Configure generic OAuth2 authentication
There are numerous authentication methods available in Grafana to verify user identity. The authentication configuration dictates which users can access Grafana and the methods they can use for logging in. You can also configure Grafana to automatically update users’ roles and team memberships in Grafana based on the information returned by the auth provider integration.
When deciding on an authentication method, it’s important to take into account your current identity and access management system as well as the specific authentication and authorization features you require. For a complete list of the available authentication options and the features they support, refer to Configure authentication.
Grafana provides OAuth2 integrations for the following auth providers:
If your OAuth2 provider is not listed, you can use generic OAuth2 authentication.
This topic describes how to configure generic OAuth2 authentication using different methods and includes examples of setting up generic OAuth2 with specific OAuth2 providers.
Before you begin
To follow this guide:
- Ensure you know how to create an OAuth2 application with your OAuth2 provider. Consult the documentation of your OAuth2 provider for more information.
- Ensure your identity provider returns OpenID UserInfo compatible information such as the
sub
claim. - If you are using refresh tokens, ensure you know how to set them up with your OAuth2 provider. Consult the documentation of your OAuth2 provider for more information.
Note
If Users use the same email address in Azure AD that they use with other authentication providers (such as Grafana.com), you need to do additional configuration to ensure that the users are matched correctly. Please refer to the Using the same email address to login with different identity providers documentation for more information.
Configure generic OAuth authentication client using the Grafana UI
Note
Available in Public Preview in Grafana 10.4 behind thessoSettingsApi
feature toggle.
As a Grafana Admin, you can configure Generic OAuth2 client from within Grafana using the Generic OAuth UI. To do this, navigate to Administration > Authentication > Generic OAuth page and fill in the form. If you have a current configuration in the Grafana configuration file then the form will be pre-populated with those values otherwise the form will contain default values.
After you have filled in the form, click Save to save the configuration. If the save was successful, Grafana will apply the new configurations.
If you need to reset changes you made in the UI back to the default values, click Reset. After you have reset the changes, Grafana will apply the configuration from the Grafana configuration file (if there is any configuration) or the default values.
Note
If you run Grafana in high availability mode, configuration changes may not get applied to all Grafana instances immediately. You may need to wait a few minutes for the configuration to propagate to all Grafana instances.
Refer to configuration options for more information.
Configure generic OAuth authentication client using the Terraform provider
Note
Available in Public Preview in Grafana 10.4 behind thessoSettingsApi
feature toggle. Supported in the Terraform provider since v2.12.0.
resource "grafana_sso_settings" "generic_sso_settings" {
provider_name = "generic_oauth"
oauth2_settings {
name = "Auth0"
auth_url = "https://<domain>/authorize"
token_url = "https://<domain>/oauth/token"
api_url = "https://<domain>/userinfo"
client_id = "<client id>"
client_secret = "<client secret>"
allow_sign_up = true
auto_login = false
scopes = "openid profile email offline_access"
use_pkce = true
use_refresh_token = true
}
}
Refer to Terraform Registry for a complete reference on using the grafana_sso_settings
resource.
Configure generic OAuth authentication client using the Grafana configuration file
Ensure that you have access to the Grafana configuration file.
Steps
To integrate your OAuth2 provider with Grafana using our generic OAuth2 authentication, follow these steps:
Create an OAuth2 application in your chosen OAuth2 provider.
Set the callback URL for your OAuth2 app to
http://<my_grafana_server_name_or_ip>:<grafana_server_port>/login/generic_oauth
.Ensure that the callback URL is the complete HTTP address that you use to access Grafana via your browser, but with the appended path of
/login/generic_oauth
.For the callback URL to be correct, it might be necessary to set the
root_url
option in the[server]
section of the Grafana configuration file. For example, if you are serving Grafana behind a proxy.Refer to the following table to update field values located in the
[auth.generic_oauth]
section of the Grafana configuration file:Field Description client_id
,client_secret
These values must match the client ID and client secret from your OAuth2 app. auth_url
The authorization endpoint of your OAuth2 provider. api_url
The user information endpoint of your OAuth2 provider. Information returned by this endpoint must be compatible with OpenID UserInfo. enabled
Enables generic OAuth2 authentication. Set this value to true
.Review the list of other generic OAuth2 configuration options and complete them, as necessary.
Optional: Configure a refresh token:
a. Extend the
scopes
field of[auth.generic_oauth]
section in Grafana configuration file with refresh token scope used by your OAuth2 provider.b. Set
use_refresh_token
totrue
in[auth.generic_oauth]
section in Grafana configuration file.c. Enable the refresh token on the provider if required.
