModel
and includes the old methods:
public class MyClass extends RealmModel {
/* might not compile due to @Override annotations for methods no longer present
in the interface RealmModel. /
/ ... */
}
public class MyClass extends LegacyRealmModel {
/* ... */
}
Interface UserCache
moved to the legacy module
As the caching status of objects will be transparent to services, the interface UserCache
has been moved to the module keycloak-legacy
.
Calls to session.userCache()
will therefore return only a UserProvider
, which is a breaking change.
Code that depends on the legacy implementation should access the UserCache
directly.
While such calls might be necessary while caching with the legacy store is used, it will not be necessary when using the new map store, as that one handles caching transparently.
// session.userCache() might return null, null-check omitted for brevity.
session.userCache().evict(realm, user);
// session.getProvider(UserCache.class) might return null, null-check omitted for brevity.
session.getProvider(UserCache.class).evict(realm, user);
To trigger the invalidation of a realm, instead of using the UserCache
API, consider triggering an event:
UserCache cache = session.getProvider(UserCache.class);
if (cache != null) cache.clear();
session.invalidate(InvalidationHandler.ObjectType.REALM, realm.getId());
Credential management for users
Credentials for users were previously managed using session.userCredentialManager().method(realm, user, ...)
.
The new way is to leverage user.credentialManager().method(...)
.
This form gets the credential functionality closer to the API of users, and does not rely on prior knowledge of the user credential’s location in regard to realm and storage.
The old APIs have been deprecated, and will only work when the legacy storage is enabled in the deployment. The new APIs will work with both old and new storages.
session.userCredentialManager().createCredential(realm, user, credentialModel)
user.credentialManager().createStoredCredential(credentialModel)
For a custom UserStorageProvider
, there is a new method credentialManager()
that needs to be implemented when returning a UserModel
.
As those providers run in an environment with the legacy storage enabled, those must return an instance of the LegacyUserCredentialManager
:
credentialManager()
required by UserModel
public class MyUserStorageProvider implements UserLookupProvider, ... {
/* ... */
protected UserModel createAdapter(RealmModel realm, String username) {
return new AbstractUserAdapter(session, realm, model) {
@Override
public String getUsername() {
return username;
}
};
}
}
UserModel.credentialManager()
for the legacy store.public class MyUserStorageProvider implements UserLookupProvider, ... {
/* ... */
protected UserModel createAdapter(RealmModel realm, String username) {
return new AbstractUserAdapter(session, realm, model) {
@Override
public String getUsername() {
return username;
}
@Override
public SubjectCredentialManager credentialManager() {
return new LegacyUserCredentialManager(session, realm, this);
}
};
}
}
Deprecated podDisruptionBudget
in the legacy Keycloak Operator
With this release, we have deprecated podDisruptionBudget
field in the Keycloak CR of the legacy Keycloak Operator.
This optional field will be ignored when the Operator is deployed on Kubernetes version 1.25 and higher.
As a workaround, you can manually create the Pod Disruption Budget in your cluster, for example:
apiVersion: policy/v1
kind: PodDisruptionBudget
metadata:
labels:
app: keycloak
name: keycloak
spec:
maxUnavailable: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
component: keycloak
See also the Kubernetes Documentation.
Deployment changes in the new Keycloak Operator
The new Keycloak Operator now uses StatefulSet
instead of Deployment
for Keycloak deployments. There’s no automated
migration in place given the Operator is a tech preview in this release. If you are using the new Operator with 18.0.z,
please make sure to back up, delete and recreate your Keycloak CR after the upgrade to 19.0.0.
Migrating to 18.0.0
Step-up authentication
Step-up authentication is a new feature. This feature provides the acr
client scope, which contains a protocol mapper that is supposed to add the acr
claim in the token. The acr
claim is not added automatically now as it was before this version, but it is added with the usage
of this client scope and protocol mapper.
The client scope is added as a realm "default" client scope and hence will be added to all newly created clients. For performance reasons,
the client scope is not automatically added to all existing clients during migration. The clients will not have an acr
claim by default after
the migration. Consider these possible actions:
-
If you do not plan to use step-up authentication feature, but you rely on the
acr
claim in the token, you can disablestep_up_authentication
feature. The claim will be added with the value1
in case of normal authentication and0
in case of SSO authentication. -
Add
acr
client scope to your clients manually by admin REST API or admin console. This is needed especially if you want to use step-up authentication. If you have a large number of clients in the realm and want to useacr
claim for all of them, you can trigger some SQL similar to this against your DB. However, remember to clear the cache or restart the server if Keycloak is already started:
insert into CLIENT_SCOPE_CLIENT (CLIENT_ID, SCOPE_ID, DEFAULT_SCOPE) select CLIENT.ID as CLIENT_ID, CLIENT_SCOPE.ID as SCOPE_ID, true as DEFAULT_SCOPE
from CLIENT_SCOPE, CLIENT where CLIENT_SCOPE.REALM_ID='test' and CLIENT_SCOPE.NAME='acr' and CLIENT.REALM_ID='test' and CLIENT.PROTOCOL='openid-connect';
OpenID Connect Logout
Previous versions of Keycloak had supported automatic logout of the user and redirecting to the application by opening logout endpoint URL such as
http(s)://example-host/auth/realms/my-realm-name/protocol/openid-connect/logout?redirect_uri=encodedRedirectUri
. While that implementation was easy to use, it had potentially negative impact
on performance and security. The new version has better support for logout based on the OpenID Connect RP-Initiated Logout specification. The parameter redirect_uri
is no longer supported; also,
in the new version, the user needs to confirm the logout. It is possible to omit the confirmation and do automatic redirect to the application when you include parameter post_logout_redirect_uri
together with the parameter id_token_hint
with the ID Token used for login.
The existing deployments are affected in the following ways:
-
If your application directly uses links to logout endpoint with the
redirect_uri
parameter, you may be required to change this as described above. Consider either removing theredirect_uri
parameter entirely or replacing it with theid_token_hint
andpost_logout_redirect_uri
parameters. -
If you use java adapters and your application does logout by call
httpServletRequest.logout()
, you are not affected because this call uses the backchannel variant of the logout endpoint and that one was not changed. -
If you use the latest javascript adapter, you are also not affected. However if your application uses an older version of the JavaScript adapter, you are affected as this adapter uses the variant of the logout endpoint with the deprecated
redirect_uri
parameter. In this case, you may need to upgrade to the latest version of the JavaScript adapter. -
For the Node.js adapter, the same guideline applies as for the JavaScript adapter. You are encouraged to update to the latest version as the older version of the adapter uses the deprecated
redirect_uri
parameter. With the latest Node.js adapter, you are not affected as long as you use the logout based on the/logout
URL as described in the documentation or in the Node.js adapter example. However, in the case when your application directly uses the methodkeycloak.logoutUrl
, you can consider addingidTokenHint
as the second argument to this method. The possibility to addidTokenHint
as second argument was newly added in this version. TheidTokenHint
needs to be a valid ID Token that was obtained during the login. AddingidTokenHint
is optional, but if you omit it, your users will need to confirm the logout screen as described earlier. Also they will not be redirected back to the application after logout.
There is a backwards compatibility option, which allows your application to still use the old format of the redirect_uri
parameter.
You can enable this parameter when you start the server by entering the following command:
bin/kc.[sh|bat] --spi-login-protocol-openid-connect-legacy-logout-redirect-uri=true start
With this configuration, you can still use the format with the redirect_uri
parameter. Note the confirmation screen will be needed if the id_token_hint
is omitted.
The backwards compatibility switch will be removed in some future version - probably Keycloak 23. You are encouraged to update your clients as soon as possible as described above rather than rely on this switch. |
Removal of the upload-scripts
feature
Previous versions of Keycloak had supported managing JavaScript code through the management interfaces like the administrations console and REST API. Starting from this version this is no longer possible, and you should now deploy your scripts to the server in order to configure the following providers:
-
OpenID Connect Script Mapper
-
Script Authenticator (Authentication Execution)
-
JavaScript Policies
More details about how to deploy scripts to the server are available in the documentation. Note that to use scripts, you are still
required to enable the scripts
technology preview feature.
kc.[sh|bat] start --auto-build --features=preview
When deploying scripts, the server is going to automatically create their corresponding providers so that you can select them when configuring authentication flows, mappers, and authorization policies.
In general, the steps to update your realms are the following:
-
Before upgrading, remove any script provider you are using.
-
After the upgrade, deploy your scripts following the instructions in the documentation.
-
Update your authentication flows, mappers, and the client authorization settings to use the providers created from the scripts deployed to the server.
Account console Patternfly upgrade
The Patternfly (PF) React libraries have been updated, @patternfly/react-core
from v3.153.3 to v4.147.0, @patternfly/react-icons
from v3.15.16 to v 4.11.8, and @patternfly/react-styles
from v3.7.14 to v4.11.8. Several minor UI updates were made to bring the account console into alignment with PF design standards.
Custom developed account UIs might not be compatible with these updates due to the breaking changes in PF. Most breaking changes should be resolvable by updating props on PF components.
