Suppose we have some RESTful API whose resources we want to expose. End users will work with this API through client applications like mobile apps and Javascript based clients that run on web browsers.
With OAuth 2.0 this RESTful API will lie on the Resource Server and we will have one Authorization Server on which the client applications are registered. The users will then be registered at the authorization server and will be able to grant permission to those applications access resources on their behalf or not.
So when the user access one client application he will be redirected to the Authorization Server and be prompted to grant permissions to said client app. After that an access token is issued and the client is able to make requests to the Resource Server.
All of this is quite clear to me. There's just one missing piece: the protection of each resource might be user-dependent. To be more precise it might be claims-dependent. What I mean by that is we can have the following situation:
The resource http://resourceserver.com/api/first-resource should only be accessible to users with claim "ExampleClaim" with value 123.
The resource http://resourceserver.com/api/second-resource should only be accessible to users with claim "AnotherClaim" with value 123.
The resource http://resourceserver.com/api/third-resource should be accessible to any users.
When I first heard of OAuth was dealing with ASP.NET WebAPI and I dealt with that in the following way: when the request was sent with the Authorization: Bearer [token]
header, on server side the thread principal was set and I thought that this meant the user was authenticated with the API. So I used [Authorize]
attributes in order to verify if the user could access the resource.
After studying OAuth more deeply I saw this was a terrible misuse of the protocol. As I've learned, OAuth authorizes applications and not users. When the request is made with the Authorization header, as I've learned, the access token shouldn't contain information about the user, just about the application being allowed to make the request.
Considering that, sending the Authorization header with the request doesn't identify the user and does don't say if the user can or cannot access said resource.
In that case, how does one perform this kind of authorization? I mean, not authorization of the client app performing the request, but the authorization of the user accessing the resource based on his claims? I believe this is where OpenID Connect and it's ID tokens come in, but I'm unsure. How does one manage this?