[keycloak-dev] Filtering in New Account Console
Marek Posolda
mposolda at redhat.com
Wed Oct 9 14:52:38 EDT 2019
+1
I was thinking a bit about something similar too. One thing is the
performance of figuring the roles. Another thing is that it is possible
that there are many clients, which don't use RBAC at all. Especially now
when we have authorization services. The fact that client doesn't have
role scope mapping for any roles doesn't mean much. Nothing prevents
user to authenticate to such client even if there won't be any roles in
the token.
Marek
On 09. 10. 19 11:38, Stian Thorgersen wrote:
> Adding one perhaps much much simpler approach.
>
> It is not simple/trivial to figure out what clients a user has
> permissions to access, but we do for sure need some way to allow
> sysadmins to limit what applications are listed. A much simpler option
> would be to introduce a simple config option on clients "Always list
> in account console". By default it would be OFF, but sysadmins would
> set it to ON to advertise common applications in the account console.
>
> This would cover the following use-cases:
>
> * Keycloak used with a large amount of clients (lots of third-party
> stuff, etc.) where you only want to list the applications currently in
> use by the user and not use it as a way to discover other apps
> * Keycloak used within a company where they have a few regular apps
> that most users use and they want to advertise these applications
>
> It would not limit the applications listed to applications the user
> can actually access, but it would be good enough for now, and we can
> then add a follow-up to support listing only apps users can access (as
> a configurable option) on-demand in the future.
>
> On Wed, 9 Oct 2019 at 11:33, Stian Thorgersen <sthorger at redhat.com
> <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com>> wrote:
>
>
>
> On Tue, 8 Oct 2019 at 14:59, Marek Posolda <mposolda at redhat.com
> <mailto:mposolda at redhat.com>> wrote:
>
> On 08. 10. 19 7:54, Stian Thorgersen wrote:
>> Ok, I wasn't aware that the old console was able to list
>> applications the user is not currently using. Testing it out
>> I can see now it does indeed do that, but that it is broken
>> as it lists a lot of irrelevant clients.
>>
>> What it should list is:
>>
>> 1. Applications currently in use - this will be any
>> application registered in the session (third party apps need
>> an option to revoke access, which will remove the granted
>> consents)
>> 2. Applications with offline access (these need to somehow be
>> differentiated from the above and have an option to revoke
>> access, which will remove the offline session)
>> 3. Applications that are actual web applications and that are
>> available to the user
>>
>> What we need to discuss is what to do in step 3. It is clear
>> to me that the logic in the old console is not working
>> correctly, so we need a better approach. What users need is
>> the ability to discover applications they can access from the
>> account console, that means it should be web applications
>> with a baseUrl so there can be a link to open the
>> application. It should not list applications just because
>> they require consent or just because they can get an offline
>> token, because that doesn't mean a user can actually start
>> using them. Further, it should be possible for a admin to
>> control what applications are listed there, which they can do
>> based on what applications users have access to and have a
>> baseUrl set on them.
>
> So assuming there are those two groups of clients:
>
> (a) clients, which already has consent or offline access
>
> (b) clients, which can get consent or offline access
>
> Not quite. The groups are:
>
> (a) clients that are already in use
> (b) clients that have consent
> (c) clients that have offline access
> (d) clients that are web applications and the user can access
> (i.e. account service can link to the app and the user can
> actually use the app)
>
> clients should not be listed just because they can get consent or
> offline access, those should only be listed if they fall in (d)
>
> I think that we're in agreement that clients from group (a)
> with already available stuff should be displayed in new
> account console? As there should be a way for the user to
> "Revoke" the consent or offline access and new access console
> doesn't have any other place where to revoke this.
>
> Yes, would have to be here
>
> The reason why I suggest to list also all clients from group
> (b) is some potential usability concern. For example assume
> you have client, which has active offline token, but it hasn't
> any roles (for example because this client doesn't use RBAC).
> Now what will happen is:
>
> - User clicks "Revoke" on client.
>
> - Client will disappear from the new account console because
> user doesn't have any roles for this client and this client
> doesn't have active offline token now.
>
> My question is, isn't it confusing from UX perspective that
> some clients will disappear from the UI when you click
> "Revoke" button? Just some clients will disappear, because
> clients with any permission/role available won't disappear.