Resources:
-
[Patternfly docs](https://www.patternfly.org)
Components known to have breaking changes:
-
Alert
-
action
prop changed toactionClose
-
Expandable
-
renamed to
ExpandableSection
-
Title
-
size attr now uses
TitleSizes
-
DataListContent
-
noPadding
changed tohasNoPadding
-
Grid, Stack, Level, Gallery
-
gutter
attr changed tohasGutter
-
Modal
-
sizing control changed from, e.g.
isLarge
, to useModalVariant
, e.g.variant={ModalVariant.large}
-
Select
-
ariaLabelTypeAhead
totypeAheadAriaLabel
-
isExpanded
toisOpen
-
ariaLabelledBy
toaria-labelledby
-
DataListContent
-
noPadding
tohasNoPadding
Quarkus distribution: Split metrics-enabled option into health-enabled and metrics-enabled
The metrics-enabled
option now only enables the metrics for Keycloak. To enable the readiness and liveness health endpoints, there’s a new boolean option health-enabled
. This allows more fine-grained usage of these options, e.g. enabling metrics but not enabling readiness/liveness probes for on-premise use cases. In order to keep the same behaviour as before when metrics-enabled=true
was set, you need to additionally set health-enabled=true
when building Keycloak.
Migrating to 17.0.0
Default distribution is now powered by Quarkus
The default distribution of Keycloak is now powered by Quarkus, which brings a number of breaking changes to you configure Keycloak and deploy custom providers. For more information check out the Quarkus Migration Guide.
The WildFly distribution of Keycloak is now deprecated, with support ending June 2022. We recommend migrating to the Quarkus distribution as soon as possible. However, if you need to remain on the legacy WildFly distribution for some time, there are some changes to consider:
-
Container images for the legacy distribution tags have changed. To use the legacy distribution use the tags
legacy
or17.0.0-legacy
. -
Download on the website for the legacy distribution has changed to
keycloak-legacy-17.0.0.[zip|tar.gz]
.
If you encounter problems migrating to the Quarkus distribution, missing ability to configure something, or have general ideas and feedback, please open a discussion in GitHub Discussions.
Migrating from the preview Quarkus distribution
A number of things have changed since the preview Quarkus distribution was released in Keycloak 15.1.0. The ideal way to learn about what’s changed is to check out the new Server guides. In summary, the changes include:
-
Container now published to
quay.io/keycloak/keycloak:latest
andquay.io/keycloak/keycloak:17.0.0
-
Download on website renamed to
keycloak-17.0.0.[zip|tar.gz]
. -
conf/keycloak.properties
changed toconf/keycloak.conf
, which unifies configuration keys between the config file and CLI arguments. -
Clearer separation between
build options
andruntime configuration
. -
Custom Quarkus configuration is done through
conf/quarkus.properties
. -
h2-mem
andh2-file
databases renamed todev-mem
anddev-file
. -
Features are now enabled/disabled with
--features
and--features-disabled
replacing the previous approach that had a separate config key for each feature. -
Runtime configuration can no longer be passed to
kc.[sh|bat] build
and is no longer persisted in the build -
Logging level and format is now configured with
--log-level
and--log-format
, while in the past these had to be configured using unsupported Quarkus properties.
Client Policies Migration : client-scopes
If you used a policy including client-scopes condition and edited JSON document directly, you will need to change the "scope" field name in a JSON document to "scopes".
Liquibase upgraded to version 4.6.2
Liquibase was updated from version 3.5.5 to 4.6.2, which includes, among other things, several bug fixes, and a new way of registering custom extensions
using ServiceLoader
.
Migration from previous Keycloak versions to Keycloak 17.0.0 has been extensively tested with all currently supported databases, but we would like to stress the importance of closely following the Upgrading Guide, specifically of backing up existing database before upgrade. While we did our best to test the consequences of the Liquibase upgrade, some installations could be using specific setup unknown to us.
Migrating to 16.0.0
WildFly 25 upgrade
WildFly 25 deprecates the legacy security subsystem that among other things was used to configure TLS. Due to the amount of changes we are not able to provide migration scripts as we have done in the past.
We recommend that rather than copying configuration files from previous versions of Keycloak that you start with the default configuration files provided in Keycloak 16 and apply the relevant changes.
Configuration for the Keycloak subsystem can be copied directly.
For more information around the Elytron subsystem refer to the WildFly documentation.
We are really sorry for this inconvenience and understand this will make it significantly harder for everyone to upgrade to Keycloak 16, but we simply have not been able to find an alternative approach.
One thing worth pointing out is the switch to Quarkus distribution, which we plan to make fully supported in Keycloak 17, will make it significantly easier to configure and upgrade Keycloak.
For more information on WildFly 25 refer to the WildFly 25 release notes.
Proxy environment variables
Keycloak now respects the standard HTTP_PROXY
, HTTPS_PROXY
and NO_PROXY
environment variables for outgoing
HTTP requests. This change could lead to unexpected use of a proxy server if you have for example the HTTP_PROXY
variable defined but have no
explicit proxy mappings specified in your SPI configuration. To prevent Keycloak from using those environment variables,
you can explicitly create a no proxy route for all requests as .*;NO_PROXY
.
Migrating to 14.0.0
Client policies migration
The Client policies feature was a preview feature since Keycloak 12 and did not have proper support. If you tried this feature and configured some client policies or client profiles in Keycloak 12 or Keycloak 13, then you will need to configure your client policies and client profiles again in the new version. The format of the configuration changed significantly as it was only a preview and hence we do not provide automatic migration of client policies and client profiles created in Keycloak 12 or Keycloak 13.
Migrating to 13.0.0
Manual migration step needed
Manual change is required when the standalone.xml contains references to any of the SmallRye modules.
SmallRye modules were removed from the underlying WildFly distribution, and the server does not start
if the configuration references them. Thus if the configuration in the standalone.xml
refers to these modules,
the server configuration migration via migrate-standalone.cli
fails before any changes are made to the configuration.
In such case, to perform server configuration migration, you have to manually remove all the lines that refer
to SmallRye modules. In the default configuration, you need to remove specifically the following lines:
<extension module="org.wildfly.extension.microprofile.config-smallrye"/>
<extension module="org.wildfly.extension.microprofile.health-smallrye"/>
<extension module="org.wildfly.extension.microprofile.metrics-smallrye"/>
<subsystem xmlns="urn:wildfly:microprofile-config-smallrye:1.0"/>
<subsystem xmlns="urn:wildfly:microprofile-health-smallrye:2.0" security-enabled="false" empty-liveness-checks-status="${env.MP_HEALTH_EMPTY_LIVENESS_CHECKS_STATUS:UP}" empty-readiness-checks-status="${env.MP_HEALTH_EMPTY_READINESS_CHECKS_STATUS:UP}"/>
<subsystem xmlns="urn:wildfly:microprofile-metrics-smallrye:2.0" security-enabled="false" exposed-subsystems="*" prefix="${wildfly.metrics.prefix:wildfly}"/>
Upgrade to Wildfly 23
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 23 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 23 server. For example, Infinispan is now
11.0.9.Final
. - Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. However, here are the most important changes, which you may need if you made your own configuration changes:-
The
module
attribute of Infinispan cache containers is now deprecated (unused) and is replaced with themodules
attribute, representing the set of modules associated with this cache container’s configuration. Moreover, there were also additional changes to attributes of various elements, originating from the use of Wildfly 23 as the underlying container. For example, themanaged-executor-service
andmanaged-scheduled-executor-service
elements now recognize the newhung-task-termination-period
attribute. See the Wildfly 23 full model reference for details.
-
Upgrade to Wildfly 22
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 22 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 22 server. For example, Infinispan is now
11.0.8.Final
. - Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. However, here are the most important changes, which you may need if you made your own configuration changes:-
The Eclipse MicroProfile Config, Eclipse MicroProfile Health, and Eclipse MicroProfile Metrics subsystems are replaced with WildFly subsystem for health and WildFly subsystem for base metrics.
-
The default Wildfly configuration now uses the ability to make use of an automatically generated self-signed certificate with Elytron. Refer to a dedicated
applicationSSC
server SSL context section for details.
-
Migrating to 12.0.2
Read-only attributes
There was added support for the read-only user attributes. This includes the user attributes, which are not supposed to be edited by the user or by the administrator when updating user with REST API or with the Keycloak user interfaces. It can be important especially if you use:
-
Custom user storage providers
-
Custom authenticators
-
Custom JavaScript authorization policies, which establish authorization based on some user attribute
-
X.509 authenticator with custom attribute for mapping the X.509 certificate to the user identity
-
Any other custom functionality, where some of the user attributes are used as the metadata for storing authentication/authorization/identity context rather than simple user profile information.
See the details in the Threat model mitigation chapter.
Valid Request URIs
If you use the OpenID Connect parameter request_uri
, a requirement exists that your client needs to have Valid Request URIs
configured.
This can be configured through the admin console on the client details page or through the admin REST API or client registration API. Valid Request URIs need
to contain the list of Request URI values, which are permitted for the particular client. This is to avoid SSRF attacks. There is possibility to use wildcards
or relative paths similarly such as the Valid Redirect URIs
option, however for security purposes, we typically recommend to use as specific value
as possible.
Migrating to 13.0.0
Upgrade to Wildfly 22
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 22 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, but a few changes related to the migration, which are worth mentioning.
