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This section provides the instructions to configure multi-factor authentication (MFA) using Email One Time Password (Email OTP) in WSO2 Identity Server (WSO2 IS). The Email OTP enables a one-time password (OTP) to be used at the second step of MFA.

Let's take a look at the tasks you need to follow to configure MFA using Email OTP:

Before you begin!

  • To ensure you get the full understanding of configuring Email OTP with WSO2 IS, the sample travelocity application is used in this use case. Therefore, make sure to download the samples before you begin.
  • The samples run on the Apache Tomcat server and are written based on Servlet 3.0. Therefore, download Tomcat 7.x from here.
  • Install Apache Maven to build the samples. For more information, see Installation Prerequisites.

Enabling email configuration on WSO2 IS

Follow the steps below to configure WSO2 IS to send emails once the Email OTP is enabled.

  1. Shut down the server if it is running.
  2. Open the  <IS_HOME>/repository/conf/axis2/axis2.xml file, uncomment the  transportSender name = "mailto" configurations, and update the following properties:

    mail.smtp.fromProvide the email address of the SMTP account.
    mail.smtp.userProvide the username of the SMTP account.
    mail.smtp.passwordProvide the password of the SMTP account.
    <transportSender  name="mailto"
    class="org.apache.axis2.transport.mail.MailTransportSender">
        <parameter  name="mail.smtp.from">{SENDER'S_EMAIL_ID}</parameter>
    	<parameter  name="mail.smtp.user">{USERNAME}</parameter>
    	<parameter  name="mail.smtp.password">{PASSWORD}</parameter>
    	<parameter  name="mail.smtp.host">smtp.gmail.com</parameter>
        <parameter  name="mail.smtp.port">587</parameter>
        <parameter  name="mail.smtp.starttls.enable">true</parameter>
        <parameter  name="mail.smtp.auth">true</parameter>
    </transportSender>

    If you are using Gmail account you have to on "Allow less secure apps" in your account.

  3. Comment out the <module ref="addressing"/> property to avoid syntax errors.

    <!-- <module ref="addressing"/> -->
  4. Add the following email template to the <IS_HOME>/repository/conf/email/email-admin-config.xml.

    <configuration type="EmailOTP" display="idleAccountReminder" locale="en_US" emailContentType="text/html">
       <targetEpr></targetEpr>
       <subject>WSO2 IS Email OTP</subject>
       <body>
          Hi,
          Please use this one time password {OTPCode} to sign in to your application.
       </body>
       <footer>
          Best Regards,
          WSO2 Identity Server Team
          http://www.wso2.com
       </footer>
       <redirectPath></redirectPath>
    </configuration>
  5. Configure the following properties in the <PRODUCT_HOME>/repository/conf/identity/identity-mgt.properties file to true.

    Authentication.Policy.Enable=true
    Authentication.Policy.Check.OneTime.Password=true
  6. Start WSO2 IS.

Configure the Email OTP provider

You can send the One Time Password (OTP) using Gmail APIs or using SendGrid. Follow the steps given below to configure Gmail APIs as the mechanisam to send the OTP.

  1. Create a Google account at https://gmail.com.
  2. Got to https://console.developers.google.com and click ENABLE APIS AND SERVICES.
  3. Search for Gmail API and click on it.
  4. Click Enable to enable the Gmail APIs.

    Why is this needed?

    If you do not enable the Gmail APIs, you run in to a 401 error when trying out step13.

  5. Click Credentials and click Create to create a new project.
  6. Click Credentials and click the Create credentials drop-down.

  7. Select OAuth client ID option.

  8. Click Configure consent screen.
  9. Enter the Product name that needs to be shown to users, enter values to any other fields you prefer to update, and click Save.
  10. Select the Web application option.
    Enter https://localhost:9443/commonauth as the Authorize redirect URIs text-box, and click Create.

    The client ID and the client secret are displayed.
    Copy the client ID and secret and keep it in a safe place as you require it for the next step.

  11. Copy the URL below and replace the <ENTER_CLIENT_ID> tag with the generated Client ID. This is required to generate the authorization code.

  12. Paste the updated URL into your browser.

    1. Select the preferred Gmail account with which you wish to proceed.

    2. Click Allow.
    3. Obtain the authorization code using a SAML tracer on your browser.

  13. To generate the access token, copy the following cURL command and replace the following place holders:

    1. <CLIENT-ID> : Replace this with the client ID obtained in Step 10 above.
    2. <CLIENT_SECRET> : Replace this with the client secret obtained in Step 10 above.
    3. <AUTHORIZATION_CODE> : Replace this with the authorization code obtained in Step 12 above.

    Paste the updated cURL command in your terminal to generate the OAuth2 access token, token validity period, and the refresh token. 

  14. Update the following configurations under the  <AuthenticatorConfigs>  section in the  <IS_HOME>/repository/conf/identity/application-authentication.xml  file. 

