Federated Authentication and Authorization for Municipal and Regional Users

This page describes the required SAML attributes in the tokens for municipal and regional users.

Common for both municipal and regional users is that:

  1. Municipal and regional users' access to the eHealth Infrastructure goes through SEB.

  2. The Infrastructure Authorization Service (AS) redirects a login to SEB (as SAML AuthNRequest).

  3. SEB redirected the SAML AuthNRequest to municipal and regional Identity Providers (IdP), respectively.

    1. From the SEB there are differences in what systems are involved in the login flow.

    2. Federated Authentication and Authorization for Municipal Users describes the flow for municipality users.

    3. Federated Authentication and Authorization for Regional Users describes the flow for regional users.

  4. The SAML AuthNResponse returned to the SEB and the Infrastructure AS must conform to OIO BPP

Technically speaking, authorization is performed in the Infrastructure Authorization Service while the municipal and regional IdP provide claims. In effect, however, the IdPs provide the decisions behind the authorization in the form of system roles.

SAML Attributes for Clinical Users

The SAML AuthNResponse from the SEB shall contain SAML attributes in a SAML assertion which the eHealth Infrastructure uses to identify the clinical user.

Attribute

Description

Attribute

Description

urn:oid:2.5.4.10

Organization name

dk:gov:saml:attribute:CprNumberIdentifier

Required from SEB. 

Civil registration number (CPR)

dk:gov:saml:attribute:CvrNumberIdentifier

CVR number

dk:gov:saml:attribute:RidNumberIdentifier

RID number from certificate

dk:gov:saml:attribute:AssuranceLevel

AssuranceLevel (must be 4)

urn:oid:2.5.4.3

Required from SEB.

Common name (full name)

urn:liberty:disco:2006-08:DiscoveryEPR

IDCard

dk:healthcare:saml:attribute:HasUserAuthorization

A boolean saying if the user has any healthcare authorizations

dk:healthcare:saml:attribute:UserAuthorizations

A list of the users healthcare authorizations

urn:oid:0.9.2342.19200300.100.1.1

Required from SEB.

The globally unique ID of the user within his/her organization. (also known as UID)

dk:gov:saml:attribute:Privileges_intermediate

Required from SEB.

A base64-encoded XML structure in OIO BPP format, listing privileges.

If an employee should have any permissions, this attribute should define one or more roles in scope of an organizational unit or careteam, e.g. a SOR number, STS Organisation or careteam reference.

See general structure in documentation[1].

[1] https://digst.dk/media/19020/oiosaml-basic-privilege-profile-1_1.pdf

dk:healthcare:ehealth:saml:attribute:scopingOIOBPPContext

Optional. Can be used to limit scopes expressed in the OIO BPP structure, by adding it as a constraint in each PrivilegeGroup. Only PriviledgeGroups with the constraint matching the value of scopingOIOBPPContext will be available for the user.

The scopingOIOBPPContext is not yet processed by the Infrastructure Authorization Server and is ignored. It can be used to support multi affiliation in the future.

The required attributes used are:

  1. dk:gov:saml:attribute:CprNumberIdentifier - the CPR number is primarily used for delivering data to the central NSP MinLog2 service.

  2. urn:oid:0.9.2342.19200300.100.1.1 the UID uniquely identifies the user in the eHealth Infrastructure

  3. dk:gov:saml:attribute:Privileges_intermediate provides the user's roles and the careteams that are available to the user in the OIO BPP format.

OIO BPP in the eHealth Infrastructure

Municipalities MUST follow the guidelines located here: OIO-BPP URI naming precautions for municipalities

The structure of the OIO BPP, used in Privileges_intermediate, is capable of expressing multiple careteam- and organization affiliations. If only a single careteam is expressed in the OIO BPP it is automatically set in the user's context. In the case where the user is part of multiple careteams, the user needs to set the wanted careteam in context (see Switching Context). Once a careteam is set into context, the roles under that careteam apply to the user - expressed in the JWT (the internal access token of the eHealth Infrastructure).

An example:

OIO BPP

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <bpp:PrivilegeList xmlns:bpp="http://itst.dk/oiosaml/basic_privilege_profile" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" > <PrivilegeGroup Scope="urn:dk:gov:saml:cvrNumberIdentifier:29190925"> <Constraint Name="urn:dk:gov:saml:sorIdentifier">440711000016004</Constraint> <Constraint Name="urn:dk:sundhed:ehealth:careteam">95c7aef7-ec7f-487b-9687-6e6624d25fdb</Constraint> <Privilege>urn:dk:sundhed:ehealth:role:monitoring_assistor</Privilege> </PrivilegeGroup> </bpp:PrivilegeList>

The OIO BPP snippet above is listed for Practitioner 1 - Lasse Dam. This OIO BPP states that Lasse Dam has the role "urn:dk:sundhed:ehealth:role:monitoring_assistor" in the careteam identified by "95c7aef7-ec7f-487b-9687-6e6624d25fdb" in the organization "440711000016004". If this was the only content of the OIO BPP, Lasse Dam would have been handed a JWT by the infrastructure where the stated careteam and organization would be set in context. Had there been multiple PrivilegeGroups in the OIO BPP, nothing would have been set in context as the choice would not be straightforward for the AS to pick, instead the client would have to ask the user to pick among the available allowed contexts (see Switching Context).

Since the OIO BPP states what privileges are available to the user, it is up to the IdP to construct the correct OIO BPPs. Valid privileges and what they map to can be seen at Tokens, Roles and RBAC/ABAC.

Enhanced example:

Enhanced OIO BPP

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?> <bpp:PrivilegeList xmlns:bpp="http://itst.dk/oiosaml/basic_privilege_profile" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" > <PrivilegeGroup Scope="urn:dk:gov:saml:cvrNumberIdentifier:29190925"> <Constraint Name="urn:dk:gov:saml:sorIdentifier">440711000016004</Constraint> <Constraint Name="urn:dk:sundhed:ehealth:careteam">95c7aef7-ec7f-487b-9687-6e6624d25fdb</Constraint> <Privilege>urn:dk:sundhed:ehealth:role:monitoring_assistor</Privilege> <Privilege>urn:dk:sundhed:ehealth:role:citizen_enroller</Privilege> </PrivilegeGroup> <PrivilegeGroup Scope="urn:dk:gov:saml:cvrNumberIdentifier:29190925"> <Constraint Name="urn:dk:kombit:orgUnit">48df8b3d-56be-4f3a-bd0f-d3ade05348dd</Constraint> <Privilege>urn:dk:sundhed:ehealth:role:clinical_administrator</Privilege> <Privilege>urn:dk:sundhed:ehealth:role:questionnaire_editor</Privilege> </PrivilegeGroup> </bpp:PrivilegeList>

Had the example instead looked like the example stated above, the user Lasse Dam would have been issued a more narrow JWT as nothing would have been set into context as the AS would be unable to choose between whether the user should be in the context of the careteam with the role "monitoring assistor" and "citizen enroller" or in the context of the organization with the roles "clinical administrator" (capable of managing PlanDefinition and ActivityDefinitions) and "questionnaire editor".

The PrivilegeGroups provided in the OIO BPP must be unique by the following scheme:

The combination of CVR number (scope) sorIdentifer(regional)/orgUnit(municipal) (and careteam) must be unique. Failing to comply with this may result in errors. This scheme is to ensure that users cannot have multiple different privileges stated differently. Do note that it is possible to list multiple (valid) privileges in any given PrivilegeGroup.