Using OpenID Connect (OIDC) Multi-Tenancy
This guide demonstrates how your OpenID Connect (OIDC) application can support multi-tenancy so that you can serve multiple tenants from a single application. Tenants can be distinct realms or security domains within the same OpenID Provider or even distinct OpenID Providers.
When serving multiple customers from the same application (e.g.: SaaS), each customer is a tenant. By enabling multi-tenancy support to your applications you are allowed to also support distinct authentication policies for each tenant even though if that means authenticating against different OpenID Providers, such as Keycloak and Google.
Please read the OIDC Bearer token authentication guide if you need to authorize a tenant using Bearer Token Authorization.
If you need to authenticate and authorize a tenant using OpenID Connect Authorization Code Flow, read the OIDC code flow mechanism for protecting web applications guide.
Also see the OIDC configuration properties reference guide.
准备
要完成本指南,您需要:
-
Roughly 15 minutes
-
An IDE
-
JDK 11+ installed with
JAVA_HOME
configured appropriately -
Apache Maven 3.9.6
-
A working container runtime (Docker or Podman)
-
Optionally the Quarkus CLI if you want to use it
-
Optionally Mandrel or GraalVM installed and configured appropriately if you want to build a native executable (or Docker if you use a native container build)
架构
In this example, we build a very simple application which supports two resource methods:
-
/{tenant}
This resource returns information obtained from the ID token issued by OpenID Provider about the authenticated user and the current tenant.
-
/{tenant}
/bearer
This resource returns information obtained from the Access token issued by OpenID Provider about the authenticated user and the current tenant.
完整源码
We recommend that you follow the instructions in the next sections and create the application step by step. However, you can go right to the completed example.
Clone the Git repository: git clone https://github.com/quarkusio/quarkus-quickstarts.git
, or download
an archive.
The solution is located in the
security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstart
directory.
Creating the Maven Project
First, we need a new project. Create a new project with the following command:
For Windows users:
-
If using cmd, (don’t use backward slash
\
and put everything on the same line) -
If using Powershell, wrap
-D
parameters in double quotes e.g."-DprojectArtifactId=security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstart"
If you already have your Quarkus project configured, you can add the oidc
extension to your project by running the following command in your project
base directory:
quarkus extension add oidc
./mvnw quarkus:add-extension -Dextensions='oidc'
./gradlew addExtension --extensions='oidc'
This will add the following to your build file:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-oidc</artifactId>
</dependency>
implementation("io.quarkus:quarkus-oidc")
Writing the application
Let’s start by implementing the /{tenant}
endpoint. As you can see from
the source code below it is just a regular Jakarta REST resource:
package org.acme.quickstart.oidc;
import jakarta.inject.Inject;
import jakarta.ws.rs.GET;
import jakarta.ws.rs.Path;
import jakarta.ws.rs.Produces;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.jwt.JsonWebToken;
import io.quarkus.oidc.IdToken;
@Path("/{tenant}")
public class HomeResource {
/**
* Injection point for the ID Token issued by the OpenID Connect Provider
*/
@Inject
@IdToken
JsonWebToken idToken;
/**
* Injection point for the Access Token issued by the OpenID Connect Provider
*/
@Inject
JsonWebToken accessToken;
/**
* Returns the ID Token info. This endpoint exists only for demonstration purposes, you should not
* expose this token in a real application.
*
* @return ID Token info
*/
@GET
@Produces("text/html")
public String getIdTokenInfo() {
StringBuilder response = new StringBuilder().append("<html>")
.append("<body>");
response.append("<h2>Welcome, ").append(this.idToken.getClaim("email").toString()).append("</h2>\n");
response.append("<h3>You are accessing the application within tenant <b>").append(idToken.getIssuer()).append(" boundaries</b></h3>");
return response.append("</body>").append("</html>").toString();
}
/**
* Returns the Access Token info. This endpoint exists only for demonstration purposes, you should not
* expose this token in a real application.