    • If you need to send the content in a payload, you can introduce a property in a format <API> Payload and define the value. Similarly, you can define the Form Data.FormdataforSendgridAPIisgivenasan example.
    • You can use <API> URLParams, <API>AuthTokenType, <API>Failure and <API>TokenEndpoint property formats to specify the URL parameters, Authorization token type, Message to identify failure and Endpoint to get access token from refresh token respectively.
    • Value of <API> URLParams should be like; api_user=<API_USER>&api_key=<API_KEY>&data=<DATA>&list<LIST>
    PropertyDescription
    GmailClientIdEnter the Client ID you got in step 10.
    Example: 501390351749-ftjrp3ld9da4ohd1rulogejscpln646s.apps.googleusercontent.com
    GmailClientSecretEnter the client secret you got in step 10.
    Example: dj4st7_m3AclenZR1weFNo1V
    SendgridAPIKeyThis property is only required if you are using the Sengrid method. Since you are using Gmail APIs, keep the default value.
    GmailRefreshTokenEnter the refresh token that you got as the response in step 12. Example: 1/YgNiepY107SyzJdgpynmf-eMYP4qYTPNG_L73MXfcbv
    GmailEmailEndpointEnter your username of your Gmail account in place of the [userId] place holder. Example: https://www.googleapis.com/gmail/v1/users/alex@gmail.com/messages/send
    SendgridEmailEndpointThis property is only required if you are using the Sengrid method. Since you are using Gmail APIs, keep the default value.
    accessTokenRequiredAPIs

    Use the default value.

    apiKeyHeaderRequiredAPIs

    This property is only required if you are using the Sengrid method. Since you are using Gmail APIs, keep the default value.

    SendgridFormData=toThis property is only required if you are using the Sengrid method. Since you are using Gmail APIs, keep the default value.
    SendgridURLParamsThis property is only required if you are using the Sengrid method. Since you are using Gmail APIs, keep the default value.
    GmailAuthTokenType Use the default value.
    GmailTokenEndpointUse the the deafult value.
    SendgridAuthTokenTypeThis property is only required if you are using the Sengrid method. Since you are using Gmail APIs, keep the default value.
     Click here to see a sample configuration
    <AuthenticatorConfig name="EmailOTP" enabled="true">
       <Parameter name="GmailClientId">501390351749-ftjrp3ld9da4ohd1rulogejscpln646s.apps.googleusercontent.com </Parameter>
       <Parameter name="GmailClientSecret">dj4st7_m3AclenZR1weFNo1V</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="SendgridAPIKey">sendgridAPIKeyValue</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="GmailRefreshToken">1/YgNiepY107SyzJdgpynmf-eMYP4qYTPNG_L73MXfcbv</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="GmailEmailEndpoint">https://www.googleapis.com/gmail/v1/users/alex@gmail.com/messages/send</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="SendgridEmailEndpoint">https://api.sendgrid.com/api/mail.send.json</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="accessTokenRequiredAPIs">Gmail</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="apiKeyHeaderRequiredAPIs">Sendgrid</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="SendgridFormData">sendgridFormDataValue</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="SendgridURLParams">sendgridURLParamsValue</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="GmailAuthTokenType">Bearer</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="GmailTokenEndpoint">https://www.googleapis.com/oauth2/v3/token</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="SendgridAuthTokenType">Bearer</Parameter>
       <Parameter name="redirectToMultiOptionPageOnFailure">false</Parameter>
    </AuthenticatorConfig>

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Deploy the travelocity.com sample

Follow the steps below to deploy the travelocity.com sample application:

To obtain and configure the single sign-on travelocity sample, follow the steps below. 

  1. Add the following entry to the /etc/hosts file of your machine to configure the hostname.

    Why is this step needed?

    Some browsers do not allow you to create cookies for a naked hostname, such as localhost. Cookies are required when working with SSO. Therefore, to ensure that the SSO capabilities work as expected in this tutorial, you need to configure the etc/host file as explained in this step.

    The etc/host file is a read-only file. Therefore, you won't be able to edit it by opening the file via a text editor. To avoid this, edit the file using the terminal commands.
    For example, use the following command if you are working on a Mac/Linux environment.

    sudo nano /etc/hosts
    127.0.0.1 	wso2is.local
  2. Open the travelocity.properties file found in the is-samples/modules/samples/sso/sso-agent-sample/src/main/resources directory of the samples folder you just checked out. Configure the following property with the hostname (wso2is.local) that you configured above. 

    #The URL of the SAML 2.0 Assertion Consumer
    SAML2.AssertionConsumerURL=http://wso2is.local:8080/travelocity.com/home.jsp
  3. In your terminal, navigate to is-samples/modules/samples/sso/sso-agent-sample folder and build the sample using the following command. You must have Apache Maven installed to do this

    mvn clean install
  4. After successfully building the sample, a .war file named travelocity.com can be found inside the is-samples/sso/sso-agent-sample/ target directory. Deploy this sample web app on a web container. To do this, use the Apache Tomcat server.

