Nowadays the engineering community has many products for authentication in their frameworks. Lots of them have built-in features for authentication and a lot of libraries available for social sign-in. We have the Django framework, Flask, and python-social-auth to build almost everything we need to authenticate users in the pythonic world.
In this article, I'll show you an example of how to add everything we need for the user's authentication without writing lots of lines of code. The code used in this blog post is available on GitHub. We'll use Flask, flask cookie-cutter, docker, docker-compose, Postgres, Ory Kratos and Ory Keto.
Let's take a look at the login flow of our application using Ory Kratos and Ory Keto.
What we will use in our project
- Flask cookiecutter is a great tool to bootstrap our project structure. It's always a great idea to have ready-to-use linters, Dockerfile, and package management tools out of the box.
- Postgres as an RDBMS. We will have two Postgres services running in two containers in this example. I think that it's a great idea to keep it simple without using custom scripts to have multiple databases available in a single docker-compose service.
- Ory Kratos with UI to authenticate users.
- Ory Keto as an access control service.
Setting up Ory Kratos
Ory Kratos will be responsible for storing identity data such as email/login and password. Using the quickstart guide we need to copy the contents of contrib/quickstart/kratos/email-password to the root of your project and then add the following content to the docker-compose:
  postgres-kratos:
    image: postgres:9.6
    ports:
      - "5432:5432"
    environment:
      - POSTGRES_USER=kratos
      - POSTGRES_PASSWORD=secret
      - POSTGRES_DB=kratos
    networks:
      - intranet
  kratos-migrate:
    image: oryd/kratos:v0.8.0-alpha.3
    links:
      - postgres-kratos:postgres-kratos
    environment:
      - DSN=postgres://kratos:secret@postgres-kratos:5432/kratos?sslmode=disable&max_conns=20&max_idle_conns=4
    networks:
      - intranet
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./kratos
        target: /etc/config/kratos
    command: -c /etc/config/kratos/kratos.yml migrate sql -e --yes
  kratos:
    image: oryd/kratos:v0.8.0-alpha.3
    links:
      - postgres-kratos:postgres-kratos
    environment:
      - DSN=postgres://kratos:secret@postgres-kratos:5432/kratos?sslmode=disable&max_conns=20&max_idle_conns=4
    ports:
      - '4433:4433'
      - '4434:4434'
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./kratos
        target: /etc/config/kratos
    networks:
      - intranet
    command: serve -c /etc/config/kratos/kratos.yml --dev --watch-courier
  kratos-selfservice-ui-node:
    image: oryd/kratos-selfservice-ui-node:v0.8.0-alpha.3
    environment:
      - KRATOS_PUBLIC_URL=http://kratos:4433/
      - KRATOS_BROWSER_URL=http://127.0.0.1:4433/
    networks:
      - intranet
    ports:
      - "4455:3000"
    restart: on-failure
  mailslurper:
    image: oryd/mailslurper:latest-smtps
    ports:
      - '4436:4436'
      - '4437:4437'
    networks:
      - intranet
  postgres-keto:
Setting up Ory Keto
You can get familiar with the concepts of Ory Keto reading the quickstart guide. These articles can give you a brief introduction to it. Since we need to manage access to the home page, we need to create a folder keto at the root of our project and have a keto/keto.yml file with the following content:
version: v0.7.0-alpha.1
log:
  level: debug
namespaces:
  - name: app
    id: 1
serve:
  read:
    host: 0.0.0.0
    port: 4466
  write:
    host: 0.0.0.0
    port: 4467
We need the following containers:
- postgresd-auth is the database for Ory Keto.
- keto-migrate that takes care of database migrations.
- keto-perms is a wrapper to work with permissions using a command-line interface.
- keto runs the server.
version: "3.7"
x-default-volumes: &default_volumes
  volumes:
    - ./:/app
    - node-modules:/app/node_modules
    - ./dev.db:/tmp/dev.db
services:
  oathkeeper:
    image: oryd/oathkeeper:v0.38
    depends_on:
      - kratos
    ports:
      - 8080:4455
      - 4456:4456
    command:
      serve proxy -c "/etc/config/oathkeeper/oathkeeper.yml"
    environment:
      - LOG_LEVEL=debug
    restart: on-failure
    networks:
      - intranet
    volumes:
      - ./oathkeeper:/etc/config/oathkeeper
  flask:
    build:
      context: .
