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https://cloud.google.com/apigee/ Consumer Data Standards Australia - Open Banking Reference Implementation

Overview

The Consumer Data Standards (CDS) have been developed as part of the Australian Government's introduction of the Consumer Data Right legislation to give Australians greater control over their data.

This is a reference implementation of the CDS Banking APIs, also known as Open Banking Australia, using the Google Cloud Apigee API Management platform.

NOTE:This reference implementation works with Apigee Edge deployments. Check the apigee-x branch of this repository for a version that works with Apigee X or hybrid deployments

This implementation is based on v1.11 of the standards and currently supports the following Banking APIs

  • Get Products
  • Get Product Detail
  • Get Accounts
  • Get Bulk Balances
  • Get Balances For Specific Accounts
  • Get Account Balance
  • Get Account Detail
  • Get Transactions For Account
  • Get Transaction Detail

as well as the required security endpoints:

  • Authorisation
  • Token
  • Token Refresh
  • Token Revocation
  • UserInfo
  • Introspection
  • OpenID Provider Configuration
  • Pushed Authorisation Requests (PARs)
  • CDR Arrangement Revocation (Consent revocation)

... administration endpoints:

  • Metadata Update
  • Get Metrics

... discovery endpoints:

  • Get Status
  • Get Outages

and dynamic client registration endpoints:

  • Register a client using a CDR Register issued Software Statement Assertion
  • Get/Update/Delete a Client Registration for a given Client ID

It optionally supports mutual TLS (mTLS) with Holder of Key (HoK) verification. For details on how to enable that feature, see README.md

Other APIs will be gradually added.

This repository includes:

  1. A set of reusable artefacts (Shared flows) that implement common functionality mandated by the standards (e.g: check request headers and parameters, include pagination information and self links in responses, etc.). These shared flows can be used in any CDS Banking API implementation
  2. API Proxies (CDS-Products, CDS-Accounts) as a reference implementation. These API proxies return mock data from a fictional bank, and showcase how to include those reusable artefacts and best practices such as caching of (mock) responses
  3. An API proxy (oidc-mock-provider) that implements a standalone Open ID Connect Identity Provider, based on the open source package oidc-provider
  4. An API Proxy (CDS-ConsentMgmtWithKVM) that provides basic consent management capabilities, including managing consent screens, end user approval and consent revocation by CDR Arrangement ID
  5. An API Proxy (oidc) that highlights one of the multiple patterns in which Apigee can interact with an Identity Provider. In this case, the standalone OIDC provider issues identity tokens, and Apigee issues opaque access and refresh tokens. It also interacts with the CDS-ConsentMgmtWithKVM proxy to create/modify/revoke consents.
  6. An API Proxy (CDS-DynamicClientRegistration) that leverages Apigee client management capabilities to allow Data Recipients to dynamically register with the reference implementation.
  7. An API Proxy (mock-cdr-register) that mocks the CDR register role in dynamic client registration: Issuing Software Statement Assertions (SSAs) and providing a JWKS to verify these SSAs.
  8. An API Proxy (mock-adr-client) that mocks the functionality that a client being registered dynamically needs to include: provide a JWKS that can be used to verify a registration request. In addition, to make testing easier, it also has a helper facility to automatically generate such registration requests and create Pushed Authorisation Requests (PARs)

The reference implementation can accelerate Open Banking implementation in multiple ways:

  • Quick delivery of a sandbox API environment, returning mock data.
  • Reusable artefacts (implemented as shared flows) can be included in real API implementations.
  • Leverage the implemented Apigee/Standalone OIDC Provider interaction to kickstart the interaction between Apigee and a real OIDC Provider.
  • The Dynamic Client Registration functionality can be reused as is, if Apigee is kept as the source of truth for API clients authentication/authorisation, or with minor changes if the API clients need to be registered in the Identity Provider and/or Consent Management Solution as well.

This is not an officially supported Google product.

Setup

Pre-requisites

Installation

  1. Install apigeetool
npm install --global apigeetool
  1. Configure environment variables specifying the Apigee organisation and environment where the artefacts will be deployed
export APIGEE_ORG=<your-org-name>
export APIGEE_ENV=<your-env-name>
export APIGEE_USER=<your-user-name>
export APIGEE_PASSWORD='<your-password>'   # Make sure to surround your password in single quotes, in case it includes special characters such as '$'
export CDS_TEST_DEVELOPER_EMAIL=<your-email-address>
  1. Run the following script from the root folder of the cloned repo.
./setup/deployOpenBankingAU.sh

This script deploys all the required artefacts and also creates a sample test app (registered to the developer provided by the CDS_TEST_DEVELOPER_EMAIL variable).