>
> Or is it an option that clients won't disappear right-away
> after click "Revoke", but after page refresh? This would mean
> that after click "Revoke" button, UI can't send another REST
> request to obtain fresh list of clients (as that would cause
> client to disappear).
>
> That is the expected behaviour, and would not be confusing. Try
> doing it to GitHub, Google, etc. once you have removed
> access/consent the client is removed from the list.
>
>>
>> I like the idea of using (user has permission for at least
>> one role with any client scope) instead of (user has one
>> role) as front-end clients like SPA type apps won't use any
>> client roles, and it also works when realm roles are used.
>
> Yes, I agree regarding frontend clients.
>
> Besides that, one of the original reasons for the condition
> (user has permission for at least one role with any client
> scope) is, that it matches clients with the role scope to
> "offline_access" role when "offline_access" client scope is
> used. Some time ago, we discussed removing "offline_access"
> role. This will makes sense now when we have client scopes and
> "offline_access" client scope.
>
> But until "offline_access" role is removed, almost all clients
> in the realm will be displayed if we use that condition. I am
> not sure if this is what we want or not (Depends on what we
> agree regarding the UX concern I had in previous paragraph).
>
>>
>> I'm concerned with the approach you (Marek) listed with
>> regards to client scope. Iterating through every client and
>> calling TokenManager.getAccess is going to be incredibly
>> expensive, so is not an option, even with pagination. If you
>> do that with pagination we'd need to fetch 10 clients, run
>> TokenManager.getAccess, find 1 client with access, then
>> continue until we've built enough for a single page. It has
>> to be something that we can actually query directly somehow,
>> but that is difficult with groups and composite roles.
>
> The performance of TokenManager.getAccess is possibly not so
> bad. I did some improvement in this part last year during work
> on client scopes. Most of the things don't need DB query as
> all entities (clients, client scopes, groups, roles, users)
> are cached together with their "direct" role memberships in
> the local infinispan cache. However for deployments with
> thousands of roles or clients, it could be tricky...
>
> What about if there are 10K clients?
>
> Thing is, that AFAIK nobody yet (surprisingly) reported any
> performance issue with the "Applications" tab in the old
> account console even if it doesn't have pagination. Maybe it
> is because people don't use old account console :) But who
> knows...
>
> Stan suggested to wait for feedback before doing pagination. I
> agree with that.
>
> Marek
>
>>
>> On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 at 21:51, Marek Posolda
>> <mposolda at redhat.com <mailto:mposolda at redhat.com>> wrote:
>>
>> On 07. 10. 19 18:09, Stian Thorgersen wrote:
>>> Marek -
>>>
>>> One big difference between the new and the old console
>>> is that the old console only listed applications the
>>> user was currently logged-in to (basically it was listed
>>> in a session, offline or regular). The new console also
>>> lists applications that are available to the user to
>>> log-in to.
>>
>> No, the old account console doesn't list only
>> applications the user is currently logged-in to. It also
>> lists all the applications available to the user.
>>
>> The old account console basically shows all the clients,
>> which matches this pseudo-condition:
>>
>> (client is NOT bearer-only && (client has consent
>> required || (user has permission for at least one role
>> with any client scope)))
>>
>> The last sub-condition is a bit tricky, but simply said,
>> all the clients, which are allowed to retrieve offline
>> token are listed in the old console. Which are defacto
>> almost all clients, which are not bearer-only.
>>
>> My point is, that new account console doesn't have any
>> separate page to manage offline tokens, is it correct? So
>> the "Applications" page of new account console will be
>> still used to revoke offline tokens and consents, right?
>> In that case, the new account console should display all
>> the clients, for which user can obtain consent or offline
>> token. And offline token can by default be retrieved for
>> almost every client in the realm, which is not
>> bearer-only. Which would mean that filtering won't help
>> to filter too much clients. Hence I guess pagination
>> might be probably needed.
>>
>> Marek
>>
>>>
>>> The new console should list applications within a
>>> session in the same way as it is done in the old console
>>> - although not sure removing bearer-only is correct. For
>>> regular sessions only apps that can do a login is
>>> registered in the session, for offline sessions the
>>> client should be listed regardless of its type.