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by Wildfly 22 server. For example, Infinispan is now
11.0.8.Final
. - Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. If more detail is needed, because, for example, you did some configuration changes on your own, the list of the most important changes follows:-
The Eclipse MicroProfile Config, Eclipse MicroProfile Health, and Eclipse MicroProfile Metrics subsystems were replaced by WildFly subsystem for health and WildFly subsystem for base metrics.
-
The default Wildfly configuration now utilizes the ability to make use of an automatically generated self-signed certificate with Elytron. Refer to a dedicated
applicationSSC
server SSL context section for details.
-
Migrating to 12.0.0
Upgrade to Wildfly 21
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 21 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 21 server. For example, Infinispan is now 11.0.4.Final.
- Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. However, here are the most important changes, which you may need if you made your own configuration changes:-
The
object-memory
element of Infinispan caches is now deprecated (unused) and is replaced with theheap-memory
element.
-
Skip creation of user session for the Docker protocol authentication
No user session is created after successful authentication with the Docker protocol. For details, please refer to the Server Administration Guide.
Upgrade to PatternFly 4
The Keycloak login theme components have been upgraded to PatternFly 4.
The old PatternFly 3 runs simultaneously with the new one, so it’s possible to keep PF3 components.
However, some changes to the design of the login theme were performed. Please upgrade your custom login theme due them.
An example with the necessary changes can be found in the keycloak/examples/themes/theme/sunrise
directory.
No additional setup is required.
Client Credentials Grant without refresh token by default
From this Keycloak version, the OAuth2 Client Credentials Grant endpoint does not issue refresh tokens by default. This behavior is aligned with the OAuth2 specification.
As a side effect of this change, no user session is created on the Keycloak server side after successful Client Credentials authentication, which results
in improved performance and memory consumption. Clients that use Client Credentials Grant are encouraged to stop using
refresh tokens and instead always authenticate at every request with grant_type=client_credentials
instead of using refresh_token
as grant type.
In relation to this, Keycloak has support for revocation of access tokens in the OAuth2 Revocation Endpoint, hence clients are allowed
to revoke individual access tokens if needed.
For backwards compatibility, a possibility to stick to the behavior of old versions exists. When this is used, the refresh token will be still issued after
a successful authentication with the Client Credentials Grant and also the user session will be created. This can be enabled for the particular client in
the Keycloak admin console, in client details in the section with OpenID Connect Compatibility Modes
with the switch Use Refresh Tokens For Client Credentials Grant
.
Migrating to 11.0.0
Upgrade to Wildfly 20
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 20 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 20 server. For example, Infinispan is now 10.1.8.Final.
- Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. - Cross-Datacenter Replication changes
-
-
You will need to upgrade Infinispan server to version 9.4.19. The older version may still work, but it is not guaranteed as they are not tested anymore.
-
It is recommended to use the
protocolVersion
property added to theremote-store
element when configuring Infinispan caches. When connecting to the Infinispan server 9.4.18, the recommended version of the hotrod protocol version is 2.9 as the Infinispan library version differs among Keycloak server and Infinispan server. For more details, see the Cross-Datacenter documentation. -
It is recommended to use
remoteStoreSecurityEnabled
property underconnectionsInfinispan
subsystem. For more details, see the Cross-Datacenter documentation.
-
LDAP no-import bugfix
In the previous Keycloak version, when the LDAP provider was configured with Import Users
OFF, it was possible to update the
user even if some of non-LDAP mapped attributes were changed. This situation resulted in confusing behavior, when the attribute appeared to be updated,
but it was not. In the current version, the update is not allowed to be performed at all if any non-LDAP mapped attributes are changed.
This should not affect most of the deployments, but some can be affected under some rare circumstances. For example if you previously tried to update a user with the admin REST API and the user had some incorrect attribute changes, the update was possible. With the current version, the update is not possible and you will be immediately informed about the reason.
UserModel changes
The fields username
, email
, firstName
and lastName
in the UserModel
are migrated to custom attributes as a preparation for adding more sophisticated user profiles to Keycloak in an upcoming version.
If a database contains users with custom attributes of that exact name, the custom attributes will need to be migrated before upgrading. This migration does not occur automatically. Otherwise, they will not be read from the database anymore and possibly deleted.
This situation implies that the username
can now also be accessed and set via UserModel.getFirstAttribute(UserModel.USERNAME)
. Similar implications exist for other fields.
Implementers of SPIs subclassing the UserModel
directly or indirectly should ensure that the behavior between setUsername
and setSingleAttribute(UserModel.USERNAME, …)
(and similar for the other fields) is consistent.
Users of the policy evaluation feature have to adapt their policies if they use the number of attributes in their evaluations since every user will now have four new attributes by default.
The public API of UserModel
did not change. No changes to frontend resources or SPIs accessing user data are necessary.
Also, the database did not change yet.
Instagram IdP migrated to new the API
Instagram IdP now uses new API as the old legacy API was deprecated. This requires getting new API credentials. For details, please refer to the Server Administration Guide.
Special attention is required for existing users that use Instagram IdP, specially the ones for whom it is the only authentication option. Such users have to log in to Keycloak using Instagram IdP before September 30th, 2020. After that day they’ll have to use a different authentication method (like password) to log in to manually update their Instagram social link, or create a new account in Keycloak. This is because Instagram user IDs are not compatible between the old and new API, however the new API temporarily returns both new and old user IDs to allow migration. Keycloak automatically migrates the ID once user logs in.
Non-standard token introspection endpoint removed
In previous versions, Keycloak advertised two introspection endpoints: token_introspection_endpoint
and introspection_endpoint
.
The latter is the one defined by RFC-8414. The former, previously deprecated,
has now been removed.
Migrating to 9.0.1
Legacy promise in JavaScript adapter
It is no longer necessary to set promiseType in the JavaScript adapter, and both are available at the same time. It is
recommended to update applications to use native promise API (then
and catch
) as soon as possible, as the legacy API
(success
and error
) will be removed at some point.
Duplicated top level groups
Version 9.0.1 fixes a problem which could create duplicated top level groups in the realm. Nevertheless the existence of previous duplicated groups makes the upgrade process fail. The Keycloak server can be affected by this issue if it is using an H2, MariaDB, MySQL or PostgreSQL database. Before launching the upgrade, check if the server contains duplicated top level groups. For example the following SQL query can be executed at database level to list them:
SELECT REALM_ID, NAME, COUNT(*) FROM KEYCLOAK_GROUP WHERE PARENT_GROUP is NULL GROUP BY REALM_ID, NAME HAVING COUNT(*) > 1;
Only one top level group can exist in each realm with the same name. Duplicates should be reviewed and deleted before the
upgrade. The error in the upgrade contains the message Change Set META-INF/jpa-changelog-9.0.1.xml::9.0.1-
KEYCLOAK-12579-add-not-null-constraint::keycloak failed.
Migrating to 9.0.0
Improved handling of user locale
A number of improvements have been made to how the locale for the login page is selected, as well as when the locale is updated for a user.
See the Server Administration Guide for more details.
Deprecated methods in token representation Java classes
In the year 2038 an int
is no longer able to hold the value of seconds since 1970, as such we are working on updating these to
long
values. Moreover, another issue related with processing of int
values exists in token representation. An int
will by
default result into 0
in the JSON representation, while it should not be included.
See JavaDocs for further details on exact methods that have been deprecated and replacement methods.
Migrating to 8.0.2
More authentication flows changes
- REQUIRED and ALTERNATIVE executions not supported at same flow
-
In previous version, it was possible to have REQUIRED and ALTERNATIVE executions in the same authentication flow at the same level. There were some issues with this approach and we did the refactoring in the Authentication SPI, which means that this is not considered valid anymore. If ALTERNATIVE and REQUIRED executions are configured at the same level, the ALTERNATIVE executions are considered disabled. So when migrating to the newest version, your existing authentication flows will be automatically migrated preserved the same behavior as existed in the previous version. If they contain ALTERNATIVE executions at the same level as some REQUIRED executions, then the ALTERNATIVE executions will be added to the separate REQUIRED subflow. This should ensure same/similar behavior of the particular authentication flow as in the previous version. We always recommend to double-check the configuration of your authentication flow and test it to double-check that everything works as expected. This recommendation is true in particular if you have some more customized authentication flows with custom authenticator implementations.
Migrating to 8.0.0
New default Hostname provider
The old request and fixed hostname providers are replaced with a new default hostname provider. The request and fixed hostname providers are now deprecated and it is recommended to switch to the default hostname provider as soon as possible.
Upgrade to Wildfly 18
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 18 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 18 server. For example, Infinispan is now 9.4.16.Final.
- Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. - Cross-Datacenter Replication changes
-
-
You will need to upgrade Infinispan server to version 9.4.19. The older version may still work, but it is not guaranteed as we don’t test it anymore.
-
Deploying scripts to the server
Until now, administrators were allowed to upload scripts to the server through the Keycloak Administration Console as well as through the RESTful Admin API.
For now on, this capability is disabled by default and users should prefer to deploy scripts directly to the server. For more details, please take a look at JavaScript Providers.
Client credentials in the JavaScript adapter
In the previous releases, developers were allowed to provide client credentials to the JavaScript adapter. For now on, this capability was removed, because client-side apps are not safe to keep secrets.
Authentication flows changes
We did some refactoring and improvements related to the authentication flows, which requires some attention during migration.
