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authentik/README.md
2020-09-15 12:04:00 +02:00

2.8 KiB

passbook logopassbook

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What is passbook?

passbook is an open-source Identity Provider focused on flexibility and versatility. You can use passbook in an existing environment to add support for new protocols. passbook is also a great solution for implementing signup/recovery/etc in your application, so you don't have to deal with it.

Installation

For small/test setups it is recommended to use docker-compose.

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/BeryJu/passbook/master/docker-compose.yml
# Optionally enable Error-reporting
# export PASSBOOK_ERROR_REPORTING=true
# Optionally deploy a different version
# export PASSBOOK_TAG=0.10.2-stable
# If this is a productive installation, set a different PostgreSQL Password
# export PG_PASS=$(pwgen 40 1)
docker-compose pull
docker-compose up -d
docker-compose run --rm server migrate

For bigger setups, there is a Helm Chart in the helm/ directory. This is documented here

Screenshots

Development

To develop on passbook, you need a system with Python 3.7+ (3.8 is recommended). passbook uses pipenv for managing dependencies.

To get started, run

python3 -m pip install pipenv
git clone https://github.com/BeryJu/passbook.git
cd passbook
pipenv shell
pipenv sync -d

Since passbook uses PostgreSQL-specific fields, you also need a local PostgreSQL instance to develop. passbook also uses redis for caching and message queueing. For these databases you can use Postgres.app and Redis.app on macOS or use it the docker-compose file in scripts/docker-compose.yml.

To tell passbook about these databases, create a file in the project root called local.env.yml with the following contents:

debug: true
postgresql:
  user: postgres

log_level: debug

Security

See SECURITY.md