HI Stian,
Adding SSO zones just to address the theming issue looks a bit overkill to
me as it will eventually come down to doing some theming at a level below
the realm. I was going on the basis that if theming is not set at a client
level, then it will default to the realm level theming which is basically
your SSO enabled zone.
Also my other point was with regard to SaaS based applications where we
have a backoffice system which is themed as per our SaaS product but the
consumer facing front end needs to be themed to be aligned with the
customer's web site. In this case, we cannot go with what KeyCloak has at
present. What I am doing is as suggested by Bill sometime back, adding
"if/else" statements into the freemarker templates and based on the client
id loading different freemarker templates which is not ideal but does the
job.
In any case, since what we are discussing is in general edge cases,
Therefore instead of complicating the core KeyCloak platform, why don't you
just expose the various links/flows that is currently available in the
login process (forgot password/reset credentials, required actions (update
password, verify email, configure OTP, etc.), user account mgmt,
registration, social login etc. Then we are still using the core of
keycloak but for the frontend themes/UI, we use our own.
I also haven't explored the Login SPI which as per the KeyCloak docs which
says "The Login SPI allows implementing the login forms using whatever web
framework or templating engine you want". Wonder if this will give us what
we are after.
Cheers
Travis
On Mon, 4 Jan 2016 at 22:27 Stian Thorgersen <sthorger(a)redhat.com> wrote:
I strongly disagree. With Keycloak you are logging in to a SSO realm,
not
an individual application. With that in mind it's important that the login
screen reflects that. Users need to know the difference as it's an
important distinction. It just doesn't make any sense that I'm logged-in to
the SSO with a login screen that is themed to look like the login screen
for an individual application.
Adding an option on clients to set the theme just doesn't make any sense.
If we added the option to create SSO "zones" or disable SSO for individual
applications then it would make sense to be able to set theme on a per-zone
or apps that doesn't have SSO enabled.
On 31 December 2015 at 09:46, Travis De Silva <traviskds(a)gmail.com> wrote:
> Hi,
>
> My vote is to provide this feature at a client level as per the original
> request.
>
> I think realms should be used for completely different domains when we
> want to isolate users etc. Should not try and use it for something that it
> was not intended in the design.
>
> The reason why you might need theming at client level is iif you really
> think that clients which are essentially different applications most of the
> time and each of these applications might have different look and feel
> themes (either due to different development teams or vendors building
> different applications).
>
> So when someone logins via KeyCloak, its true that we are logging into a
> realm but for an end user, it is really logging into a application and
> there is a need for the login page theme to look similar to the application
> look and feel.
>
> Also I have a use case where I have a back office application that
> requires login for admin users and then I have the front office of this
> application where in addition to the admin users, you also can have other
> users as well who can self register and login to the front end which is a
> consumer facing site.
>
> How I handle this is by having two clients in the same realm. This works
> fine if you are happy with the same backend login theme to be there for the
> consumer facing frontend. But we cannot do that as the front end is a
> consumer facing SaaS site, so each front end needs to have the client's
> website theme. This becomes very hard to do if we don't have theming at a
> client level.
>
> I came across this post from Bill a few months ago
>
http://lists.jboss.org/pipermail/keycloak-user/2015-July/002537.html
>
> I am thinking to make use of the client variable that is available in
> login.ftl and load different freemarker fragments that will then theme it
> differently for each client. As mentioned by Bill, having many if
> conditions might not be ideal but it might meet the requirement.
>
> Cheers
> Travis
>
>
>
>
>
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