- OPTIONAL execution requirement removed
-
Regarding migration, the most important change is removing the support for the OPTIONAL requirement from authentication executions and replacing it with the CONDITIONAL requirement, which allows more flexibility. The existing OPTIONAL authenticators configured in the previous version are replaced with the CONDITIONAL subflows. These subflows have the
Condition - User Configured
condition configured as first execution, and the previously OPTIONAL authenticator (for exampleOTP Form
) as second execution. From the user’s point of view, the behavior during authentication is the same as in the previous version. - Changes in the Java SPI
-
Some changes exist in the Java Authentication SPI and Credential Provider SPI. The interface
Authenticator
is not changed, but you may be affected if you’re developing more advanced authenticators, which introduce some new credential types (subclasses ofCredentialModel
). There are changes on theCredentialProvider
interface and introduction of some new interfaces likeCredentialValidator
. Also you may be affected if your authenticator supported the OPTIONAL execution requirement. It is recommended to double-check the latest authentication examples in the server development guide for more details. - Freemarker template changes
-
Some changes in the freemarker templates exist. You may be affected if you have your own theme with custom freemarker templates for login forms or some account forms, especially for the forms related to OTP. It is recommended to double-check changes in the Freemarker templates in the latest Keycloak and align your templates according to it.
User credentials changes
We added more flexibility around storing of user credentials. Among other things, every user can have multiple credentials of the same type, for example multiple OTP credentials. As a result, some changes to the database schema were performed. However the credentials from the previous version should be automatically updated to the new format and users should be still able to login with their passwords or OTP credentials set in the previous version.
Migrating to 7.0.0
Upgrade to Wildfly 17
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 17 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 17 server. For example, Infinispan is now 9.4.14.Final.
- Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. - Cross-Datacenter Replication changes
-
-
You will need to upgrade Infinispan server to version 9.4.19. The older version may still work, but it is not guaranteed as we don’t test it anymore.
-
Migrating to 6.0.0
Upgrade to Wildfly 16
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 16 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 16 server. For example, Infinispan is now 9.4.8.Final.
- Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. - Cross-Datacenter Replication changes
-
-
You will need to upgrade Infinispan server to version 9.4.19. The older version may still work, but it is not guaranteed as we don’t test it anymore.
-
New optional client scope
We have added a new microprofile-jwt
optional client scope to handle the claims defined in the MicroProfile/JWT Auth Specification.
This new client scope defines protocol mappers to set the username of the authenticated user to the upn
claim and to
set the realm roles to the groups
claim.
Ability to propagate prompt=none to default IDP
We have added a new switch in the OIDC identity provider configuration named Accepts prompt=none forward from client
to identify IDPs that
are able to handle forwarded requests that include the prompt=none
query parameter.
Until now, when receiving an auth request with prompt=none
a realm would return a login_required
error if the user is
not authenticated in the realm without checking if the user has been authenticated by an IDP. From now on, if a default
IDP can be determined for the auth request (either by the use of the kc_idp_hint
query param or by setting up a default IDP
for the realm) and if the Accepts prompt=none forward from client
switch has been enabled for the IDP, the auth request is forwarded to the IDP
to check if the user has been authenticated there.
It is important to note that this switch is only taken into account if a default IDP is specified, in which case we know where to forward the auth request without having to prompt the user to select an IDP. If a default IDP cannot be determined we cannot assume which one will be used to fulfill the auth request so the request forwarding is not performed.
Migrating to 5.0.0
Upgrade to Wildfly 15
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 15 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 15 server. For example, Infinispan is now 9.4.3.Final.
- Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. - Cross-Datacenter Replication changes
-
-
You will need to upgrade Infinispan server to version 9.4.19. The older version may still work, but it is not guaranteed as we don’t test it anymore.
-
Migrating to 4.8.2
Google Identity Provider updated to use Google Sign-in authentication system
The Google Identity Provider implementation in Keycloak up to version 4.8.1 relies on the Google+ API endpoints for authorization and obtaining the user profile. From March 2019 onwards, Google is removing support for the Google+ API in favor of the new Google Sign-in authentication system. The Keycloak identity provider has been updated to use the new endpoints so if this integration is in use make sure you upgrade to Keycloak version 4.8.2 or later.
If you run into an error saying that the application identifier was not found in the directory, you will have to register the client application again in the Google API Console portal to obtain a new application id and secret.
It is possible that you will need to adjust custom mappers for non-standard claims that were provided by Google+ user information endpoint and are provided under different name by Google Sign-in API. Please consult Google documentation for the most up-to-date information on available claims.
LinkedIn social broker updated to Version 2 of LinkedIn APIs
Accordingly with LinkedIn, all developers need to migrate to version 2.0 of their APIs and OAuth 2.0. As such, we have updated our LinkedIn Social Broker.
Existing deployments using this broker may start experiencing errors when fetching user’s profile using version 2 of LinkedIn APIs. This error may be related with the lack of permissions granted to the client application used to configure the broker which may not be authorized to access the Profile API or request specific OAuth2 scopes during the authentication process.
Even for newly created LinkedIn client applications, you need to make sure that the client is able to request the r_liteprofile
and
r_emailaddress
OAuth2 scopes, at least, as well that the client application can fetch current member’s profile from the https://api.linkedin.com/v2/me
endpoint.
Due to these privacy restrictions imposed by LinkedIn in regards to access to member’s information and the limited set of claims returned by the
current member’s Profile API, the LinkedIn Social Broker
is now using the member’s email address as the default username. That means that the r_emailaddress
is always set when
sending authorization requests during the authentication.
Migrating to 4.6.0
New default client scopes
We have added new realm default client scopes roles
and web-origins
. These client scopes contain protocol
mappers to add the roles of the user and allowed web origins to the token. During migration, these client scopes should be
automatically added to all the OpenID Connect clients as default client scopes. Hence no setup should be required after database
migration is finished.
Protocol mapper SPI addition
Related to this, a small addition to the (unsupported) Protocol Mappers SPI exists. You can be affected only if you
implemented a custom ProtocolMapper. A new getPriority()
method on the ProtocolMapper interface got introduced. The method has the
default implementation set to return 0. If your protocol mapper implementation relies on the roles in the access token realmAccess
or resourceAccess
properties, you may need to increase the priority of your mapper.
Audience resolving
Audiences of all the clients, for which authenticated user has at least one client role in the token, are automatically added
to the aud
claim in the access token now. On the other hand, an access token may not automatically contain the audience of the
frontend client, for which it was issued. Read the Server Administration Guide for more details.
JavaScript adapter promise
To use native JavaScript promise with the JavaScript adapter it is now required to set promiseType
to native
in the
init options.
In the past if native promise was available a wrapper was returned that provided both the legacy Keycloak promise and
the native promise. This was causing issues as the error handler was not always set prior to the native error event, which
resulted in Uncaught (in promise)
error.
Microsoft Identity Provider updated to use the Microsoft Graph API
The Microsoft Identity Provider implementation in Keycloak up to version 4.5.0 relies on the Live SDK endpoints for authorization and obtaining the user profile. From November 2018 onwards, Microsoft is removing support for the Live SDK API in favor of the new Microsoft Graph API. The Keycloak identity provider has been updated to use the new endpoints so if this integration is in use make sure you upgrade to Keycloak version 4.6.0 or later.
Legacy client applications registered under "Live SDK applications" won’t work with the Microsoft Graph endpoints due to changes in the id format of the applications. If you run into an error saying that the application identifier was not found in the directory, you will have to register the client application again in the Microsoft Application Registration portal to obtain a new application id.
Upgrade to Wildfly 14
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 14 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 14 server. For example, Infinispan is now 9.3.1.Final.
- Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. - Cross-Datacenter Replication changes
-
-
You will need to upgrade Infinispan server to version 9.4.19. The older version may still work, but it is not guaranteed as we don’t test it anymore.
-
Migrating to 4.4.0
Upgrade to Wildfly 13
The Keycloak server was upgraded to use Wildfly 13 as the underlying container. This does not directly involve any specific Keycloak server functionality, however, note these changes related to migration:
- Dependency updates
-
The dependencies were updated to the versions used by the Wildfly 13 server. For example, Infinispan is now 9.2.4.Final and Undertow is 2.0.9.Final
- Configuration changes
-
A few configuration changes exist in the
standalone(-ha).xml
anddomain.xml
files. You should follow the Downloading the Keycloak server section to handle the migration of configuration files automatically. However, here are the most important changes, which you may need if you made your own configuration changes:-
Element
eviction
on infinispan caches is now deprecated (unused) and is replaced with elementobject-memory
-
The
cache-container
element in Infinispan subsystem does not recognize thejndi-attribute
anymore.
-
- Cross-Datacenter Replication changes
-
-
You will need to upgrade Infinispan server to version 9.4.19. The older version may still work, but it is not guaranteed as we don’t test it anymore.
-
You don’t need to configure security anymore in the Infinispan server configuration file.
-
The
transaction
element needs to be removed from the configuration of replicated caches in the Infinispan server configuration file. This is needed because of the infinispan bug https://issues.redhat.com/browse/ISPN-9323.