Optional: Configure team synchronization.
Restart Grafana.
You should now see a generic OAuth2 login button on the login page and be able to log in or sign up with your OAuth2 provider.
Configure login
Grafana can resolve a user’s login from the OAuth2 ID token or user information retrieved from the OAuth2 UserInfo endpoint. Grafana looks at these sources in the order listed until it finds a login. If no login is found, then the user’s login is set to user’s email address.
Refer to the following table for information on what to configure based on how your Oauth2 provider returns a user’s login:
Source of login | Required configuration |
---|---|
login or username field of the OAuth2 ID token. | N/A |
Another field of the OAuth2 ID token. | Set login_attribute_path configuration option. |
login or username field of the user information from the UserInfo endpoint. | N/A |
Another field of the user information from the UserInfo endpoint. | Set login_attribute_path configuration option. |
Configure display name
Grafana can resolve a user’s display name from the OAuth2 ID token or user information retrieved from the OAuth2 UserInfo endpoint. Grafana looks at these sources in the order listed until it finds a display name. If no display name is found, then user’s login is displayed instead.
Refer to the following table for information on what you need to configure depending on how your Oauth2 provider returns a user’s name:
Source of display name | Required configuration |
---|---|
name or display_name field of the OAuth2 ID token. | N/A |
Another field of the OAuth2 ID token. | Set name_attribute_path configuration option. |
name or display_name field of the user information from the UserInfo endpoint. | N/A |
Another field of the user information from the UserInfo endpoint. | Set name_attribute_path configuration option. |
Configure email address
Grafana can resolve the user’s email address from the OAuth2 ID token, the user information retrieved from the OAuth2 UserInfo endpoint, or the OAuth2 /emails
endpoint.
Grafana looks at these sources in the order listed until an email address is found.
If no email is found, then the email address of the user is set to an empty string.
Refer to the following table for information on what to configure based on how the Oauth2 provider returns a user’s email address:
Source of email address | Required configuration |
---|---|
email field of the OAuth2 ID token. | N/A |
attributes map of the OAuth2 ID token. | Set email_attribute_name configuration option. By default, Grafana searches for email under email:primary key. |
upn field of the OAuth2 ID token. | N/A |
email field of the user information from the UserInfo endpoint. | N/A |
Another field of the user information from the UserInfo endpoint. | Set email_attribute_path configuration option. |
Email address marked as primary from the /emails endpoint ofthe OAuth2 provider (obtained by appending /emails to the URLconfigured with api_url ) | N/A |
Configure a refresh token
Available in Grafana v9.3 and later versions.
When a user logs in using an OAuth2 provider, Grafana verifies that the access token has not expired. When an access token expires, Grafana uses the provided refresh token (if any exists) to obtain a new access token.
Grafana uses a refresh token to obtain a new access token without requiring the user to log in again. If a refresh token doesn’t exist, Grafana logs the user out of the system after the access token has expired.
To configure generic OAuth2 to use a refresh token, set use_refresh_token
configuration option to true
and perform one or both of the following steps, if required:
- Extend the
scopes
field of[auth.generic_oauth]
section in Grafana configuration file with additional scopes. - Enable the refresh token on the provider.
Note: The
accessTokenExpirationCheck
feature toggle has been removed in Grafana v10.3.0 and theuse_refresh_token
configuration value will be used instead for configuring refresh token fetching and access token expiration check.
Configure role mapping
Unless skip_org_role_sync
option is enabled, the user’s role will be set to the role retrieved from the auth provider upon user login.
The user’s role is retrieved using a JMESPath expression from the role_attribute_path
configuration option.
To map the server administrator role, use the allow_assign_grafana_admin
configuration option.
Refer to configuration options for more information.
If no valid role is found, the user is assigned the role specified by the auto_assign_org_role
option.
You can disable this default role assignment by setting role_attribute_strict = true
. This setting denies user access if no role or an invalid role is returned after evaluating the role_attribute_path
and the org_mapping
expressions.
You can use the org_attribute_path
and org_mapping
configuration options to assign the user to organizations and specify their role. For more information, refer to Org roles mapping example. If both org role mapping (org_mapping
) and the regular role mapping (role_attribute_path
) are specified, then the user will get the highest of the two mapped roles.
To ease configuration of a proper JMESPath expression, go to JMESPath to test and evaluate expressions with custom payloads.
Role mapping examples
This section includes examples of JMESPath expressions used for role mapping.
Map user organization role
In this example, the user has been granted the role of an Editor
. The role assigned is based on the value of the property role
, which must be a valid Grafana role such as Admin
, Editor
, Viewer
or None
.