    Since this sample is written based on Servlet 3.0 it needs to be deployed on Tomcat 7.x.

    Use the following steps to deploy the web app in the web container:

    1. Stop the Apache Tomcat server if it is already running.
    2. Copy the  travelocity.com.war file to the <TOMCAT_HOME>/webapps directory.
    3. Start the Apache Tomcat server.

Tip: If you wish to change properties like the issuer ID, consumer URL, and IdP URL, you can edit the travelocity.properties file found in the travelocity.com/WEB-INF/classes directory. If the service provider is configured in a tenant you can use the  QueryParams property to send the tenant domain. For  example, QueryParams=tenantDomain=wso2.com.

This sample uses the following default values.

PropertiesDescription
SAML2.SPEntityId=travelocity.comA unique identifier for this SAML 2.0 Service Provider application.

SAML2.AssertionConsumerURL=http://wso2is.local:8080/travelocity.com/home.jsp

The URL of the SAML 2.0 Assertion Consumer.

SAML2.IdPURL=https://localhost:9443/samlsso 

The URL of the SAML 2.0 Identity Provider.

If you edit the travelocity.properties file, you must restart the Apache Tomcat server for the changes to take effect.

Now the web application is successfully deployed on a web container. 

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Configure the Identity Provider

Follow the steps below to add an identity provider:

  1. Click Add under Main > Identity > Identity Providers.
  2. Provide a suitable name for the identity provider.
  3. Expand the  EmailOTPAuthenticator Configuration under Federated Authenticators.
    1. Select the Enable and Default check boxes.

    2. Click Register.

    You have now added the identity provider.

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Configure the Service Provider

Follow the steps below add a service provider:

  1. Return to the Management Console home screen.

  2. Click Add under Add under Main > Identity > Service Providers .

  3. Enter travelocity.com as the Service Provider Name.

  4. Click Register.

  5. Expand SAML2 Web SSO Configuration under Inbound Authentication Configuration.

  6. Click Configure.

  7. Now set the configuration as follows:

    1. Issuertravelocity.com

    2. Assertion Consumer URLhttp://localhost:8080/travelocity.com/home.jsp

    3. Select the following check-boxes: Enable Response Signing, Enable Single Logout, Enable Attribute Profile, and Include Attributes in the Response Always.

  8. Click Update to save the changes. Now you will be sent back to the Service Providers page.

  9. Go to Claim Configuration and select the http://wso2.org/claims/emailaddress claim.

  10. Go to Local and Outbound Authentication Configuration section.

    1. Select the Advanced configuration radio button option.

    2. Creating the first authentication step:

      1. Click Add Authentication Step.

      2. Click Add Authenticator that is under Local Authenticators of Step 1 to add the basic authentication as the first step.
        Adding basic authentication as a first step ensures that the first step of authentication will be done using the user's credentials that are configured with the WSO2 Identity Server
    3. Creating the second authentication step:

      1. Click Add Authentication Step.

      2. Click Add Authenticator that is under Federated Authenticators of Step 2 to add the SMSOTP identity provider you created as the second step.
        SMSOTP is a second step that adds another layer of authentication and security.

  11. Click Update.

    You have now added and configured the service provider.

    For more information on service provider configuration, see Configuring Single Sign-On.

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Update the email address of the user

Follow the steps given below to update the user's email address.

  1. Return to the WSO2 Identity Server Management Console home screen.
  2. Click List under Add under Main > Identity > Users and Roles
    1. Click Users
    2. Click User Profile under Admin
    3. Update the email address.    
    4. Click Update.

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Configure the user claims

Follow the steps below to map the user claims:

For more information about claims, see  Adding Claim Mapping

  1. Click Add under Main > Identity > Claims.

    1. Click Add Local Claim.
    2. Select the Dialect from the drop down provided and enter the required information.
    3. Add the following:

      1. Claim URI: http://wso2.org/claims/identity/emailotp_disabled
      2. Display Name: DisableEmailOTP
      3. Description: DisableEmailOTP
      4. Mapped Attribute (s): title
      5. Supported by Default: checked

    4. Click Add

      To disable this claim for the admin user, navigate to Users and Roles > List and click Users. Click on the User Profile link corresponding to admin account and then click Disable EmailOTP. This will disable the second factor authentication for the admin user.

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Test the sample

  1. To test the sample, go to the following URL: http://localhost:8080/travelocity.com

  2. Click the link to log in with SAML from WSO2 Identity Server.

  3. The basic authentication page appears. Use your WSO2 Identity Server credentials.

  4. You receive a token to your email account. Enter the code to authenticate. If the authentication is successful, you are taken to the home page of the travelocity.com app.

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