-
Migration to 4.3.0
Hostname configuration
In previous versions it was recommended to use a filter to specify permitted hostnames. It is now possible to set a fixed hostname which makes it easier to make sure the valid hostname is used and also allows internal applications to invoke Keycloak through an alternative URL, for example an internal IP address. It is recommended that you switch to this approach in production.
Migrating to 4.0.0
Client Templates changed to Client Scopes
We added support for Client Scopes, which requires some attention during migration.
- Client Templates changed to Client Scopes
-
Client Templates were changed to Client Scopes. If you had any Client Templates, their protocol mappers and role scope mappings will be preserved.
- Spaces replaced in the names
-
Client templates with the space character in the name were renamed by replacing spaces with an underscore, because spaces are not allowed in the name of client scopes. For example, a client template
my template
will be changed to client scopemy_template
. - Linking Client Scopes to Clients
-
For clients which had the client template, the corresponding client scope is now added as
Default Client Scope
to the client. So protocol mappers and role scope mappings will be preserved on the client. - Realm Default Client Scopes not linked with existing clients
-
During the migration, the list of built-in client scopes is added to each realm as well as list of
Realm Default Client Scopes
. However, existing clients are NOT upgraded and new client scopes are NOT automatically added to them. Also all the protocol mappers and role scope mappings are kept on existing clients. In the new version, when you create a new client, it automatically has Realm Default Client Scopes attached to it and it does not have any protocol mappers attached to it. We did not change existing clients during migration as it would be impossible to properly detect customizations, which you will have for protocol mappers of the clients, for example. If you want to update existing clients (remove protocol mappers from them and link them with client scopes), you will need to do it manually. - Consents need to be confirmed again
-
The client scopes change required the refactoring of consents. Consents now point to client scopes, not to roles or protocol mappers. Because of this change, the previously confirmed persistent consents by users are not valid anymore and users need to confirm the consent page again after the migration.
- Some configuration switches removed
-
The switch
Scope Param Required
was removed from Role Detail. The switchesConsent Required
andConsent Text
were removed from the Protocol Mapper details. Those switches are replaced with the Client Scope feature.
Changes to Authorization Services
We added support for UMA 2.0. This version of the UMA specification introduced some important changes on how permissions are obtained from the server.
Here are the main changes introduced by UMA 2.0 support. See Authorization Services Guide for details.
- Authorization API was removed
-
Prior to UMA 2.0 (UMA 1.0), client applications were using the Authorization API to obtain permissions from the server in the format of an RPT. The new version of UMA specification has removed the Authorization API which was also removed from Keycloak. In UMA 2.0, RPTs can now be obtained from the token endpoint by using a specific grant type. See Authorization Services Guide for details.
- Entitlement API was removed
-
With the introduction of UMA 2.0, we decided to leverage the token endpoint and UMA grant type to allow obtaining RPTs from Keycloak and avoid having different APIs. The functionality provided by the Entitlement API was kept the same and is still possible to obtain permissions for a set of one or more resources and scopes or all permissions from the server in case no resource or scope is provided. See Authorization Services Guide for details.
- Changes to UMA Discovery Endpoint
-
UMA Discovery document changed, see Authorization Services Guide for details.
- Changes to Keycloak Authorization JavaScript adapter
-
The Keycloak Authorization JavaScript adapter (keycloak-authz.js) changed in order to comply with the changes introduced by UMA 2.0 while keeping the same behavior as before. The main change is on how you invoke both
authorization
andentitlement
methods which now expect a specific object type representing an authorization request. This new object type provides more flexibility on how permissions can be obtained from the server by supporting the different parameters supported by the UMA grant type.One of the main changes introduced by this release is that you are no longer required to exchange access tokens with RPTs in order to access resources protected by a resource server (when not using UMA). Depending on how the policy enforcer is configured on the resource server side, you can just send regular access tokens as a bearer token and permissions will still be enforced.
- Changes to Keycloak Authorization Client Java API
-
When upgrading to the new version of Keycloak Authorization Client Java API, you’ll notice that some representation classes were moved to a different package in
org.keycloak:keycloak-core
.
Migrating to 3.4.2
Added session_state parameter to OpenID Connect Authentication Response
The OpenID Connect Session Management specification requires that the parameter session_state
is present in the OpenID Connect Authentication Response.
In past releases, we did not have this parameter, but now Keycloak adds this parameter by default, as required by the specification.
However, some OpenID Connect / OAuth2 adapters, and especially older Keycloak adapters, may have issues with this new parameter.
For example, the parameter will be always present in the browser URL after successful authentication to the client application.
In these cases, it may be useful to disable adding the session_state
parameter to the authentication response. This can be done
for the particular client in the Keycloak admin console, in client details in the section with OpenID Connect Compatibility Modes
,
described in Compatibility with older adapters. Dedicated Exclude Session State From Authentication Response
switch exists,
which can be turned on to prevent adding the session_state
parameter to the Authentication Response.
The parameter session_state was added in 3.4.2, however the switch Exclude Session State From Authentication Response was added
in 4.0.0.Beta1. If your Keycloak server is on 3.4.2 or 3.4.3 and you have issues with session_state parameter, you will need
to upgrade the server to 4.0.0.Beta1 or newer.
|
Migrating to 3.2.0
New password hashing algorithms
We’ve added two new password hashing algorithms (pbkdf2-sha256 and pbkdf2-sha512). New realms will use the pbkdf2-sha256 hashing algorithm with 27500 hashing iterations. Since pbkdf2-sha256 is slightly faster than pbkdf2 the iterations was increased to 27500 from 20000.
Existing realms are upgraded if the password policy contains the default value for hashing algorithm (not specified) and iteration (20000). If you have changed the hashing iterations you need to manually change to pbkdf2-sha256 if you’d like to use the more secure hashing algorithm.
ID Token requires scope=openid
OpenID Connect specification requires that parameter scope
with value openid
is used in initial authorization request. So in Keycloak
2.1.0 we changed our adapters to use scope=openid
in the redirect URI to Keycloak. Now we changed the server part too and ID token
will be sent to the application just if scope=openid
is really used. If it’s not used, then ID token will be skipped and just Access token and Refresh token will be sent to the application.
This also allows that you can omit the generation of ID Token on purpose - for example for space or performance purposes.
Direct grants (OAuth2 Resource Owner Password Credentials Grant) and Service accounts login (OAuth2 Client credentials grant) also don’t use ID Token by default now.
You need to explicitly add scope=openid
parameter to have ID Token included.
Authentication sessions and Action tokens
We are working on support for multiple datacenters. As the initial step, we introduced authentication session and action tokens. Authentication session replaces Client session, which was used in previous versions. Action tokens are currently used especially for the scenarios, where the authenticator or requiredActionProvider requires sending email to the user and requires user to click on the link in email.
Here are concrete changes related to this, which may affect you for the migration.
First change related to this is introducing new Infinispan caches authenticationSessions
and actionTokens
in standalone.xml
or standalone-ha.xml
. If you use our migration CLI, you
don’t need to care much as your standalone(-ha).xml
files will be migrated automatically.
Second change is changing of some signatures in methods of authentication SPI. This may affect you if you use custom Authenticator
or
RequiredActionProvider
. Classes AuthenticationFlowContext
and RequiredActionContext
now allow to retrieve authentication session
instead of client session.
We also added some initial support for sticky sessions. You may want to change your load balancer/proxy server and configure it if you don’t want to suffer from it and want to have better performance.
The route is added to the new AUTH_SESSION_ID
cookie. More info in the clustering documentation.
Another change is, that token.getClientSession()
was removed. This may affect you for example if you’re using Client Initiated Identity Broker Linking feature.
The ScriptBasedAuthenticator
changed the binding name from clientSession
to authenticationSession
, so you would need to update your scripts if you’re using this authenticator.
Finally we added some new timeouts to the admin console. This allows you for example to specify different timeouts for the email actions triggered by admin and by user himself.
Migrating to 2.5.1
Migration of old offline tokens
If you migrate from version 2.2.0 or older and you used offline tokens, then your offline tokens didn’t have KID in the token header. We added KID to the token header in 2.3.0 together with the ability to have multiple realm keys, so Keycloak is able to find the correct key based on the token KID.
For the offline tokens without KID, Keycloak 2.5.1 will always use the active realm key to find the proper key for the token verification. In other words, migration of old offline tokens will work. So for example, your user requested offline token in 1.9.8, then you migrate from 1.9.8 to 2.5.1 and then your user will be still able to refresh his old offline token in 2.5.1 version.
But a limitation exists. Once you change the realm active key, the users won’t be able to refresh old offline tokens anymore. So you shouldn’t change the active realm key until all your users with offline tokens refreshed their tokens. Obviously newly refreshed tokens will have KID in the header, so after all users exchange their old offline tokens, you are free to change the active realm key.
Migrating to 2.5.0
Changes to the Infinispan caches
The realms
cache defined in the infinispan subsystem in standalone.xml
or standalone-ha.xml
configuration file, now has the eviction with the 10000 records by default.
This is the same default as the users
cache.
Also the authorization
cache now doesn’t have any eviction on it by default.
Migrating to 2.4.0
Server SPI split into Server SPI and Sever SPI Private
The keycloak-server-spi module has been split into keycloak-server-spi and keycloak-server-spi-private. APIs within keycloak-server-spi will not change between minor releases, while we reserve the right and may quite likely change APIs in keycloak-server-spi-private between minor releases.