Payload:
{
...
"role": "Editor",
...
}
Config:
role_attribute_path = role
In the following more complex example, the user has been granted the Admin
role. This is because they are a member of the admin
group of their OAuth2 provider.
If the user was a member of the editor
group, they would be granted the Editor
role, otherwise Viewer
.
Payload:
{
...
"info": {
...
"groups": [
"engineer",
"admin",
],
...
},
...
}
Config:
role_attribute_path = contains(info.groups[*], 'admin') && 'Admin' || contains(info.groups[*], 'editor') && 'Editor' || 'Viewer'
Map server administrator role
In the following example, the user is granted the Grafana server administrator role.
Payload:
{
...
"info": {
...
"roles": [
"admin",
],
...
},
...
}
Config:
role_attribute_path = contains(info.roles[*], 'admin') && 'GrafanaAdmin' || contains(info.roles[*], 'editor') && 'Editor' || 'Viewer'
allow_assign_grafana_admin = true
Map one role to all users
In this example, all users will be assigned Viewer
role regardless of the user information received from the identity provider.
Config:
role_attribute_path = "'Viewer'"
skip_org_role_sync = false
Org roles mapping example
In this example, the user has been granted the role of a Viewer
in the org_foo
org, and the role of an Editor
in the org_bar
and org_baz
orgs.
If the user was a member of the admin
group, they would be granted the Grafana server administrator role.
Payload:
{
...
"info": {
...
"roles": [
"org_foo",
"org_bar",
"another_org'
],
...
},
...
}
Config:
role_attribute_path = contains(info.roles[*], 'admin') && 'GrafanaAdmin' || 'None'
allow_assign_grafana_admin = true
org_attribute_path = info.roles
org_mapping = org_foo:org_foo:Viewer org_bar:org_bar:Editor *:org_baz:Editor
Configure team synchronization
Note: Available in Grafana Enterprise and Grafana Cloud.
By using Team Sync, you can link your OAuth2 groups to teams within Grafana. This will automatically assign users to the appropriate teams. Teams for each user are synchronized when the user logs in.
Generic OAuth2 groups can be referenced by group ID, such as 8bab1c86-8fba-33e5-2089-1d1c80ec267d
or myteam
.
For information on configuring OAuth2 groups with Grafana using the groups_attribute_path
configuration option, refer to configuration options.
To learn more about Team Sync, refer to Configure team sync.
Team synchronization example
Configuration:
groups_attribute_path = info.groups
Payload:
{
...
"info": {
...
"groups": [
"engineers",
"analysts",
],
...
},
...
}
Configuration options
The following table outlines the various generic OAuth2 configuration options. You can apply these options as environment variables, similar to any other configuration within Grafana.
Setting | Required | Description | Default |
---|---|---|---|
enabled | No | Enables generic OAuth2 authentication. | false |
name | No | Name that refers to the generic OAuth2 authentication from the Grafana user interface. | OAuth |
icon | No | Icon used for the generic OAuth2 authentication in the Grafana user interface. | signin |
client_id | Yes | Client ID provided by your OAuth2 app. | |
client_secret | Yes | Client secret provided by your OAuth2 app. | |
auth_url | Yes | Authorization endpoint of your OAuth2 provider. | |
token_url | Yes | Endpoint used to obtain the OAuth2 access token. | |
api_url | Yes | Endpoint used to obtain user information compatible with OpenID UserInfo. | |
auth_style | No | Name of the OAuth2 AuthStyle to be used when ID token is requested from OAuth2 provider. It determines how client_id and client_secret are sent to Oauth2 provider. Available values are AutoDetect , InParams and InHeader . | AutoDetect |
scopes | No | List of comma- or space-separated OAuth2 scopes. | user:email |
empty_scopes | No | Set to true to use an empty scope during authentication. | false |
allow_sign_up | No | Controls Grafana user creation through the generic OAuth2 login. Only existing Grafana users can log in with generic OAuth if set to false . | true |
auto_login | No | Set to true to enable users to bypass the login screen and automatically log in. This setting is ignored if you configure multiple auth providers to use auto-login. | false |
id_token_attribute_name | No | The name of the key used to extract the ID token from the returned OAuth2 token. | id_token |
login_attribute_path | No | JMESPath expression to use for user login lookup from the user ID token. For more information on how user login is retrieved, refer to Configure login. | |
name_attribute_path | No | JMESPath expression to use for user name lookup from the user ID token. This name will be used as the user’s display name. For more information on how user display name is retrieved, refer to Configure display name. | |
email_attribute_path | No | JMESPath expression to use for user email lookup from the user information. For more information on how user email is retrieved, refer to Configure email address. | |
email_attribute_name | No | Name of the key to use for user email lookup within the attributes map of OAuth2 ID token. For more information on how user email is retrieved, refer to Configure email address. | email:primary |