*
* @return Access Token info
*/
@GET
@Produces("text/html")
@Path("bearer")
public String getAccessTokenInfo() {
StringBuilder response = new StringBuilder().append("<html>")
.append("<body>");
response.append("<h2>Welcome, ").append(this.accessToken.getClaim("email").toString()).append("</h2>\n");
response.append("<h3>You are accessing the application within tenant <b>").append(accessToken.getIssuer()).append(" boundaries</b></h3>");
return response.append("</body>").append("</html>").toString();
}
}
In order to resolve the tenant from incoming requests and map it to a
specific quarkus-oidc
tenant configuration in application.properties, you
need to create an implementation for the
io.quarkus.oidc.TenantConfigResolver
interface which can be used to
resolve the tenant configurations dynamically:
package org.acme.quickstart.oidc;
import jakarta.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.config.ConfigProvider;
import io.quarkus.oidc.OidcRequestContext;
import io.quarkus.oidc.OidcTenantConfig;
import io.quarkus.oidc.OidcTenantConfig.ApplicationType;
import io.quarkus.oidc.TenantConfigResolver;
import io.smallrye.mutiny.Uni;
import io.vertx.ext.web.RoutingContext;
@ApplicationScoped
public class CustomTenantResolver implements TenantConfigResolver {
@Override
public Uni<OidcTenantConfig> resolve(RoutingContext context, OidcRequestContext<OidcTenantConfig> requestContext) {
String path = context.request().path();
if (path.startsWith("/tenant-a")) {
String keycloakUrl = ConfigProvider.getConfig().getValue("keycloak.url", String.class);
OidcTenantConfig config = new OidcTenantConfig();
config.setTenantId("tenant-a");
config.setAuthServerUrl(keycloakUrl + "/realms/tenant-a");
config.setClientId("multi-tenant-client");
config.getCredentials().setSecret("secret");
config.setApplicationType(ApplicationType.HYBRID);
return Uni.createFrom().item(config);
} else {
// resolve to default tenant config
return Uni.createFrom().nullItem();
}
}
}
From the implementation above, tenants are resolved from the request path so
that in case no tenant could be inferred, null
is returned to indicate
that the default tenant configuration should be used.
Note the tenant-a
application type is hybrid
- it can accept HTTP bearer
tokens if provided, otherwise it will initiate an authorization code flow
when the authentication is required.
Configuring the application
# Default Tenant Configuration
%prod.quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/quarkus
quarkus.oidc.client-id=multi-tenant-client
quarkus.oidc.application-type=web-app
# Tenant A Configuration is created dynamically in CustomTenantConfigResolver
# HTTP Security Configuration
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.paths=/*
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.policy=authenticated
The first configuration is the default tenant configuration that should be
used when the tenant can not be inferred from the request. Note that a
%prod
profile prefix is used with quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url
- it is
done to support testing a multi-tenant application with Dev Services For
Keycloak
. This configuration is using a Keycloak instance to authenticate
users.
The second configuration is provided by TenantConfigResolver
, it is the
configuration that will be used when an incoming request is mapped to the
tenant tenant-a
.
Note that both configurations map to the same Keycloak server instance while
using distinct realms
.
Alternatively you can configure the tenant tenant-a
directly in
application.properties
:
# Default Tenant Configuration
%prod.quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/quarkus
quarkus.oidc.client-id=multi-tenant-client
quarkus.oidc.application-type=web-app
# Tenant A Configuration
quarkus.oidc.tenant-a.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/tenant-a
quarkus.oidc.tenant-a.client-id=multi-tenant-client
quarkus.oidc.tenant-a.application-type=web-app
# HTTP Security Configuration
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.paths=/*
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.policy=authenticated
and use a custom TenantConfigResolver
to resolve it:
package org.acme.quickstart.oidc;
import jakarta.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
import io.quarkus.oidc.TenantResolver;
import io.vertx.ext.web.RoutingContext;
@ApplicationScoped
public class CustomTenantResolver implements TenantResolver {
@Override
public String resolve(RoutingContext context) {
String path = context.request().path();
String[] parts = path.split("/");
if (parts.length == 0) {
// resolve to default tenant configuration
return null;
}
return parts[1];
}
}
You can define multiple tenants in your configuration file, just make sure
they have a unique alias so that you can map them properly when resolving a
tenant from your TenantResolver
implementation.