Key encryption algorithm in SAML assertions
Key in SAML assertions and documents are now encrypted using RSA-OAEP encryption scheme.
If you want to use encrypted assertions, make sure that service providers understand this encryption scheme.
In the unlikely case that SP would not be able to handle the new scheme, Keycloak
can be made to use legacy RSA-v1.5 encryption scheme when started with system property
keycloak.saml.key_trans.rsa_v1.5
set to true
.
Infinispan caches realms and users are always local
Even if you use Keycloak in cluster, the caches realms
and users
defined in infinispan subsystem in standalone-ha.xml
are
always local caches now. A separate cache work
exists, which handles sending invalidation messages between cluster nodes and informing whole cluster
what records in underlying realms
and users
caches should be invalidated.
Migrating to 2.3.0
Default max results on paginated endpoints
All Admin REST API endpoints that support pagination now have a default max results set to 100. If you want to return
more than 100 entries you need to explicitly specify that with ?max=<RESULTS>
.
realm-public-key
adapter property not recommended
In 2.3.0 release we added support for Public Key Rotation. When admin rotates the realm keys in Keycloak admin console, the Client
Adapter will be able to recognize it and automatically download new public key from Keycloak. However this automatic download of new
keys is done just if you don’t have realm-public-key
option in your adapter with the hardcoded public key. For this reason, we don’t recommend
to use realm-public-key
option in adapter configuration anymore.
Note this option is still supported, but it may be useful just if you really want to have hardcoded public key in your adapter configuration and never download the public key from Keycloak. In theory, one reason for this can be to avoid man-in-the-middle attack if you have untrusted network between adapter and Keycloak, however in that case, it is much better option to use HTTPS, which will secure all the requests between adapter and Keycloak.
Added Infinispan cache keys
In this release, we added new cache keys
to the infinispan subsystem, which is defined in standalone.xml
or standalone-ha.xml
configuration file.
It has also some eviction and expiration defined. This cache is internally used for caching the external public keys of the entities
trusted by the server (Identity providers or clients, which uses authentication with signed JWT).
Migrating to 2.2.0
databaseSchema
property deprecated
The databaseSchema
property for both JPA and Mongo is now deprecated and is replaced with initializeEmpty
and migrationStrategy
. initializeEmpty
can bet set to true
or false
and controls if an empty database should
be initialized. migrationStrategy
can be set to update
, validate
and manual
. manual
is only supported for
relational databases and will write an SQL file with the required changes to the database schema. Please note that
for Oracle database, the created SQL file contains SET DEFINE OFF
command understood by Oracle SQL clients.
Should the script be consumed by any other client, please replace the lines with equivalent command of the tool of
your choice that disables variable expansion or remove it completely if such functionality is not applicable.
Changes in Client’s Valid Redirect URIs
The following scenarios are affected:
-
When a Valid Redirect URI with query component is saved in a Client (e.g.
http://localhost/auth?foo=bar
),redirect_uri
in authorization request must exactly match this URI (or other registered URI in this Client). -
When a Valid Redirect URI without a query component is saved in a Client,
redirect_uri
must exactly match as well. -
Wildcards in registered Valid Redirect URIs are no longer supported when query component is present in this URI, so the
redirect_uri
needs to exactly match this saved URI as well. -
Fragments in registered Valid Redirect URIs (like
http://localhost/auth#fragment
) are no longer allowed.
Authenticate by default removed from Identity Providers
Identity providers no longer has an option to set it as a default authentication provider. Instead go to Authentication, select the Browser
flow and configure the Identity Provider Redirector
. It has an option to set the default identity provider.
Migrating to 1.9.5
Default password hashing interval increased to 20K
The default password hashing interval for new realms has been increased to 20K (from 1 previously). This change will have an impact on performance when users authenticate. For example with the old default (1) it takes less than 1 ms to hash a password, but with the new default (20K) the same operation can take 50-100 ms.
Migrating to 1.9.2
Adapter option auth-server-url-for-backend-requests removed
We’ve removed the option auth-server-url-for-backend-requests due to issues in some scenarios when it was used. In more details, it was possible to access the Keycloak server from 2 different contexts (internal and external), which was causing issues in token validations etc.
If you still want to use the optimization of network, which this option provided (avoid the application to send backchannel requests through load balancer but send them to local Keycloak server directly) you may need to handle it at hosts configuration (DNS) level.
Migrating to 1.9.0
Themes and providers directory moved
We’ve moved the themes and providers directories from standalone/configuration/themes
and standalone/configuration/providers
to themes
and providers
respectively.
If you have added custom themes and providers you need to move them to the new location.
You also need to update keycloak-server.json
as it’s changed due to this.
Adapter subsystems only bring in dependencies if Keycloak is on
Previously, if you had installed our SAML or OIDC Keycloak subsystem adapters into WildFly or JBoss EAP, we would automatically include Keycloak client jars into EVERY application regardless if you were using Keycloak or not. These libraries are now only added to your deployment if you have Keycloak authentication turned on for that adapter (via the subsystem, or auth-method in web.xml)
Client Registration service endpoints moved
The Client Registration service endpoints have been moved from {realm-name}/clients
to {realm-name}/clients-registrations
.
Session state parameter in authentication response renamed
In the OpenID Connect authentication response we used to return the session state as session-state
this is not correct according to the specification and has been renamed to session_state
.
Deprecated OpenID Connect endpoints
In 1.2 we deprecated a number of endpoints that where not consistent with the OpenID Connect specifications, these have now been removed. This also applies to the validate token endpoint that is replaced with the new introspect endpoint in 1.8.
Module and source code reorganization
Most of our modules and source code have been consolidated into two maven modules: keycloak-server-spi and keycloak-services. SPI interfaces are in server-spi, implementations are in keycloak-services. All JPA dependent modules have been consolidated under keycloak-model-jpa. Same goes with mongo and Infinispan under modules keycloak-model-mongo and keycloak-model-infinispan.
Migrating to 1.8.0
Admin account
In previous releases we shipped with a default admin user with a default password, this has now been removed. If you are doing a new installation of 1.8 you will have to create an admin user as a first step.
OAuth2 token introspection
In order to add more compliance with OAuth2 specification, we added a new endpoint for token introspection.
The new endpoint can reached at /realms/{realm-name}/protocols/openid-connect/token/introspect
and it is solely based on RFC-7662
.
The /realms/{realm-name}/protocols/openid-connect/validate
endpoint is now deprecated and we strongly recommend you to move to the new introspection endpoint as soon as possible.
The reason for this change is that RFC-7662 provides a more standard and secure introspection endpoint.
The new token introspection URL can now be obtained from OpenID Connect Provider’s configuration at /realms/{realm-name}/.well-known/openid-configuration
.
There you will find a claim with name token_introspection_endpoint
within the response.
Only confidential clients
are allowed to invoke the new endpoint, where these clients will be usually acting as a resource server and looking for token metadata in order to perform local authorization checks.
Migrating to 1.7.0.CR1
Direct access grants disabled by default for clients
In order to add more compliance with OpenID Connect specification, we added flags into admin console to Client Settings page, where you can enable/disable various kinds of OpenID Connect/OAuth2 flows (Standard flow, Implicit flow, Direct Access Grants, Service Accounts). As part of this, we have Direct Access Grants
(corresponds to OAuth2 Resource Owner Password Credentials Grant
) disabled by default for new clients.
Clients migrated from previous version have Direct Access Grants
enabled just if they had flag Direct Grants Only
on.
The Direct Grants Only
flag was removed as if you enable Direct Access Grants and disable both Standard+Implicit flow, you will achieve same effect.
We also added built-in client admin-cli
to each realm.
This client has Direct Access Grants
enabled.
So if you’re using Admin REST API or Keycloak admin-client, you should update your configuration to use admin-cli
instead of security-admin-console
as the latter one doesn’t have direct access grants enabled anymore by default.
Option 'Update Profile On First Login' moved from Identity provider to Review Profile authenticator
In this version, we added First Broker Login
, which allows you to specify what exactly should be done when new user is logged through Identity provider (or Social provider), but no Keycloak user linked to the social account exists yet.
As part of this work, we added option First Login Flow
to identity providers where you can specify the flow and then you can configure this flow under Authentication
tab in admin console.
We also removed the option Update Profile On First Login
from the Identity provider settings and moved it to the configuration of Review Profile
authenticator.
So once you specify which flow should be used for your Identity provider (by default it’s First Broker Login
flow), you go to Authentication
tab, select the flow and then you configure the option under Review Profile
authenticator.
Element 'form-error-page' in web.xml not supported anymore
form-error-page in web.xml will no longer work for client adapter authentication errors. You must define an error-page for the various HTTP error codes. See documentation for more details if you want to catch and handle adapter error conditions.
IdentityProviderMapper changes
The interface itself and method signatures did not change. However some changes in the behavior exist.
We added First Broker Login
flow in this release and the method IdentityProviderMapper.importNewUser
is now called after First Broker Login
flow is finished.
So if you want to have any attribute available in Review Profile
page, you would need to use the method preprocessFederatedIdentity
instead of importNewUser
. You can set any attribute by invoke BrokeredIdentityContext.setUserAttribute
and that will be available on Review profile
page.
