Well known modifications to baseline CAS 2.x:
Services whitelist
High level discussion
An important feature of CAS is its openness. Bring up a CAS instance at your institution and you can let application developers of varying trustworthiness and ability produce applications against which your users securely authenticate. Passwords are not exposed to these potentially suspect applications. There's a lot to be said for not having to centrally manage the set of applications authorized to use your central authentication server.
However, some institutions nonetheless want to restrict the set of applications able to authenticate using CAS. This is typically implemented as a whitelist of services. Service tickets will only be vended for whitelisted services.
Feature specification
CAS administrators can specify a whitelist of services. CAS will only vend tickets for these services. It is easy to implement compelling user factors / UI for the case where the service is not authorized for ticket vending.
Implementation notes
This can be implemented under CAS 2.x as a Filter which examines the "service" parameter of the login / proxy request and forwards to an error page if the service is not authorized. A similar implementation may be very possible under CAS 3.0. That is, this feature may not require any changes or accomodations by the CAS server product itself.
Who has done this
Columbia University has done this. So has University of Delaware.
Single Sign Out
High level discussion
Some CAS adoptors, notably the Campus Crusade for Christ, have added a Single Sign Out feature whereby CAS Server calls back client applications for which it validated tickets during the CAS session when the user explicitly logs out of CAS.
Feature specification
This feature might best be specified as a well-defined but optional extension to the CAS protocol. At ticket validation time, the CAS client can specify the URL whereat it would like to be called back with the ticket it is validating, indicating that the user has logged out of CAS. If the CAS server supports the feature, the validation response would include confirmation of the registered logout callback URL. CAS clients not supporting the feature will not specify a logout callback and so will receive an unmodified validation response. CAS clients supporting the protocol interacting with CAS servers which do not support the protocl will not receive callback confirmation in the validation response and so will not expect the logout callback. Clients will have to be prepared to deal with the callback not happening anyway since this affirmative callback might be blocked by network difficulties, etc. CAS clients supporting the protocol interacting with CAS servers supporting the protocol will receive confirmation in the validation response indicating that they can expect the server to attempt the callback. Again, the callback could fail due to network problems, the client application being out of service at the time of the callback, etc.
Who has done this
Campus Crusade for Christ distributes a CAS server modified to implement this feature.
Audit Trail
Who has done this
Return link at logout and other Logout customization
High level discussion
When sending the user to the CAS logout page, you might want to provide a URL to CAS such that when it paints the logout page it provides users an opportunity to follow a link to someplace interesting. For instance, upon logging out of CAS from your uPortal instance, you might have the CAS logout screen provide a link back from CAS logout to the uPortal guest page. Columbia's WIND takes this further by allowing services to provide customized text to include in the logout UI.
Implementation notes
Implemented by Yale as checking for the request parameter "url" in the logout.jsp display logic, displaying a link to the provided URL if the parameter is present.
Who has done this
Yale University. Columbia University.
Renew evaluated client-side
CAS 2.0 offers a request parameter "renew" on service ticket validation. Setting renew=true requires that the ST was issued in the same transaction as that which issued its granting ticket – that is, the user presented primary crendentials simultaneous with specifying the target for which the ST was issued.
Columbia WIND includes this boolean in the ticket validation response. Doing so enables clients to determine client-side whether to require this of a ST.
Use case
Suppose a service wishes to allow users to opt into Single Sign On. If this attribute of STs is communicated in the validation response, then the client can examine the authenticated username and whether the ST was issued simultaneous with user presentation of primary credentials. If the user has opted into SSO, great. If the user has not opted into SSO, but the user presented primary credentials at the time the ST was issued, great. If the user has not opted into SSO but the ticket was issued via SSO, then the service can redirect back to CAS login with renew=true.
Who has done this
- Columbia University