role_attribute_path | No | JMESPath expression to use for Grafana role lookup. Grafana will first evaluate the expression using the OAuth2 ID token. If no role is found, the expression will be evaluated using the user information obtained from the UserInfo endpoint. The result of the evaluation should be a valid Grafana role (None , Viewer , Editor , Admin or GrafanaAdmin ). For more information on user role mapping, refer to Configure role mapping. | |
role_attribute_strict | No | Set to true to deny user login if the Grafana org role cannot be extracted using role_attribute_path or org_mapping . For more information on user role mapping, refer to Configure role mapping. | false |
org_attribute_path | No | JMESPath expression to use for Grafana org to role lookup. Grafana will first evaluate the expression using the OAuth2 ID token. If no value is returned, the expression will be evaluated using the user information obtained from the UserInfo endpoint. The result of the evaluation will be mapped to org roles based on org_mapping . For more information on org to role mapping, refer to Org roles mapping example. | |
org_mapping | No | List of comma- or space-separated <ExternalOrgName>:<OrgIdOrName>:<Role> mappings. Value can be * meaning “All users”. Role is optional and can have the following values: None , Viewer , Editor or Admin . For more information on external organization to role mapping, refer to Org roles mapping example. | |
allow_assign_grafana_admin | No | Set to true to enable automatic sync of the Grafana server administrator role. If this option is set to true and the result of evaluating role_attribute_path for a user is GrafanaAdmin , Grafana grants the user the server administrator privileges and organization administrator role. If this option is set to false and the result of evaluating role_attribute_path for a user is GrafanaAdmin , Grafana grants the user only organization administrator role. For more information on user role mapping, refer to Configure role mapping. | false |
skip_org_role_sync | No | Set to true to stop automatically syncing user roles. This will allow you to set organization roles for your users from within Grafana manually. | false |
groups_attribute_path | No | JMESPath expression to use for user group lookup. Grafana will first evaluate the expression using the OAuth2 ID token. If no groups are found, the expression will be evaluated using the user information obtained from the UserInfo endpoint. The result of the evaluation should be a string array of groups. | |
allowed_groups | No | List of comma- or space-separated groups. The user should be a member of at least one group to log in. If you configure allowed_groups , you must also configure groups_attribute_path . | |
allowed_organizations | No | List of comma- or space-separated organizations. The user should be a member of at least one organization to log in. | |
allowed_domains | No | List comma- or space-separated domains. The user should belong to at least one domain to log in. | |
team_ids | No | String list of team IDs. If set, the user must be a member of one of the given teams to log in. If you configure team_ids , you must also configure teams_url and team_ids_attribute_path . | |
team_ids_attribute_path | No | The JMESPath expression to use for Grafana team ID lookup within the results returned by the teams_url endpoint. | |
teams_url | No | The URL used to query for team IDs. If not set, the default value is /teams . If you configure teams_url , you must also configure team_ids_attribute_path . | |
tls_skip_verify_insecure | No | If set to true , the client accepts any certificate presented by the server and any host name in that certificate. You should only use this for testing, because this mode leaves SSL/TLS susceptible to man-in-the-middle attacks. | false |
tls_client_cert | No | The path to the certificate. | |
tls_client_key | No | The path to the key. | |
tls_client_ca | No | The path to the trusted certificate authority list. | |
use_pkce | No | Set to true to use Proof Key for Code Exchange (PKCE). Grafana uses the SHA256 based S256 challenge method and a 128 bytes (base64url encoded) code verifier. | false |
use_refresh_token | No | Set to true to use refresh token and check access token expiration. | false |
Examples of setting up generic OAuth2
This section includes examples of setting up generic OAuth2 integration.
Set up OAuth2 with Descope
To set up generic OAuth2 authentication with Descope, follow these steps:
Create a Descope Project here, and go through the Getting Started Wizard to configure your authentication. You can skip step if you already have Descope project set up.
If you wish to use a flow besides
Sign Up or In
, go to the IdP Applications menu in the console, and select your IdP application. Then alter the Flow Hosting URL query parameter?flow=sign-up-or-in
to change which flow id you wish to use.Click Save.