Migrating to 1.6.0.Final
Option that refresh tokens are not reusable anymore
Old versions of Keycloak allowed reusing refresh tokens multiple times.
Keycloak still permits this, but also have an option Revoke refresh token
to disallow it.
Option is under token settings in admin console.
When a refresh token is used to obtain a new access token a new refresh token is also included.
When option is enabled, then this new refresh token should be used next time the access token is refreshed.
It won’t be possible to reuse old refresh token multiple times.
Some packages renamed
We did a bit of restructure and renamed some packages.
It is mainly about renaming internal packages of util classes.
The most important classes used in your application ( for example AccessToken or KeycloakSecurityContext ) as well as the SPI are still unchanged.
However, a slight chance exists that you will be affected and will need to update imports of your classes.
For example if you are using multitenancy and KeycloakConfigResolver, you will be affected as for example class HttpFacade was moved to different package - it is org.keycloak.adapters.spi.HttpFacade
now.
Persisting user sessions
We added support for offline tokens in this release, which means that we are persisting "offline" user sessions into database now.
If you are not using offline tokens, nothing will be persisted for you, so you don’t need to care about worse performance for more DB writes.
However in all cases, you will need to update standalone/configuration/keycloak-server.json
and add userSessionPersister
like this:
"userSessionPersister": {
"provider": "jpa"
},
If you want sessions to be persisted in Mongo instead of classic RDBMS, use provider mongo
instead.
Migrating to 1.5.0.Final
Realm and User cache providers
Infinispan is now the default and only realm and user cache providers. In non-clustered mode a local Infinispan cache is used. We’ve also removed our custom in-memory cache and the no cache providers. If you have realmCache or userCache set in keycloak-server.json to mem or none please remove these. As Infinispan is the only provider the realmCache and userCache objects are no longer needed and can be removed.
Uses Session providers
Infinispan is now the default and only user session provider. In non-clustered mode a local Infinispan cache is used. We’ve also removed the JPA and Mongo user session providers. If you have userSession set in keycloak-server.json to mem, jpa or mongo please remove it. As Infinispan is the only provider the userSession object is no longer needed and can be removed.
For anyone that wants to achieve increased durability of user sessions this can be achieved by configuring the user session cache with more than one owner or use a replicated cache. It’s also possible to configure Infinispan to persist caches, although that would have impacts on performance.
Contact details removed from registration and account management
In the default theme we have now removed the contact details from the registration page and account management. The admin console now lists all the users attributes, not just contact specific attributes. The admin console also has the ability to add/remove attributes to a user. If you want to add contact details, please refer to the address theme included in the examples.
Migrating to 1.3.0.Final
Direct Grant API always enabled
In the past Direct Grant API (or Resource Owner Password Credentials) was disabled by default and an option to enable it on a realm existed. The Direct Grant API is now always enabled and the option to enable/disable for a realm is removed.
Database changed
There are again few database changes. Remember to back up your database prior to upgrading.
UserFederationProvider changed
There are few minor changes in UserFederationProvider interface. You may need to sync your implementation when upgrade to newer version and upgrade few methods, which has changed signature. Changes are really minor, but were needed to improve performance of federation.
WildFly 9.0.0.Final
Following on from the distribution changes that was done in the last release the standalone download of Keycloak is now based on WildFly 9.0.0.Final. This also affects the overlay which can only be deployed to WildFly 9.0.0.Final or JBoss EAP 6.4.0.GA. WildFly 8.2.0.Final is no longer supported for the server.
WildFly, JBoss EAP and JBoss AS7 adapters
There are now 3 separate adapter downloads for WildFly, JBoss EAP and JBoss AS7:
-
eap6
-
wf9
-
wf8
-
as7
Make sure you grab the correct one.
You also need to update standalone.xml as the extension module and subsystem definition has changed. See Securing applications Guides for details.
Migrating from 1.2.0.Beta1 to 1.2.0.RC1
Distribution changes
Keycloak is now available in 3 downloads: standalone, overlay and demo bundle. The standalone is intended for production and non-JEE developers. Overlay is aimed at adding Keycloak to an existing WildFly 8.2 or EAP 6.4 installation and is mainly for development. Finally we have a demo (or dev) bundle that is aimed at developers getting started with Keycloak. This bundle contains a WildFly server, with Keycloak server and adapter included. It also contains all documentation and examples.
Database changed
This release contains again a number of changes to the database. The biggest one is Application and OAuth client merge. Remember to back up your database prior to upgrading.
Application and OAuth client merge
Application and OAuth clients are now merged into Clients
.
The UI of admin console is updated and database as well.
Your data from database should be automatically updated.
The previously set Applications will be converted into Clients with Consent required
switch off and OAuth Clients will be converted into Clients with this switch on.
Migrating from 1.1.0.Final to 1.2.0.Beta1
Database changed
This release contains a number of changes to the database. Remember to back up your database prior to upgrading.
iss
in access and id tokens
The value of iss
claim in access and id tokens have changed from realm name
to realm url
.
This is required by OpenID Connect specification.
If you’re using our adapters no change is required, except if you’ve been using bearer-only without specifying the auth-server-url
, you have to add it now.
If you’re using another library (or RSATokenVerifier) you need to make the corresponding changes when verifying iss
.
OpenID Connect endpoints
To comply with OpenID Connect specification the authentication and token endpoints have been changed to having a single authentication endpoint and a single token endpoint.
As per-spec response_type
and grant_type
parameters are used to select the required flow.
The old endpoints (/realms/{realm-name}/protocols/openid-connect/login
, /realms/{realm-name}/protocols/openid-connect/grants/access
, /realms/{realm-name}/protocols/openid-connect/refresh
, /realms/{realm-name}/protocols/openid-connect/access/codes
) are now deprecated and will be removed in a future version.
Theme changes
The layout of themes has changed.
The directory hierarchy used to be type/name
this is now changed to name/type
.
For example a login theme named sunrise
used to be deployed to standalone/configuration/themes/login/sunrise
, which is now moved to standalone/configuration/themes/sunrise/login
.
This change was done to make it easier to have groups of the different types for the same theme into one folder.
If you deployed themes as a JAR in the past you had to create a custom theme loader which required Java code.
This has been simplified to only requiring a plain text file (META-INF/keycloak-themes.json
) to describe the themes included in a JAR.
Claims changes
Previously a dedicated Claims
tab existed in the admin console for application and OAuth clients.
This was used to configure which attributes should go into access token for particular application/client.
This was removed and is replaced with protocol mappers which are more flexible.
You don’t need to care about migration of database from previous version. We did migration scripts for both RDBMS and Mongo, which should ensure that claims configured for particular application/client will be converted into corresponding protocol mappers (Still it’s safer to back up DB before migrating to newer version though). Same applies for exported JSON representation from previous version.
Social migration to identity brokering
We refactored social providers SPI and replaced it with Identity Brokering SPI, which is more flexible.
The Social
tab in admin console is renamed to Identity Provider
tab.
Again you don’t need to care about migration of database from previous version similarly like for Claims/protocol mappers. Both configuration of social providers and "social links" to your users will be converted to corresponding Identity providers.
Only required action from you would be to change allowed Redirect URI
in the admin console of particular 3rd party social providers.
You can first go to the Keycloak admin console and copy Redirect URI from the page where you configure the identity provider.
Then you can simply paste this as allowed Redirect URI to the admin console of 3rd party provider (IE.
Facebook admin console).
Migrating from 1.1.0.Beta1 to 1.1.0.Beta2
-
adapters are now a separate download. They are not included in appliance and war distribution. We have too many now and the distro is getting bloated.
-
org.keycloak.adapters.tomcat7.KeycloakAuthenticatorValve
+org.keycloak.adapters.tomcat.KeycloakAuthenticatorValve
-
JavaScript adapter now has idToken and idTokenParsed properties. If you use idToken to retrieve first name, email, etc. you need to change this to idTokenParsed.
-
The as7-eap-subsystem and keycloak-wildfly-subsystem have been merged into one keycloak-subsystem. If you have an existing standalone.xml or domain.xml, you will need edit near the top of the file and change the extension module name to org.keycloak.keycloak-subsystem. For AS7 only, the extension module name is org.keycloak.keycloak-as7-subsystem.
-
Server installation is no longer supported on AS7. You can still use AS7 as an application client.
Migrating from 1.0.x.Final to 1.1.0.Beta1
-
RealmModel JPA and Mongo storage schema has changed
-
UserSessionModel JPA and Mongo storage schema has changed as these interfaces have been refactored
-
Upgrade your adapters, old adapters are not compatible with Keycloak 1.1. We interpreted JSON Web Token and OIDC ID Token specification incorrectly. 'aud' claim must be the client id, we were storing the realm name in there and validating it.
Migrating from 1.0 RC-1 to RC-2
-
A lot of info level logging has been changed to debug. Also, a realm no longer has the jboss-logging audit listener by default. If you want log output when users login, logout, change passwords, etc. enable the jboss-logging audit listener through the admin console.
Migrating from 1.0 Beta 4 to RC-1
-
logout REST API has been refactored. The GET request on the logout URI does not take a session_state parameter anymore. You must be logged in in order to log out the session. You can also POST to the logout REST URI. This action requires a valid refresh token to perform the logout. The signature is the same as refresh token minus the grant type form parameter. See documentation for details.