>>>
>>> What we've been discussing here is what is the list of
>>> applications available to a user, but that are not part
>>> of the session. What you are suggesting doesn't make all
>>> that much sense to me in this context.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Mon, 7 Oct 2019 at 16:24, Bruno Oliveira
>>> <bruno at abstractj.org <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org>> wrote:
>>>
>>> I just talked with Stian this morning and we agreed on:
>>>
>>> 1. It's mandatory that Option 1 becomes part version
>>> of the New
>>> Account Console. The current Jira was updated
>>> https://issues.jboss.org/browse/KEYCLOAK-5628 to
>>> reflect such
>>> requirement.
>>>
>>> 2 Filtering and pagination can be postponed for
>>> future releases. Jiras
>>> to follow up on this are here:
>>> - https://issues.jboss.org/browse/KEYCLOAK-11534
>>> - https://issues.jboss.org/browse/KEYCLOAK-11677
>>>
>>> If we are all aboard with this, I think we should
>>> move on. Otherwise,
>>> please let us know.
>>>
>>> On Fri, Oct 4, 2019 at 1:35 PM Marek Posolda
>>> <mposolda at redhat.com <mailto:mposolda at redhat.com>>
>>> wrote:
>>> >
>>> > On 04. 10. 19 16:41, Stan Silvert wrote:
>>> > > On 10/4/2019 10:16 AM, Stian Thorgersen wrote:
>>> > >> Okay, so I've re-read and we're on the same
>>> page I believe. Sorry for
>>> > >> that (trying to do to many things with too
>>> little time).
>>> > >>
>>> > >> Option 1 limiting the list to real apps/UIs and
>>> those the user has
>>> > >> access to is what we should do since you are on
>>> board with this.
>>> > >> Option 2 can then be dropped completely as it
>>> was just a quicker
>>> > >> temporary solution.
>>> > >>
>>> > >> To limit to real apps in addition to what I
>>> listed before I would also
>>> > >> only include apps that have a display name set.
>>> > > Ideally, we should have a flag for this. I
>>> don't like the idea that we
>>> > > have to rely on the administrator to understand
>>> that a display name
>>> > > being blank in admin console conveys a certain
>>> meaning in account console.
>>> > >> To limit apps that users have access to.
>>> Thinking about this some more
>>> > >> and the ideal I think would be to only list
>>> apps where user has at
>>> > >> least one client role. That may be a bit tricky
>>> though, but perhaps a
>>> > >> smart query could solve that? I'm open to other
>>> ideas here for sure
>>> > >> though.
>>> > > I think an approach like that would work. It
>>> would be helpful to an
>>> > > admin if there was something in the admin
>>> console that did this query
>>> > > and showed explicitly which applications a given
>>> user has access to.
>>> >
>>> > BTV. Some similar filtering is already done in the
>>> old account console.
>>> >
>>> > It filtered the "bearerOnly" clients, but it
>>> didn't filter clients
>>> > without baseURL . I think that baseUrl is not
>>> mandatory field for
>>> > clients and IMO many clients don't have it
>>> configured, so not sure
>>> > whether to filter based on that...
>>> >
>>> > In addition to that you need always display
>>> clients with offline-access
>>> > and with granted consent. The old account console
>>> allowed on the
>>> > "Applications" page to see and revoke granted
>>> consents of clients and it
>>> > also allowed to see and revoke granted offline
>>> tokens. So if new account
>>> > console doesn't have any other place to
>>> view/revoke the consents and
>>> > offline tokens, it should be provided on this page.
>>> >
>>> > However if you filter to see just clients with any
>>> client role + clients
>>> > with offline-access and granted consent, it may
>>> create interesting
>>> > situations. For example imagine there is client,
>>> which doesn't have any
>>> > client roles, but it has consent granted or
>>> offline token granted. Now
>>> > user clicks the "revoke consent" (or "revoke
>>> offline token") button.
>>> > This will cause that client will disappear from
>>> the UI because it
>>> > doesn't have any client roles and it doesn't have
>>> any consent or offline
>>> > access. This seems to me like quite confusing
>>> behaviour regarding UX?
>>> > Also it will affect pagination results etc...