Update the
[auth.generic_oauth]
section of the Grafana configuration file using the values from the Settings tab:Note
You can get your Client ID (Descope Project ID) under Project Settings. Your Client Secret (Descope Access Key) can be generated under Access Keys.[auth.generic_oauth] enabled = true allow_sign_up = true auto_login = false team_ids = allowed_organizations = name = Descope client_id = <Descope Project ID> client_secret = <Descope Access Key> scopes = openid profile email descope.claims descope.custom_claims auth_url = https://api.descope.com/oauth2/v1/authorize token_url = https://api.descope.com/oauth2/v1/token api_url = https://api.descope.com/oauth2/v1/userinfo use_pkce = true use_refresh_token = true
Set up OAuth2 with Auth0
To set up generic OAuth2 authentication with Auth0, follow these steps:
Create an Auth0 application using the following parameters:
- Name: Grafana
- Type: Regular Web Application
Go to the Settings tab of the application and set Allowed Callback URLs to
https://<grafana domain>/login/generic_oauth
.Click Save Changes.
Update the
[auth.generic_oauth]
section of the Grafana configuration file using the values from the Settings tab:[auth.generic_oauth] enabled = true allow_sign_up = true auto_login = false team_ids = allowed_organizations = name = Auth0 client_id = <client id> client_secret = <client secret> scopes = openid profile email offline_access auth_url = https://<domain>/authorize token_url = https://<domain>/oauth/token api_url = https://<domain>/userinfo use_pkce = true use_refresh_token = true
Set up OAuth2 with Bitbucket
To set up generic OAuth2 authentication with Bitbucket, follow these steps:
Navigate to Settings > Workspace setting > OAuth consumers in BitBucket.
Create an application by selecting Add consumer and using the following parameters:
- Allowed Callback URLs:
https://<grafana domain>/login/generic_oauth
- Allowed Callback URLs:
Click Save.
Update the
[auth.generic_oauth]
section of the Grafana configuration file using the values from theKey
andSecret
from the consumer description:[auth.generic_oauth] name = BitBucket enabled = true allow_sign_up = true auto_login = false client_id = <client key> client_secret = <client secret> scopes = account email auth_url = https://bitbucket.org/site/oauth2/authorize token_url = https://bitbucket.org/site/oauth2/access_token api_url = https://api.bitbucket.org/2.0/user teams_url = https://api.bitbucket.org/2.0/user/permissions/workspaces team_ids_attribute_path = values[*].workspace.slug team_ids = allowed_organizations = use_refresh_token = true
By default, a refresh token is included in the response for the Authorization Code Grant.
Set up OAuth2 with OneLogin
To set up generic OAuth2 authentication with OneLogin, follow these steps:
Create a new Custom Connector in OneLogin with the following settings:
- Name: Grafana
- Sign On Method: OpenID Connect
- Redirect URI:
https://<grafana domain>/login/generic_oauth
- Signing Algorithm: RS256
- Login URL:
https://<grafana domain>/login/generic_oauth
Add an app to the Grafana Connector:
- Display Name: Grafana
Update the
[auth.generic_oauth]
section of the Grafana configuration file using the client ID and client secret from the SSO tab of the app details page:Your OneLogin Domain will match the URL you use to access OneLogin.
[auth.generic_oauth] name = OneLogin enabled = true allow_sign_up = true auto_login = false client_id = <client id> client_secret = <client secret> scopes = openid email name auth_url = https://<onelogin domain>.onelogin.com/oidc/2/auth token_url = https://<onelogin domain>.onelogin.com/oidc/2/token api_url = https://<onelogin domain>.onelogin.com/oidc/2/me team_ids = allowed_organizations =
Set up OAuth2 with Dex
To set up generic OAuth2 authentication with Dex IdP, follow these steps:
Add Grafana as a client in the Dex config YAML file:
staticClients: - id: <client id> name: Grafana secret: <client secret> redirectURIs: - 'https://<grafana domain>/login/generic_oauth'
Note
Unlike many other OAuth2 providers, Dex doesn’t provide<client secret>
. Instead, a secret can be generated with for exampleopenssl rand -hex 20
.Update the
[auth.generic_oauth]
section of the Grafana configuration:[auth.generic_oauth] name = Dex enabled = true client_id = <client id> client_secret = <client secret> scopes = openid email profile groups offline_access auth_url = https://<dex base uri>/auth token_url = https://<dex base uri>/token api_url = https://<dex base uri>/userinfo
<dex base uri>
corresponds to theissuer:
configuration in Dex (e.g. the Dex domain possibly including a path such as e.g./dex
). Theoffline_access
scope is needed when using refresh tokens.