See README.md for details on how to enable support for mutual TLS (mTLS) with Holder of Key (HoK) verification.

Testing the Installation

A Postman collection includes sample requests for the implemented APIs, and for obtaining an access token (including navigating through the mock login and consent pages)

Portal

You can find an adaptation of the Apigee Developer Kickstart Drupal distribution that works with this reference implementation at https://github.com/srijanone/OpenBanking-Portal. This Distribution lets you quickly try out or get started using Drupal to create an Apigee developer portal. It also has the necessary callbacks required to authenticate/authorise an end user against the standalone OIDC provider included in this reference implementation.

You can publish APIs into the portal using the OpenAPI specifications found in specs

You can see and try out an actual instance of such a portal at https://live-cds-au-sandbox.devportal.apigee.io

Admin APIs

This reference implementation includes Admin endpoints, Metadata Update and Get Metrics. These endpoints are meant to be called by the CDR Register only. In order to be able to test these endpoints, the deployment script generates a Mock implementation of the Register and a Test Register Client which needs to authenticate using private key jwts. The Mock implementation includes a facility to generate such a private key jwt.

The Postman collection includes a request to the helper endpoint in the Mock CDR Register (/mock-cdr-register/privatekeyjwt).

The reference implementation also includes an optional solution that utilises Apigee Analytics capabilities to return actual metrics. For more details see its associated README.md

Integrations with specific Identity Providers

Okta has contributed to this reference implementation by providing a modified version of the oidc proxy that shows how Apigee can interact with Okta as an Identity Provider. You can find this version of the reference implementation in the okta-integration branch of this repository.

Shared Flows

There are 17 shared flows that implement common functionality required by the Banking, Admin and dynamic client registration APIs.

  1. add-response-fapi-interaction-id: Includes x-fapi-interaction-id header in responses and error messages
  2. add-response-headers-links-meta: Includes in the response the mandated headers and "meta" structure in the payload, including self links, pagination links, and pagination information, if applicable.
  3. apply-traffic-thresholds: Implements traffic threshold requirements for the different types of API requests: public, customer present, and unattended.
  4. authenticate-with-private-key-jwt: Implements private_key_jwt client authentication method. It can also be used to verify JWT tokens that contain Pushed Authorisation Requests (PARs)
  5. check-request-headers: Makes sure mandatory headers are included in a request, and that headers have acceptable values.
  6. check-token-not-reused: Validates that a JWT token has not been previously seen by caching its JTI claim for a specified amount of time. Used in Register token validation shared flows, as well as dynamic client registration.
  7. collect-performance-slo: Collects analytics information about the performance tier a request belongs to, and whether it meets its performance SLO. Also records type of token operations (for customerCount and recipientCount metrics)
  8. decide-if-customer-present: Determines whether a request has a customer present or is unattended. This impact the traffic thresholds and performance SLOs applied to the request. Used by the check-request-headers shared flow, but can also be used independently.
  9. get-jwks-from-dynamic-uri: Retrieves (and caches) a JWKS from a URI.
  10. get-ppid: Returns a unique Pairwise Pseudonym Identifier based on a sector and a customer Id. Uses a KVM to persist the generated PPIds. The sector is an attribute of the registered app for a given data receiver, determined at registration time, according to the CDS specifications.
  11. manage-tokens-by-consent-id: Keeps track of the latest tokens (access and refresh tokens) associated with a given CDR arrangement ID. Can revoke these tokens when a CDR arrangement is revoked (either through Arrangement Revocation API or out of band, on a different channel)
  12. paginate-backend-response: Returns a subset of the full backend response, according to the pagination parameters included in a request.
  13. validate-audience-in-jwt: Validates the audience claim in an authorisation JWT token as specified in version 1.6
  14. validate-request-params: Implements checks on request parameters: data types, admissible values, etc.
  15. validate-ssa: Validates a Software Statement Assertion included in a dynamic client registration request, as specified in Section Dynamic Client Registration of the CDR Register standards
  16. verify-idp-id-token: Verifies the JWT ID token issued by the IDP and stores the relevant claims into variables for reuse
  17. verify-mtls-and-hok: Can be configured to check that mTLS is used on a given request, and, if mTLS is used, that the client certificate being presented is the same used for acquiring a token (Holder of Key verification)