>>> >
>>> > With regards to this, I wonder if filtering
>>> shouldn't be the same as it
>>> > was in old account console? This was that client
>>> with consentRequired
>>> > were always included and clients with ANY role in
>>> the token for any
>>> > client scope were always included. The details are
>>> here:
>>> >
>>> https://github.com/keycloak/keycloak/blob/master/services/src/main/java/org/keycloak/forms/account/freemarker/model/ApplicationsBean.java#L67
>>> >
>>> > It is quite complex to compute if client has
>>> permission to see any
>>> > single role. You need to make composite roles into
>>> account etc. Hence
>>> > there is call to TokenManager.getAccess . The
>>> performance of this is not
>>> > very great, however if you have pagination with
>>> showing only 10 clients
>>> > per page, it should be just fine to use this IMO.
>>> >
>>> > In shortcut: I suggest to use exactly same
>>> filtering as done by old
>>> > account console. but add pagination support to it
>>> (which wasn't provided
>>> > by old account console). Or alternatively, if new
>>> account console has
>>> > separate page to manage offline tokens (which it
>>> maybe should have?)
>>> > then filtering can be done to display clients that:
>>> >
>>> > are NOT bearerOnly && (have consentRequired OR
>>> have any client role
>>> > available).
>>> >
>>> > By "client role available", you may still need to
>>> consider composite
>>> > roles, all possible client scopes etc, so the call to
>>> > "TokenManager.getAccess" will be still needed.
>>> >
>>> > Marek
>>> >
>>> > >
>>> > >> On Fri, 4 Oct 2019, 16:10 Stian Thorgersen,
>>> <sthorger at redhat.com <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com>
>>> > >> <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com
>>> <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com>>> wrote:
>>> > >>
>>> > >> My bad. I was thinking about comment 1, 2
>>> and 3 from my first reply.
>>> > >>
>>> > >> Let me re-read the whole thing again ;)
>>> > >>
>>> > >> On Fri, 4 Oct 2019, 15:42 Bruno Oliveira,
>>> <bruno at abstractj.org <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org>
>>> > >> <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org
>>> <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org>>> wrote:
>>> > >>
>>> > >> My comments were pretty much based on
>>> the items you mentioned:
>>> > >>
>>> > >> > 1) Limit the list to clients that
>>> are applications and that
>>> > >> the user has access to (I suggested a
>>> fairly simple approach,
>>> > >> which I believe should work)
>>> > >>
>>> > >> That wouldn't list the clients
>>> regardless if the user has
>>> > >> access to
>>> > >> them or not. So I'm not sure where the
>>> security issue is.
>>> > >> Unless I'm
>>> > >> missing something.
>>> > >>
>>> > >> > 2) Only list clients from active
>>> sessions - then add a
>>> > >> follow-up for 1
>>> > >> at some point in the future
>>> > >> Yes, that's possible, but as you
>>> mentioned something to postpone
>>> > >> unless badly needed. If we keep
>>> increasing the scope of what
>>> > >> we aim,
>>> > >> this may become an endless task.
>>> > >>
>>> > >> So here are my questions:
>>> > >> - Are we in agreement that #1 should
>>> be part of our
>>> > >> deliverable for
>>> > >> the first release of the new account
>>> console and #2
>>> > >> implemented later?
>>> > >> - If yes, are we ok about postponing
>>> pagination/filtering?
>>> > >>
>>> > >>
>>> > >> On Fri, Oct 4, 2019 at 10:24 AM Stian
>>> Thorgersen
>>> > >> <sthorger at redhat.com
>>> <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com>
>>> <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com
>>> <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com>>> wrote:
>>> > >> >
>>> > >> > We're not on the same page. #2 is
>>> absolutely not redundant
>>> > >> with #1. It is both a security issue
>>> and a usability issue to
>>> > >> list all applications regardless if
>>> the user has access to
>>> > >> them or not.
>>> > >> >
>>> > >> > One more not devices page should not
>>> list applications with
>>> > >> offline access (offline sessions)
>>> those should be on app page
>>> > >> (or a separate place?!?)
>>> > >> >
>>> > >> > On Fri, 4 Oct 2019, 14:49 Bruno
>>> Oliveira,
>>> > >> <bruno at abstractj.org
>>> <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org>
>>> <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org
>>> <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org>>> wrote:
>>> > >> >>
>>> > >> >> I believe that we're all in
>>> agreement that we don't need
>>> > >> pagination
>>> > >> >> for the Applications endpoint.
