5 Minute Tutorial
This tutorial walks you through a quick setup of Ory Hydra and an exemplary User Login & Consent App based on Docker Compose. You need to have the latest Docker and Docker Compose version installed.
We will use the Docker Compose configuration in the Ory Hydra code base. Getting the Hydra source code is easy:
- if you have Go 1.15+ installed:
go get -d github.com/ory/hydra
- if you have Git installed:
git clone https://github.com/ory/hydra.git
- otherwise: download the Hydra source code. and extract it somewhere
Change into the directory with the Hydra source code and run the following command to start the needed containers:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml \
-f quickstart-postgres.yml \
up --build
Starting hydra_postgresd_1
Starting hydra_hydra_1
[...]
This command adds support for PostgreSQL. If you wish to use another database backend, you can run this command to use MySQL:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml \
-f quickstart-mysql.yml \
up --build
This one to use CockroachDB:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml \
-f quickstart-cockroach.yml \
up --build
Or simply omit the second file to default to SQLite:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml \
up --build
This command makes Docker Compose start up a database server and a basic base Ory Hydra server that uses this database. If you
need more details on this, please examine the scripts/5-min-tutorial.sh
and docker-compose*.yml
files.
You may also extend the command above to enable distributed tracing. The tracing UI is exposed at http://127.0.0.1:16686/search:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml \
-f quickstart-postgres.yml \
-f quickstart-tracing.yml \
up --build
Hydra provides an endpoint for Prometheus to scrape as a target. You can run the following command to start the needed containers, and status of Hydra is exposed at targets page in Prometheus http://localhost:9090/targets:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml \
-f quickstart-prometheus.yml \
up --build
If you want to test Hardware Security Module add -f quickstart-hsm.yml
. For more information head over to
HSM support.
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml \
-f quickstart-hsm.yml \
up --build
Let's confirm that everything is working by creating an OAuth 2.0 Client.
Note: The following commands run Hydra inside Docker. If you have the Ory Hydra CLI installed locally, you can omit
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml exec /hydra
in front of each command.
The OAuth 2.0 client uses port 4444
and 4445
. The former is Ory Hydra's public endpoint, the latter its administrative
endpoint. For more information head over to Exposing Administrative and Public API Endpoints.
Let's create the OAuth 2.0 Client:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml exec hydra \
hydra clients create \
--endpoint http://127.0.0.1:4445/ \
--id my-client \
--secret secret \
--grant-types client_credentials
Let's perform the client credentials grant:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml exec hydra \
hydra token client \
--endpoint http://127.0.0.1:4444/ \
--client-id my-client \
--client-secret secret
UDYMha9TwsMBejEvKfnDOXkhgkLsnmUNYVQDklT5bD8.ZNpuNRC85erbIYDjPqhMwTinlvQmNTk_UvttcLQxFJY
Let's perform token introspection on that token. Make sure to copy the token you just got and not the dummy value.
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml exec hydra \
hydra token introspect \
--endpoint http://127.0.0.1:4445/ \
UDYMha9TwsMBejEvKfnDOXkhgkLsnmUNYVQDklT5bD8.ZNpuNRC85erbIYDjPqhMwTinlvQmNTk_UvttcLQxFJY
{
"active": true,
"client_id": "my-client",
"exp": 1527078658,
"iat": 1527075058,
"iss": "http://127.0.0.1:4444/",
"sub": "my-client",
"token_type": "access_token"
}
Next, we will perform the OAuth 2.0 Authorization Code Grant. For that, we must first create a client that's capable of performing that grant:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml exec hydra \
hydra clients create \
--endpoint http://127.0.0.1:4445 \
--id auth-code-client \
--secret secret \
--grant-types authorization_code,refresh_token \
--response-types code,id_token \
--scope openid,offline \
--callbacks http://127.0.0.1:5555/callback
Note that you need to add --token-endpoint-auth-method none
if your clients are public (such as SPA apps and native apps)
because the public clients can't provide client secrets.
The following command starts a server that serves an example web application. The application will perform the OAuth 2.0 Authorization Code Flow using Ory Hydra. The web server runs on http://127.0.0.1:5555.
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml exec hydra \
hydra token user \
--client-id auth-code-client \
--client-secret secret \
--endpoint http://127.0.0.1:4444/ \
--port 5555 \
--scope openid,offline
Setting up home route on http://127.0.0.1:5555/
Setting up callback listener on http://127.0.0.1:5555/callback
Press ctrl + c on Linux / Windows or cmd + c on OSX to end the process.
If your browser doesn't open automatically, navigate to:
http://127.0.0.1:5555/
Open the URL http://127.0.0.1:5555, log in, and authorize the application. Next, you should see at least
an access token in the response. If you granted the offline
scope, you will also see a refresh token. If you granted the
openid
scope, you will get an ID Token as well.
Great! You installed Ory Hydra, connected the CLI, created a client and completed two authentication flows! Before you continue, clean up this set up in order to avoid conflicts with other tutorials from this guide:
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml kill
docker-compose -f quickstart.yml rm -f -v
Quickstart Configuration
In this tutorial we use a simplified configuration. You can find it in
contrib/quickstart/5-min/hydra.yml
. The
configuration gets loaded in docker-compose as specified in the
quickstart.yml
.
Have a look at the reference configuration for further information on all possible configuration options.