However, using a static tenant resolution (configuring tenants in
application.properties
and resolving them with TenantResolver
) prevents
testing the endpoint with Dev Services for Keycloak
since Dev Services
for Keycloak
has no knowledge of how the requests will be mapped to
individual tenants and can not dynamically provide tenant-specific
quarkus.oidc.<tenant-id>.auth-server-url
values and therefore using
%prod
prefixes with the tenant-specific URLs in application.properties
will not work in tests or devmode.
When a current tenant represents an OIDC
In fact, this is how Quarkus OIDC resolves static custom tenants itself if
no custom A similar technique can be used with |
If you also use Hibernate ORM
multitenancy or MongoDB with Panache
multitenancy and both tenant IDs are the same and must be extracted from
the Vert.x
|
Starting and Configuring the Keycloak Server
To start a Keycloak Server you can use Docker and just run the following command:
docker run --name keycloak -e KEYCLOAK_ADMIN=admin -e KEYCLOAK_ADMIN_PASSWORD=admin -p 8180:8080 quay.io/keycloak/keycloak:{keycloak.version} start-dev
where keycloak.version
should be set to 17.0.0
or higher.
You should be able to access your Keycloak Server at localhost:8180.
Log in as the admin
user to access the Keycloak Administration
Console. Username should be admin
and password admin
.
Now, follow the steps below to import the realms for the two tenants:
-
Import the default-tenant-realm.json to create the default realm
-
Import the tenant-a-realm.json to create the realm for the tenant
tenant-a
.
For more details, see the Keycloak documentation about how to create a new realm.
Running and Using the Application
Running in Developer Mode
To run the microservice in dev mode, use:
quarkus dev
./mvnw quarkus:dev
./gradlew --console=plain quarkusDev
Running in JVM Mode
When you’re done playing with dev mode, you can run it as a standard Java application.
First compile it:
quarkus build
./mvnw install
./gradlew build
Then run it:
java -jar target/quarkus-app/quarkus-run.jar
Running in Native Mode
This same demo can be compiled into native code: no modifications required.
This implies that you no longer need to install a JVM on your production environment, as the runtime technology is included in the produced binary, and optimized to run with minimal resource overhead.
Compilation will take a bit longer, so this step is disabled by default; let’s build again by enabling the native build:
quarkus build --native
./mvnw install -Dnative
./gradlew build -Dquarkus.package.type=native
After getting a cup of coffee, you’ll be able to run this binary directly:
./target/security-openid-connect-multi-tenancy-quickstart-runner
Test the Application
Use Dev Services for Keycloak
Using Dev Services for
Keycloak is recommended for the integration testing against Keycloak. Dev
Services for Keycloak
will launch and initialize a test container: it will
import configured realms and set a base Keycloak URL for
CustomTenantResolver
used in this quickstart to calculate a realm specific
URL.
First you need to add the following dependencies:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.quarkus</groupId>
<artifactId>quarkus-test-keycloak-server</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.rest-assured</groupId>
<artifactId>rest-assured</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>net.sourceforge.htmlunit</groupId>
<artifactId>htmlunit</artifactId>
<scope>test</scope>
</dependency>
testImplementation("io.quarkus:quarkus-test-keycloak-server")
testImplementation("io.rest-assured:rest-assured")
testImplementation("net.sourceforge.htmlunit:htmlunit")
quarkus-test-keycloak-server
provides a utility class
io.quarkus.test.keycloak.client.KeycloakTestClient
for acquiring the realm
specific access tokens and which you can use with RestAssured
for testing
the /{tenant}/bearer
endpoint expecting bearer access tokens. HtmlUnit
is used for testing the /{tenant}
endpoint and the authorization code
flow.