>>> > >> >>
>>> > >> >> And I have the same impression as
>>> Stan, #1 makes perfect
>>> > >> sense and
>>> > >> >> once it's done should make #2
>>> redundant. If we are on the
>>> > >> same page
>>> > >> >> about this, I can update
>>> > >> >>
>>> https://issues.jboss.org/browse/KEYCLOAK-5628.
>>> > >> >>
>>> > >> >> Another question is: assuming that
>>> we implement #1. Do we
>>> > >> still need
>>> > >> >> filtering
>>> (https://issues.jboss.org/browse/KEYCLOAK-11534)?
>>> > >> >>
>>> > >> >>
>>> > >> >> On Fri, Oct 4, 2019 at 8:59 AM
>>> Stian Thorgersen
>>> > >> <sthorger at redhat.com
>>> <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com>
>>> <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com
>>> <mailto:sthorger at redhat.com>>> wrote:
>>> > >> >> >
>>> > >> >> > You can not have an application
>>> page in the new account
>>> > >> console that lists every client there
>>> is in a realm. As I said
>>> > >> a large portion of those will not be
>>> actual applications, and
>>> > >> a portion will be applications that
>>> the user does not have
>>> > >> access to.
>>> > >> >> >
>>> > >> >> > There's really two choices here:
>>> > >> >> >
>>> > >> >> > 1) Limit the list to clients that
>>> are actually
>>> > >> applications and that the user has
>>> access to (I suggested a
>>> > >> fairly simple approach, which I
>>> believe should work)
>>> > >> >> > 2) Only list clients from active
>>> sessions - then add a
>>> > >> follow-up for 1 at some point in the
>>> future
>>> > >> >> >
>>> > >> >> > My preference here would be 1 for
>>> sure as if this is done
>>> > >> right it would be a good value add for
>>> users to have a place
>>> > >> to discover available applications.
>>> > >> >> >
>>> > >> >> > On Thu, 3 Oct 2019 at 11:54,
>>> Bruno Oliveira
>>> > >> <bruno at abstractj.org
>>> <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org>
>>> <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org
>>> <mailto:bruno at abstractj.org>>> wrote:
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> On 2019-10-03, Stian Thorgersen
>>> wrote:
>>> > >> >> >> > Simply returning all clients
>>> is not going to work for
>>> > >> a few reasons:
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > * It will return clients that
>>> are not applications/UIs
>>> > >> >> >> > * It can return applications
>>> the user doesn't have
>>> > >> access to
>>> > >> >> >> > * There can be thousands (in
>>> fact we know about users
>>> > >> with 10K+ clients)
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > That means we need the following:
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > 1) Limit clients returned by
>>> the REST endpoint to only
>>> > >> those that are
>>> > >> >> >> > indeed applications/UIs
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> That makes sense, at the same
>>> time, not part of our
>>> > >> requirements into the
>>> > >> >> >> Jira:
>>> https://issues.jboss.org/browse/KEYCLOAK-5628.
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> Doug is working on it, and if
>>> there's anything that has
>>> > >> to change, I'd
>>> > >> >> >> suggest we bring this up in the
>>> same Jira.
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> > 2) Limit applications to those
>>> the user has access to
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> Same as my previous comment
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> > 3) Support filtering and
>>> pagination (even though 1 and
>>> > >> 2 most likely will
>>> > >> >> >> > significantly reduce the
>>> number of applications to 10s
>>> > >> of applications, we
>>> > >> >> >> > still need to have pagination
>>> and filtering support)
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> We have a Jira for filtering,
>>> but not for pagination.
>>> > >> >> >> See:
>>> https://issues.jboss.org/browse/KEYCLOAK-11534. But
>>> > >> if you think
>>> > >> >> >> pagination should also be a part
>>> of it, please let us
>>> > >> know. Just keep in
>>> > >> >> >> mind that this is not part of
>>> our plans at the moment.
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> Do you really think we need to
>>> implement pagination for
>>> > >> Applications
>>> > >> >> >> endpoint right now? Based on the
>>> requirements you
>>> > >> described, I don't see
>>> > >> >> >> a user with 2000 applications.
>>> Just look at how many
>>> > >> applications you
>>> > >> >> >> have linked into your GH or FB
>>> profile.
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> Maybe this is something we could
>>> postpone? Unless I'm
>>> > >> missing something,
>>> > >> >> >> I don't see a real need to do it
>>> right now.
