openova/platform/keycloak
hatiyildiz 441ebaebb8 fix(charts): pin upstream chart versions/names to ones that exist in their repos
The first Blueprint Release CI run (commit 8c0f766) failed because four chart wrappers referenced upstream chart versions/names that don't exist in their published repositories:

- platform/flux/chart: name was "flux", repo was OCI; actual is name "flux2" in plain helm repo at https://fluxcd-community.github.io/helm-charts. Pinned to 2.13.0.
- platform/openbao/chart: version 2.1.0 was the binary appVersion, not the chart version. Pinned to 0.16.0 chart (which packages openbao 2.1.0 internally).
- platform/keycloak/chart (Bitnami): chart version 25.0.6 was the appVersion of upstream; Bitnami's chart is at 24.7.1 packaging Keycloak 26.0.x. Pinned to 24.7.1.
- platform/nats-jetstream/chart: name was "nats-jetstream"; the upstream chart is named "nats" (it always was — JetStream is a feature of NATS, not a separate chart). Renamed.

Cilium, cert-manager, crossplane, sealed-secrets, spire wrappers were unaffected; their version pins matched upstream availability.

Containerd permission-denied errors from `helm package` on cilium/cert-manager/crossplane/gitea/sealed-secrets are a separate CI plumbing issue (helm tries to pull OCI base images during package build via containerd, but the GitHub Actions runner blocks containerd socket access). Tracked as a follow-up: switch to `helm package --skip-refresh` or use a runner with containerd permissions.

After this commit lands, the next blueprint-release CI run should green-build at minimum the 4 fixed charts. Successful builds publish bp-{flux,openbao,keycloak,nats-jetstream}:1.0.0 OCI artifacts to ghcr.io/openova-io/.
2026-04-28 12:55:21 +02:00
..
chart fix(charts): pin upstream chart versions/names to ones that exist in their repos 2026-04-28 12:55:21 +02:00
blueprint.yaml feat(charts): G2 wrapper Helm charts for 11 bootstrap-kit components + blueprint-release CI 2026-04-28 12:51:06 +02:00
README.md docs(pass-34): banned-term TENANT sweep + keycloak hostname drift 2026-04-27 22:42:50 +02:00

Keycloak

User identity for Catalyst Sovereigns. Per-Sovereign supporting service in the Catalyst control plane (see docs/PLATFORM-TECH-STACK.md §2.3). Also serves as the FAPI Authorization Server for the Fingate (Open Banking) Blueprint.

Status: Accepted | Updated: 2026-04-27

Catalyst topology (set at Sovereign provisioning time, see docs/SECURITY.md §6):

  • per-organization (SME-style Sovereigns, e.g. omantel): one minimal Keycloak per Organization (single replica, embedded H2/sqlite, ~150 MB RAM, no HA). Blast radius limited to one Org.
  • shared-sovereign (corporate self-host, e.g. bankdhofar): one HA Keycloak for the entire Sovereign with multiple realms (one per Organization), federating to the corporation's identity provider (Azure AD, Okta).

Overview

Keycloak provides:

  • User identity for the Catalyst console, marketplace, admin, REST/GraphQL API, and per-Application SSO.
  • OIDC / OAuth 2.0 / SAML federation to corporate IdPs.
  • FAPI 2.0 compliant authorization for the Fingate Open Banking Blueprint:
    • PSD2/FAPI 2.0 certification path
    • eIDAS certificate validation
    • Consent management
    • Multi-tenant TPP support (PSD2 sense — Third Party Providers, not platform tenants)

Architecture

flowchart TB
    subgraph Keycloak["Keycloak"]
        Core[Core IAM]
        FAPI[FAPI Module]
        Consent[Consent Service]
    end

    subgraph Backend["Backend"]
        CNPG[CNPG Postgres]
    end

    subgraph Integration["Integration"]
        Envoy[Envoy/Cilium]
        TPP[TPP Registry]
    end

    Envoy -->|"ext_authz"| FAPI
    FAPI --> Consent
    Core --> CNPG
    FAPI --> TPP