Next, configure the required realms:
# Default Tenant Configuration
%prod.quarkus.oidc.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/quarkus
quarkus.oidc.client-id=multi-tenant-client
quarkus.oidc.application-type=web-app
# Tenant A Configuration is created dynamically in CustomTenantConfigResolver
# HTTP Security Configuration
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.paths=/*
quarkus.http.auth.permission.authenticated.policy=authenticated
quarkus.keycloak.devservices.realm-path=default-tenant-realm.json,tenant-a-realm.json
Finally, write your test which will be executed in JVM mode:
package org.acme.quickstart.oidc;
import static org.hamcrest.Matchers.containsString;
import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.assertEquals;
import static org.junit.jupiter.api.Assertions.assertTrue;
import java.io.IOException;
import org.junit.jupiter.api.Test;
import com.gargoylesoftware.htmlunit.SilentCssErrorHandler;
import com.gargoylesoftware.htmlunit.WebClient;
import com.gargoylesoftware.htmlunit.html.HtmlForm;
import com.gargoylesoftware.htmlunit.html.HtmlPage;
import io.quarkus.test.junit.QuarkusTest;
import io.quarkus.test.keycloak.client.KeycloakTestClient;
import io.restassured.RestAssured;
@QuarkusTest
public class CodeFlowTest {
KeycloakTestClient keycloakClient = new KeycloakTestClient();
@Test
public void testLogInDefaultTenant() throws IOException {
try (final WebClient webClient = createWebClient()) {
HtmlPage page = webClient.getPage("http://localhost:8081/default");
assertEquals("Sign in to quarkus", page.getTitleText());
HtmlForm loginForm = page.getForms().get(0);
loginForm.getInputByName("username").setValueAttribute("alice");
loginForm.getInputByName("password").setValueAttribute("alice");
page = loginForm.getInputByName("login").click();
assertTrue(page.asText().contains("tenant"));
}
}
@Test
public void testLogInTenantAWebApp() throws IOException {
try (final WebClient webClient = createWebClient()) {
HtmlPage page = webClient.getPage("http://localhost:8081/tenant-a");
assertEquals("Sign in to tenant-a", page.getTitleText());
HtmlForm loginForm = page.getForms().get(0);
loginForm.getInputByName("username").setValueAttribute("alice");
loginForm.getInputByName("password").setValueAttribute("alice");
page = loginForm.getInputByName("login").click();
assertTrue(page.asText().contains("alice@tenant-a.org"));
}
}
@Test
public void testLogInTenantABearerToken() throws IOException {
RestAssured.given().auth().oauth2(getAccessToken()).when()
.get("/tenant-a/bearer").then().body(containsString("alice@tenant-a.org"));
}
private String getAccessToken() {
return keycloakClient.getRealmAccessToken("tenant-a", "alice", "alice", "multi-tenant-client", "secret");
}
private WebClient createWebClient() {
WebClient webClient = new WebClient();
webClient.setCssErrorHandler(new SilentCssErrorHandler());
return webClient;
}
}
and in native mode:
package org.acme.quickstart.oidc;
import io.quarkus.test.junit.QuarkusIntegrationTest;
@QuarkusIntegrationTest
public class CodeFlowIT extends CodeFlowTest {
}
Please see Dev Services for Keycloak for more information about the way it is initialized and configured.
Use Browser
To test the application, you should open your browser and access the following URL:
If everything is working as expected, you should be redirected to the
Keycloak server to authenticate. Note that the requested path defines a
default
tenant which we don’t have mapped in the configuration file. In
this case, the default configuration will be used.
In order to authenticate to the application you should type the following credentials when at the Keycloak login page:
-
Username: alice
-
Password: alice
After clicking the Login
button you should be redirected back to the
application.
If you try now to access the application at the following URL:
You should be redirected again to the login page at Keycloak. However, now
you are going to authenticate using a different realm
.
In both cases, if the user is successfully authenticated, the landing page
will show the user’s name and e-mail. Even though user alice
exists in
both tenants, for the application they are distinct users belonging to
different realms/tenants.
Static tenant configuration resolution
When you set multiple tenant configurations in the application.properties
file, you only need to specify how the tenant identifier gets resolved. To
configure the resolution of the tenant identifier, use one of the following
options:
These tenant resolution options will be tried in turn, in the order they are
listed, until the tenant id gets resolved. If the tenant id remains
unresolved (null
) in the end then the default (unnamed) tenant
configuration will be selected.