    image: "kratos_app_example-development"
    environment:
      - FLASK_APP=autoapp.py
      - FLASK_ENV=development
    networks:
      - intranet
    restart: on-failure
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./
        target: /app
  postgres-kratos:
    image: postgres:9.6
    ports:
      - "5432:5432"
    environment:
      - POSTGRES_USER=kratos
      - POSTGRES_PASSWORD=secret
      - POSTGRES_DB=kratos
    networks:
      - intranet
  kratos-migrate:
    image: oryd/kratos:v0.8.0-alpha.3
    links:
      - postgres-kratos:postgres-kratos
    environment:
      - DSN=postgres://kratos:secret@postgres-kratos:5432/kratos?sslmode=disable&max_conns=20&max_idle_conns=4
    networks:
      - intranet
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./kratos
        target: /etc/config/kratos
    command: -c /etc/config/kratos/kratos.yml migrate sql -e --yes
  kratos:
    image: oryd/kratos:v0.8.0-alpha.3
    links:
      - postgres-kratos:postgres-kratos
    environment:
      - DSN=postgres://kratos:secret@postgres-kratos:5432/kratos?sslmode=disable&max_conns=20&max_idle_conns=4
    ports:
      - '4433:4433'
      - '4434:4434'
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./kratos
        target: /etc/config/kratos
    networks:
      - intranet
    command: serve -c /etc/config/kratos/kratos.yml --dev --watch-courier
  kratos-selfservice-ui-node:
    image: oryd/kratos-selfservice-ui-node:v0.8.0-alpha.3
    environment:
      - KRATOS_PUBLIC_URL=http://kratos:4433/
      - KRATOS_BROWSER_URL=http://127.0.0.1:4433/
    networks:
      - intranet
    ports:
      - "4455:3000"
    restart: on-failure
  mailslurper:
    image: oryd/mailslurper:latest-smtps
    ports:
      - '4436:4436'
      - '4437:4437'
    networks:
      - intranet
  postgres-keto:
    image: postgres:9.6
    ports:
      - "15432:5432"
    environment:
      - POSTGRES_USER=keto
      - POSTGRES_PASSWORD=secret
      - POSTGRES_DB=keto
    networks:
      - intranet
  keto-migrate:
    image: oryd/keto:v0.7.0-alpha.1
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./keto
        target: /home/ory
    environment:
      - LOG_LEVEL=debug
      - DSN=postgres://keto:secret@postgres-keto:5432/keto?sslmode=disable&max_conns=20&max_idle_conns=4
    command: ["migrate", "up", "-y"]
    restart: on-failure
    depends_on:
      - postgres-kratos
    networks:
      - intranet
  keto-perms:
    image: oryd/keto:v0.7.0-alpha.1
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./keto
        target: /home/ory
    environment:
      - KETO_WRITE_REMOTE=keto:4467
      - KETO_READ_REMOTE=keto:4466
      - LOG_LEVEL=debug
      - DSN=postgres://keto:secret@postgres-keto:5432/keto?sslmode=disable&max_conns=20&max_idle_conns=4
    depends_on:
      - postgres-kratos
    networks:
      - intranet
  keto:
    image: oryd/keto:v0.7.0-alpha.1
    volumes:
      - type: bind
        source: ./keto
        target: /home/ory
    ports:
      - '4466:4466'
      - '4467:4467'
    depends_on:
      - keto-migrate
    environment:
      - DSN=postgres://keto:secret@postgres-keto:5432/keto?sslmode=disable&max_conns=20&max_idle_conns=4
    networks:
      - intranet
    command: serve
volumes:
  node-modules:
  kratos-sqlite:
networks:
  intranet:
Working with policies
Keto has configured namespace app to use in Flask application. Following the guide Check whether a User has Access to Something I decided to implement simple permission policy for the demo project:
- Use keto-cli managing permissions.
- Use email for subjects without @symbol.
Pros
- Easy to use and maintain.
- Can easily be automated using CI/CD pipelines.
Cons
- Lack of UI can be dealbreaker for non-engineering staff
- This permission policy can violate GDPR, HIPAA or any other compliances due to personal data usage.
Flask part
HTTP_STATUS_FORBIDDEN = 403
@blueprint.route("/", methods=["GET", "POST"])
def home():
    """Home page."""
    if 'ory_kratos_session' not in request.cookies:
        return redirect(settings.KRATOS_UI_URL)
    response = requests.get(
        f"{settings.KRATOS_EXTERNAL_API_URL}/sessions/whoami",
        cookies=request.cookies
    )
    active = response.json().get('active')
    if not active:
        abort(HTTP_STATUS_FORBIDDEN)
    email = response.json().get('identity', {}).get('traits', {}).get('email').replace('@', '')
    # Check permissions
    response = requests.get(
        f"{settings.KETO_API_READ_URL}/check",
        params={
            "namespace": "app",
            "object": "homepage",
            "relation": "read",
            "subject_id": email,
        }
    )
    if not response.json().get("allowed"):
        abort(HTTP_STATUS_FORBIDDEN)
    return render_template("public/home.html")
@blueprint.route("/oathkeeper", methods=["GET", "POST"])
def oathkeeper():
    """ An example route to demo oathkeeper integration with Kratos """
    return {"message": "greetings"}
Nota bene
- Consider having authorizationandauthenticationpackages that use Kratos SDK and Keto SDK. Instead of just calling some magic endpoints, your code will be more readable with SDKs.
- Please pay attention to configure login session and cookies.
- It's better to use Ory Cloud instead of having Ory Kratos managed by your team just because Ory manages it, and you don't need to enable observability/logging/metrics for your service.