Migrating from 1.0 Beta 1 to Beta 4
-
LDAP/AD configuration is changed. It is no longer under the "Settings" page. It is now under Users→Federation. Add Provider will show you an "ldap" option.
-
Authentication SPI has been removed and rewritten. The new SPI is UserFederationProvider and is more flexible.
-
ssl-not-required
+ssl-required
+all
+external
+none
-
DB Schema has changed again.
-
Created applications now have a full scope by default. This means that you don’t have to configure the scope of an application if you don’t want to.
-
Format of JSON file for importing realm data was changed. Now role mappings is available under the JSON record of particular user.
Migrating from 1.0 Alpha 4 to Beta 1
-
DB Schema has changed. We have added export of the database to Beta 1, but not the ability to import the database from older versions. This will be supported in future releases.
-
For all clients except bearer-only applications, you must specify at least one redirect URI. Keycloak will not allow you to log in unless you have specified a valid redirect URI for that application.
-
Direct Grant API +
ON
-
standalone/configuration/keycloak-server.json
-
JavaScript adapter
-
Session Timeout
Migrating from 1.0 Alpha 2 to Alpha 3
-
SkeletonKeyToken, SkeletonKeyScope, SkeletonKeyPrincipal, and SkeletonKeySession have been renamed to: AccessToken, AccessScope, KeycloakPrincipal, and KeycloakAuthenticatedSession respectively.
-
ServletOAuthClient.getBearerToken() method signature has changed. It now returns an AccessTokenResponse so that you can obtain a refresh token too.
-
adapters now check the access token expiration with every request. If the token is expired, they will attempt to invoke a refresh on the auth server using a saved refresh token.
-
Subject in AccessToken has been changed to the User ID.
Migrating from 1.0 Alpha 1 to Alpha 2
-
DB Schema has changed. We don’t have any data migration utilities yet as of Alpha 2.
-
JBoss and WildFly adapters are now installed via a WildFly subsystem. Please review the adapter installation documentation. Edits to standalone.xml are now required.
-
A new credential type "secret" got introduced. Unlike other credential types, it is stored in plain text in the database and can be viewed in the admin console.
-
Application and OAuth Client credentials are no longer required. These client types are now hard coded to use the "secret" credential type.
-
Because of the "secret" credential change to Application and OAuth Client, you’ll have to update your keycloak.json configuration files and regenerate a secret within the Application or OAuth Client credentials tab in the administration console.
Upgrading the Keycloak server
You upgrade the server before you upgrade the adapters.
Preparing for upgrading
Perform the following steps before you upgrade the server.
-
Shutdown Keycloak.
-
Back up the old installation, such as configuration, themes, and so on.
-
If XA transaction is enabled, handle any open transactions and delete the
data/transaction-logs/
transaction directory. -
Back up the database using instructions in the documentation for your relational database.
The database will no longer be compatible with the old server after you upgrade the server. If you need to revert the upgrade, first restore the old installation, and then restore the database from the backup copy.
In case the feature |
Information about failed logins for the brute force detection and currently ongoing authentication flows is only stored in the internal caches that are cleared when Keycloak is shut down. Users currently authenticating, changing their passwords or resetting their password will need to restart the authentication flow once Keycloak is up and running again. |
Downloading the Keycloak server
Once you have prepared for the upgrade, you can download the server.
-
Download and extract keycloak-26.0.2.zip from the Keycloak website.
After extracting this file, you should have a directory that is named
keycloak-26.0.2
. -
Move this directory to the desired location.
-
Copy
conf/
,providers/
andthemes/
from the previous installation to the new installation.
Migrating the database
Keycloak can automatically migrate the database schema, or you can choose to do it manually. By default the database is automatically migrated when you start the new installation for the first time.
Automatic relational database migration
To perform an automatic migration, start the server connected to the desired database. If the database schema has changed for the new server version, the migration starts automatically unless the database has too many records.
For example, creating an index on tables with millions of records can be time-consuming and cause a major service disruption. Therefore, a threshold of 300000
records exists for automatic migration. If the number of records exceeds this threshold, the index is not created. Instead, you find a warning in the server logs with the SQL commands that you can apply manually.
To change the threshold, set the index-creation-threshold
property, value for the default connections-liquibase
provider:
kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-connections-liquibase-default-index-creation-threshold=300000
Manual relational database migration
To enable manual upgrading of the database schema, set the migration-strategy
property value to "manual" for the
default connections-jpa
provider:
kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-connections-jpa-quarkus-migration-strategy=manual
When you start the server with this configuration, the server checks if the database needs to be migrated.
The required changes are written to the bin/keycloak-database-update.sql
SQL file that you can review and manually run against the database.
To change the path and name of the exported SQL file, set the migration-export
property for the
default connections-jpa
provider:
kc.[sh|bat] start --spi-connections-jpa-quarkus-migration-export=<path>/<file.sql>
For further details on how to apply this file to the database, see the documentation for your relational database. After the changes have been written to the file, the server exits.
Migrating themes
If you created custom themes, those themes must be migrated to the new server. Also, any changes to the built-in themes might need to be reflected in your custom themes, depending on which aspects you customized.
-
Copy your custom themes from the old server
themes
directory to the new serverthemes
directory. -
Use the following sections to migrate templates, messages, and styles.
-
If you customized any of the updated templates listed in Migration Changes, compare the template from the base theme to check for any changes you need to apply.
-
If you customized messages, you might need to change the key or value or to add additional messages.
-
If you customized any styles and you are extending the Keycloak themes, review the changes to the styles. If you are extending the base theme, you can skip this step.
-
Migrating templates
If you customized any template, review the new version to decide about updating your customized template. If you made minor changes, you could compare the updated template to your customized template. However, if you made many changes, consider comparing the new template to your customized template. This comparison will show you what changes you need to make.
You can use a diff tool to compare the templates. The following screenshot compares the info.ftl
template from the Login theme and an example custom theme:
This comparison shows that the first change (Hello world!!
) is a customization, while the
second change (if pageRedirectUri
) is a change to the base theme. By copying the second change to your custom template,
you have successfully updated your customized template.
In an alternative approach, the following screenshot compares the info.ftl
template from the old installation with
the updated info.ftl
template from the new installation:
This comparison shows what has been changed in the base template. You can then manually make the same changes to your modified template. Since this approach is more complex, use this approach only if the first approach is not feasible.
Migrating messages
If you added support for another language, you need to apply all the changes listed above. If you have not added support for another language, you might not need to change anything. You need to make changes only if you have changed an affected message in your theme.
-
For added values, review the value of the message in the base theme to determine if you need to customize that message.
-
For renamed keys, rename the key in your custom theme.
-
For changed values, check the value in the base theme to determine if you need to make changes to your custom theme.
Migrating styles
You might need to update your custom styles to reflect changes made to the styles from the built-in themes. Consider using a diff tool to compare the changes to stylesheets between the old server installation and the new server installation.
For example:
$ diff KEYCLOAK_HOME_OLD/themes/keycloak/login/resources/css/login.css \
KEYCLOAK_HOME_NEW/themes/keycloak/login/resources/css/login.css
Review the changes and determine if they affect your custom styling.
Upgrading Keycloak adapters
After you upgrade the Keycloak server, you can upgrade the adapters. Earlier versions of the adapter might work with later versions of the Keycloak server, but earlier versions of the Keycloak server might not work with later versions of the adapter.
Compatibility with older adapters
Newer versions of the Keycloak server potentially work with older versions of the adapters. However, some fixes of the Keycloak server may break compatibility with older versions of the adapters. For example, a new implementation of the OpenID Connect specification may not match older client adapter versions.
For this situation, you can use Compatibility modes. For OpenID Connect clients, the Admin Console includes OpenID Connect Compatibility Modes on the page with client details. With this option, you can disable some new aspects of the Keycloak server to preserve compatibility with older client adapters. For more details, see the tool tips of individual switches.
Upgrading the EAP adapter
To upgrade the WildFly adapter, complete the following steps:
-
Download the new adapter archive.
-
Remove the previous adapter modules by deleting the
WILDFLY_HOME/modules/system/add-ons/keycloak/
directory. -
Unzip the downloaded archive into
WILDFLY_HOME
.
Upgrading the JavaScript adapter
To upgrade a JavaScript adapter, install the latest version from NPM.
-
npm install keycloak-js@latest
Upgrading the Node.js
adapter
To upgrade a Node.js
adapter that has been copied to your web application, perform the following procedure.
-
Download the new adapter archive.
-
Remove the existing
Node.js
adapter directory -
Unzip the updated file into its place
-
Change the dependency for keycloak-connect in the
package.json
of your application
Upgrading the Keycloak Client Libraries
The client libraries are those artifacts:
-
Java admin client - Maven artifact
org.keycloak:keycloak-admin-client
-
Java authorization client - Maven artifact
org.keycloak:keycloak-authz-client
-
Java policy enforcer - Maven artifact
org.keycloak:keycloak-policy-enforcer
The client libraries are supported with the last supported Keycloak server version.
It is possible that client libraries may work even with the older releases of the Keycloak server, but it is not guaranteed and officially supported.
It may be needed to consult the javadoc of the client libraries like Java admin-client to see what endpoints and parameters are supported with which Keycloak server version.