Resolve with TenantResolver
The following application.properties
example shows how you can resolve the
tenant identifier of two tenants named a
and b
by using the
TenantResolver
method:
# Tenant 'a' configuration
quarkus.oidc.a.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/quarkus-a
quarkus.oidc.a.client-id=client-a
quarkus.oidc.a.credentials.secret=client-a-secret
# Tenant 'b' configuration
quarkus.oidc.b.auth-server-url=http://localhost:8180/realms/quarkus-b
quarkus.oidc.b.client-id=client-b
quarkus.oidc.b.credentials.secret=client-b-secret
You can return the tenant ID of either a
or b
from
quarkus.oidc.TenantResolver
:
import quarkus.oidc.TenantResolver;
public class CustomTenantResolver implements TenantResolver {
@Override
public String resolve(RoutingContext context) {
String path = context.request().path();
if (path.endsWith("a")) {
return "a";
} else if (path.endsWith("b")) {
return "b";
} else {
// default tenant
return null;
}
}
}
In this example, the value of the last request path segment is a tenant ID, but if required, you can implement a more complex tenant identifier resolution logic.
Default resolution
The default resolution for a tenant identifier is convention based, whereby the authentication request must include the tenant identifier in the last segment of the request path.
The following application.properties
example shows how you can configure
two tenants named google
and github
:
# Tenant 'google' configuration
quarkus.oidc.google.provider=google
quarkus.oidc.google.client-id=${google-client-id}
quarkus.oidc.google.credentials.secret=${google-client-secret}
quarkus.oidc.google.authentication.redirect-path=/signed-in
# Tenant 'github' configuration
quarkus.oidc.github.provider=google
quarkus.oidc.github.client-id=${github-client-id}
quarkus.oidc.github.credentials.secret=${github-client-secret}
quarkus.oidc.github.authentication.redirect-path=/signed-in
In this example, both tenants configure OIDC web-app
applications to use
an authorization code flow to authenticate users and also require session
cookies to get generated after the authentication has taken place. After
either Google or GitHub authenticates the current user, the user gets
returned to the /signed-in
area for authenticated users, for example, a
secured resource path on the JAX-RS endpoint.
Finally, to complete the default tenant resolution, set the following configuration property:
quarkus.http.auth.permission.login.paths=/google,/github
quarkus.http.auth.permission.login.policy=authenticated
If the endpoint is running on http://localhost:8080
, you can also provide
UI options for users to log in to either http://localhost:8080/google
or
http://localhost:8080/github
, without having to add specific`/google` or
/github
JAX-RS resource paths. Tenant identifiers are also recorded in
the session cookie names after the authentication is completed. Therefore,
authenticated users can access the secured application area without
requiring either the google
or github
path values to be included in the
secured URL.
Default resolution can also work for Bearer token authentication but it might be less practical in this case because a tenant identifier will always need to be set as the last path segment value.
Resolve with annotations
You can use the io.quarkus.oidc.Tenant
annotation for resolving the tenant
identifiers as an alternative to using io.quarkus.oidc.TenantResolver
.
Proactive HTTP authentication must be disabled
( |
Assuming your application supports two OIDC tenants (hr
, and default), all
resource methods and classes carrying @Tenant("hr")
will be authenticated
using the OIDC provider configured by quarkus.oidc.hr.auth-server-url
,
while all other classes and methods will still be authenticated using the
default OIDC provider.
import jakarta.ws.rs.GET;
import jakarta.ws.rs.Path;
import jakarta.ws.rs.Produces;
import jakarta.ws.rs.core.MediaType;
import io.quarkus.oidc.Tenant;
import io.quarkus.security.Authenticated;
@Authenticated
@Path("/api/hello")
public class HelloResource {
@Tenant("hr") (1)
@GET
@Produces(MediaType.TEXT_PLAIN)
public String sayHello() {
return "Hello!";
}
}
1 | The io.quarkus.oidc.Tenant annotation must be placed either on resource
class or resource method. |
Dynamic tenant configuration resolution
If you need a more dynamic configuration for the different tenants you want
to support and don’t want to end up with multiple entries in your
configuration file, you can use the io.quarkus.oidc.TenantConfigResolver
.
