authentik/website/integrations/services/netbox/index.md

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---
title: Integrate with NetBox
sidebar_label: NetBox
---
# NetBox
<span class="badge badge--secondary">Support level: Community</span>
## What is NetBox
> NetBox is the leading solution for modeling and documenting modern networks.
>
> -- https://github.com/netbox-community/netbox
## Preparation
The following placeholders will be used:
- `netbox.company` is the FQDN of the NetBox install.
- `authentik.company` is the FQDN of the authentik install.
Create an application in authentik and note the slug you choose, as this will be used later. In the Admin Interface, go to _Applications_ -> _Providers_. Create a _OAuth2/OpenID provider_ with the following parameters:
- Client Type: `Confidential`
- Redirect URIs: `https://netbox.company/oauth/complete/oidc/`
- Scopes: OpenID, Email and Profile
- Signing Key: Select any available key
Note the Client ID and Client Secret values. Create an application, using the provider you've created above.
## NetBox
:::info
This setup was tested and developed with NetBox Docker. For a non-Docker installation, the Docker part must be disabled and the non-docker part must be used.
:::
The following Docker env vars are required for the configuration.
```env
# Enable python-social-auth
REMOTE_AUTH_ENABLED='true'
REMOTE_AUTH_BACKEND='social_core.backends.open_id_connect.OpenIdConnectAuth'
# python-social-auth config
SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_ENDPOINT='https://authentik.company/application/o/<Application slug>/'
SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_KEY='<Client ID>'
SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_SECRET='<Client Secret>'
SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_SCOPE = ["openid", "profile", "email", "roles"]
LOGOUT_REDIRECT_URL='https://authentik.company/application/o/<Application slug>/end-session/'
```
The Netbox configuration needs to be extended, for this you can create a new file in the configuration folder, for example `authentik.py`.
```py
from os import environ
#############
# Docker
#############
# python-social-auth configuration
SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_ENDPOINT = environ.get('SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_ENDPOINT')
SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_KEY = environ.get('SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_KEY')
SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_SECRET = environ.get('SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_SECRET')
SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_SCOPE = ["openid", "profile", "email", "roles"]
LOGOUT_REDIRECT_URL = environ.get('LOGOUT_REDIRECT_URL')
#############
# non Docker
#############
# NetBox settings
#REMOTE_AUTH_ENABLED = True
#REMOTE_AUTH_BACKEND = 'social_core.backends.open_id_connect.OpenIdConnectAuth'
# python-social-auth configuration
#SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_ENDPOINT = 'https://authentik.company/application/o/<Application
#SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_KEY = '<Client ID>'
#SOCIAL_AUTH_OIDC_SECRET = '<Client Secret>'
#LOGOUT_REDIRECT_URL = 'https://authentik.company/application/o/<Application slug>/end-session/
```
### Groups
To manage groups in NetBox custom social auth pipelines are required. To create them you have to create the `custom_pipeline.py` file in the NetBox directory with the following content.
:::info
From Netbox version 4.0.0 Netbox add the custom `Group` models. The following code is compatible with Netbox 4.0.0 and above. For Netbox versions below 4.0.0, the import statement and group adding / deleting of user lines must be changed.
:::
```python
# from django.contrib.auth.models import Group # For Netbox < 4.0.0
from netbox.authentication import Group # For Netbox >= 4.0.0
class AuthFailed(Exception):
pass
def add_groups(response, user, backend, *args, **kwargs):
try:
groups = response['groups']
except KeyError:
pass
# Add all groups from oAuth token
for group in groups:
group, created = Group.objects.get_or_create(name=group)
# group.user_set.add(user) # For Netbox < 4.0.0
user.groups.add(group) # For Netbox >= 4.0.0
def remove_groups(response, user, backend, *args, **kwargs):
try:
groups = response['groups']
except KeyError:
# Remove all groups if no groups in oAuth token
user.groups.clear()
pass
# Get all groups of user
user_groups = [item.name for item in user.groups.all()]
# Get groups of user which are not part of oAuth token
delete_groups = list(set(user_groups) - set(groups))
# Delete non oAuth token groups
for delete_group in delete_groups:
group = Group.objects.get(name=delete_group)
# group.user_set.remove(user) # For Netbox < 4.0.0
user.groups.remove(group) # For Netbox >= 4.0.0
def set_roles(response, user, backend, *args, **kwargs):
# Remove Roles temporary
user.is_superuser = False
user.is_staff = False
try:
groups = response['groups']
except KeyError:
# When no groups are set
# save the user without Roles
user.save()
pass
# Set roles is role (superuser or staff) is in groups
user.is_superuser = True if 'superusers' in groups else False
user.is_staff = True if 'staff' in groups else False
user.save()
```
The path of the file in the Official Docker image is: `/opt/netbox/netbox/netbox/custom_pipeline.py`
To enable the pipelines, add the pipelines section to the netbox configuration file from above
```python
SOCIAL_AUTH_PIPELINE = (
###################
# Default pipelines
###################
# Get the information we can about the user and return it in a simple
# format to create the user instance later. In some cases the details are
# already part of the auth response from the provider, but sometimes this
# could hit a provider API.
'social_core.pipeline.social_auth.social_details',
# Get the social uid from whichever service we're authing thru. The uid is
# the unique identifier of the given user in the provider.
'social_core.pipeline.social_auth.social_uid',
# Verifies that the current auth process is valid within the current
# project, this is where emails and domains whitelists are applied (if
# defined).
'social_core.pipeline.social_auth.auth_allowed',
# Checks if the current social-account is already associated in the site.
'social_core.pipeline.social_auth.social_user',
# Make up a username for this person, appends a random string at the end if
# there's any collision.
'social_core.pipeline.user.get_username',
# Send a validation email to the user to verify its email address.
# Disabled by default.
# 'social_core.pipeline.mail.mail_validation',
# Associates the current social details with another user account with
# a similar email address. Disabled by default.
# 'social_core.pipeline.social_auth.associate_by_email',
# Create a user account if we haven't found one yet.
'social_core.pipeline.user.create_user',
# Create the record that associates the social account with the user.
'social_core.pipeline.social_auth.associate_user',
# Populate the extra_data field in the social record with the values
# specified by settings (and the default ones like access_token, etc).
'social_core.pipeline.social_auth.load_extra_data',
# Update the user record with any changed info from the auth service.
'social_core.pipeline.user.user_details',
###################
# Custom pipelines
###################
# Set authentik Groups
'netbox.custom_pipeline.add_groups',
'netbox.custom_pipeline.remove_groups',
# Set Roles
'netbox.custom_pipeline.set_roles'
)
```
### Roles
In netbox, there are two special user roles `superuser` and `staff`. To set them, add your users to the `superusers` or `staff` group in authentik.
To use custom group names, the following scope mapping example can be used. In the example, the group `netbox_admins` is used for the `superusers` and the group `netbox_staff` for the `staff` users.
Name: `Netbox roles`
Scope name: `roles`
Expression:
```python
return {
"groups": ["superusers" if group.name == "netbox_admin" else "staff" if group.name == "netbox_staff" else group.name for group in request.user.ak_groups.all()],
}
```
This scope mapping must also be selected in the _OAuth2/OpenID Provider_ created above.