>>> > >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >
>>> > >> >> > If you do 1 or 2 the list of
>>> applications available to
>>> > >> any given user will be reduced
>>> significantly, so I'm fairly
>>> > >> confident that pagination/filtering on
>>> the server-side can be
>>> > >> postponed in that case.
>>> > >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > Some ideas on how we can
>>> achieve the above:
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > 1) Figuring out what is indeed
>>> applications/UIs
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > List applications that are
>>> added to open sessions,
>>> > >> including the below:
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > * All OIDC clients where:
>>> client.baseUrl != null &&
>>> > >> !client.bearerOnly
>>> > >> >> >> > * All SAML clients where:
>>> client.baseUrl != null**
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > This will make sure we only
>>> include applications where
>>> > >> the user can
>>> > >> >> >> > actually click on the
>>> application in the list to go to
>>> > >> the application.
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > ** Not sure if there's
>>> anything in addition to check
>>> > >> for SAML
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > 2) Limit applications to those
>>> the user has access to
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > Not sure about this one as we
>>> don't really have an
>>> > >> easy way to figure out
>>> > >> >> >> > if a user has access the an
>>> application or not. One
>>> > >> idea would be to only
>>> > >> >> >> > include clients where user has
>>> at least one client
>>> > >> role. Even if the
>>> > >> >> >> > application doesn't use client
>>> roles directly a
>>> > >> "dummy" role can be created
>>> > >> >> >> > for this purpose by
>>> admins/developers.
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > 3) Pagination and filtering
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > All endpoints should support
>>> pagination and filtering
>>> > >> by design. Pagination
>>> > >> >> >> > and filtering should be
>>> server-side (REST endpoint
>>> > >> should provide according
>>> > >> >> >> > to our REST guidelines).
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> +1 for most of the ideas, except
>>> for implementing
>>> > >> pagination right now.
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > On Wed, 2 Oct 2019 at 19:11,
>>> Stan Silvert
>>> > >> <ssilvert at redhat.com
>>> <mailto:ssilvert at redhat.com>
>>> <mailto:ssilvert at redhat.com
>>> <mailto:ssilvert at redhat.com>>> wrote:
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> > >> >> >> > > Specifically, we need to
>>> discuss filtering and
>>> > >> pagination as it relates
>>> > >> >> >> > > to the "Applications" page:
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> https://marvelapp.com/c90dfi0/screen/59942290
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > > The current design allows
>>> filtering by name and
>>> > >> application type.
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > > However, Stian has pointed
>>> out that some customers
>>> > >> will have thousands
>>> > >> >> >> > > of clients. So this design
>>> might be unworkable.
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > > I don't want to go too far
>>> into the weeds right now
>>> > >> because I want to
>>> > >> >> >> > > understand the problem
>>> better first.
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > > What is the use case when
>>> customers have many, many
>>> > >> clients?
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > > How common is it to have
>>> many, many clients for a
>>> > >> single user?
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > > What do those clients look like?
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > > What could we use to filter
>>> on? The information we
>>> > >> currently have on
>>> > >> >> >> > > the client side looks
>>> something like what you see here:
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> https://marvelapp.com/c90dfi0/screen/59942292
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> > >> >> >> > > keycloak-dev mailing list
>>> > >> >> >> > > keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org
>>> <mailto:keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org>
>>> > >> <mailto:keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org
>>> <mailto:keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org>>
>>> > >> >> >> > >
>>> https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/keycloak-dev
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> > >> >> >> > keycloak-dev mailing list
>>> > >> >> >> > keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org
>>> <mailto:keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org>
>>> > >> <mailto:keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org
>>> <mailto:keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org>>
>>> > >> >> >> >
>>> https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/keycloak-dev
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> --
>>> > >> >> >>
>>> > >> >> >> abstractj
>>> > >> >>
>>> > >> >>
>>> > >> >>
>>> > >> >> --
>>> > >> >> - abstractj
>>> > >>
>>> > >>
>>> > >>
>>> > >> --
>>> > >> - abstractj
>>> > >>
>>> > > _______________________________________________
>>> > > keycloak-dev mailing list
>>> > > keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org
>>> <mailto:keycloak-dev at lists.jboss.org>
>>> > >
>>> https://lists.jboss.org/mailman/listinfo/keycloak-dev
>>> >
>>> >
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> - abstractj
>>>
>>
>
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