This interface allows you to dynamically create tenant configurations at runtime:
package io.quarkus.it.keycloak;
import jakarta.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
import java.util.function.Supplier;
import io.smallrye.mutiny.Uni;
import io.quarkus.oidc.OidcRequestContext;
import io.quarkus.oidc.OidcTenantConfig;
import io.quarkus.oidc.TenantConfigResolver;
import io.vertx.ext.web.RoutingContext;
@ApplicationScoped
public class CustomTenantConfigResolver implements TenantConfigResolver {
@Override
public Uni<OidcTenantConfig> resolve(RoutingContext context, OidcRequestContext<OidcTenantConfig> requestContext) {
String path = context.request().path();
String[] parts = path.split("/");
if (parts.length == 0) {
// resolve to default tenant configuration
return null;
}
if ("tenant-c".equals(parts[1])) {
// Do 'return requestContext.runBlocking(createTenantConfig());'
// if a blocking call is required to create a tenant config
return Uni.createFromItem(createTenantConfig());
}
// resolve to default tenant configuration
return null;
}
private Supplier<OidcTenantConfig> createTenantConfig() {
final OidcTenantConfig config = new OidcTenantConfig();
config.setTenantId("tenant-c");
config.setAuthServerUrl("http://localhost:8180/realms/tenant-c");
config.setClientId("multi-tenant-client");
OidcTenantConfig.Credentials credentials = new OidcTenantConfig.Credentials();
credentials.setSecret("my-secret");
config.setCredentials(credentials);
// any other setting support by the quarkus-oidc extension
return () -> config;
}
}
The OidcTenantConfig
returned from this method is the same used to parse
the oidc
namespace configuration from the application.properties
. You
can populate it using any of the settings supported by the quarkus-oidc
extension.
If the dynamic tenant resolver returns null
then a
Static tenant configuration resolution will
be attempted next.
Tenant resolution for OIDC web-app
applications
The simplest option for resolving OIDC web-app
application configuration
is to follow the steps described in the Default
resolution section.
Try one of the options suggested below if the default resolution strategy does not work for your application setup.
Several options are available for selecting the tenant configuration which
should be used to secure the current HTTP request for both service
and
web-app
OIDC applications, such as:
-
Check URL paths, for example, a
tenant-service
configuration has to be used for the "/service" paths, while atenant-manage
configuration - for the "/management" paths -
Check HTTP headers, for example, with a URL path always being '/service', a header such as "Realm: service" or "Realm: management" can help to select between the
tenant-service
andtenant-manage
configurations -
Check URL query parameters - it can work similarly to the way the headers are used to select the tenant configuration
All these options can be easily implemented with the custom TenantResolver
and TenantConfigResolver
implementations for the OIDC service
applications.
However, due to an HTTP redirect required to complete the code
authentication flow for the OIDC web-app
applications, a custom HTTP
cookie may be needed to select the same tenant configuration before and
after this redirect request because:
-
URL path may not be the same after the redirect request if a single redirect URL has been registered in the OIDC Provider - the original request path can be restored but after the tenant configuration is resolved
-
HTTP headers used during the original request are not available after the redirect
-
Custom URL query parameters are restored after the redirect but after the tenant configuration is resolved
One option to ensure the information for resolving the tenant configurations
for web-app
applications is available before and after the redirect is to
use a cookie, for example:
package org.acme.quickstart.oidc;
import java.util.List;
import jakarta.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
import io.quarkus.oidc.TenantResolver;
import io.vertx.core.http.Cookie;
import io.vertx.ext.web.RoutingContext;
@ApplicationScoped
public class CustomTenantResolver implements TenantResolver {
@Override
public String resolve(RoutingContext context) {
List<String> tenantIdQuery = context.queryParam("tenantId");
if (!tenantIdQuery.isEmpty()) {
String tenantId = tenantIdQuery.get(0);
context.addCookie(Cookie.cookie("tenant", tenantId));
return tenantId;
} else if (context.cookieMap().containsKey("tenant")) {
return context.getCookie("tenant").getValue();
}
return null;
}
}
Disabling Tenant Configurations
Custom TenantResolver
and TenantConfigResolver
implementations may
return null
if no tenant can be inferred from the current request and a
fallback to the default tenant configuration is required.
If you expect that the custom resolvers will always infer a tenant then you do not need to configure the default tenant resolution.
-
To disable the default tenant configuration, set
quarkus.oidc.tenant-enabled=false
.
The default tenant configuration is automatically disabled when
|
Note that tenant specific configurations can also be disabled, for example:
quarkus.oidc.tenant-a.tenant-enabled=false
.