# Basic Authelia Config # Send a subsequent request to Authelia to verify if the user is authenticated # and has the right permissions to access the resource. auth_request /authelia; # Set the `target_url` variable based on the request. It will be used to build the portal # URL with the correct redirection parameter. auth_request_set $target_url $scheme://$http_host$request_uri; # Set the X-Forwarded-User and X-Forwarded-Groups with the headers # returned by Authelia for the backends which can consume them. # This is not safe, as the backend must make sure that they come from the # proxy. In the future, it's gonna be safe to just use OAuth. auth_request_set $user $upstream_http_remote_user; auth_request_set $groups $upstream_http_remote_groups; auth_request_set $name $upstream_http_remote_name; auth_request_set $email $upstream_http_remote_email; proxy_set_header Remote-User $user; proxy_set_header Remote-Groups $groups; proxy_set_header Remote-Name $name; proxy_set_header Remote-Email $email; # If Authelia returns 401, then nginx redirects the user to the login portal. # If it returns 200, then the request pass through to the backend. # For other type of errors, nginx will handle them as usual. error_page 401 =302 https://auth.{{ base_domain }}/?rd=$target_url;