FAPI 2.0 Compliance

Feature Status
PKCE Required
Signed JWT requests Required
mTLS client auth Required
PAR (Pushed Authorization) Required
JARM responses Required

Configuration

Keycloak Deployment

The deployment shape depends on Catalyst's keycloakTopology choice (see banner above):

Corporate (shared-sovereign) — one HA Keycloak per Sovereign in catalyst-keycloak namespace on the management cluster:

apiVersion: k8s.keycloak.org/v2alpha1
kind: Keycloak
metadata:
  name: keycloak
  namespace: catalyst-keycloak
spec:
  instances: 3                          # HA, multiple replicas
  db:
    vendor: postgres
    host: keycloak-postgres-rw.catalyst-keycloak.svc
    port: 5432
    database: keycloak
    usernameSecret:                     # ESO-managed via OpenBao
      name: keycloak-db-credentials
      key: username
    passwordSecret:
      name: keycloak-db-credentials
      key: password
  http:
    tlsSecret: keycloak-tls
  hostname:
    hostname: auth.<location-code>.<sovereign-domain>

SME (per-organization) — one minimal Keycloak per Organization in the Org's namespace on the management cluster:

apiVersion: k8s.keycloak.org/v2alpha1
kind: Keycloak
metadata:
  name: keycloak
  namespace: <org>                     # per-Org namespace
spec:
  instances: 1                          # no HA at SME tier
  db:
    vendor: postgres                    # or H2/sqlite for the smallest tier
    host: keycloak-postgres-rw.<org>.svc
    port: 5432
    database: keycloak
    # ... credentials
  hostname:
    hostname: auth.<org>.<location-code>.<sovereign-domain>

FAPI Realm Configuration

{
  "realm": "open-banking",
  "enabled": true,
  "sslRequired": "all",
  "attributes": {
    "fapi.compliance.mode": "strict",
    "pkce.required": "S256",
    "require.pushed.authorization.requests": "true"
  },
  "clientPolicies": {
    "policies": [
      {
        "name": "fapi-advanced",
        "enabled": true,
        "conditions": [
          {
            "condition": "client-roles",
            "configuration": {
              "roles": ["fapi-client"]
            }
          }
        ],
        "profiles": ["fapi-2-security-profile"]
      }
    ]
  }
}

eIDAS Certificate Validation

TPP certificates are validated against qualified trust service providers:

apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
  name: eidas-config
  namespace: open-banking
data:
  trust-anchors: |
    # QTSPs for eIDAS validation
    - name: qualified-tsp-1
      certificate: |
        -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
        ...
        -----END CERTIFICATE-----    

TPP Client Registration

{
  "clientId": "tpp-12345",
  "clientAuthenticatorType": "client-jwt",
  "redirectUris": ["https://tpp.example.com/callback"],
  "attributes": {
    "tpp.authorization.number": "PSDGB-FCA-123456",
    "tpp.eidas.certificate": "...",
    "tpp.roles": ["AISP", "PISP"]
  },
  "defaultClientScopes": [
    "openid",
    "accounts",
    "payments"
  ]
}

sequenceDiagram
    participant TPP
    participant Keycloak
    participant User
    participant ConsentService

    TPP->>Keycloak: PAR request
    Keycloak->>TPP: request_uri
    TPP->>User: Redirect to Keycloak
    User->>Keycloak: Authenticate
    Keycloak->>ConsentService: Get consent page
    ConsentService->>User: Show accounts/permissions
    User->>Keycloak: Grant consent
    Keycloak->>ConsentService: Store consent
    Keycloak->>TPP: Authorization code

High Availability

HA shape depends on Catalyst's keycloakTopology:

  • shared-sovereign (corporate): 3 replicas behind a Service, CNPG PostgreSQL with WAL streaming to async standby, session replication via Infinispan.
  • per-organization (SME): single replica, no session replication, restart-on-deploy is acceptable for SME-tier SLAs. Larger SMEs can opt into HA via tier upgrade — same Catalyst CR shape, just bumped instances.

Part of OpenOva