Open WebUI

Open WebUI

This integration guide is community supported. It's not guaranteed to be complete, accurate, or up-to-date. It's likely that if this integration guide does not work for you that changes occurred with a third-party application.

Important Note: This documentation is version specific. Make sure you check the section outlining the tested versions.

Important Note: We always recommend users read the third-party documentation as part of the integration process to ensure configuration elements matches their needs. As such the See Also section is likely to have important links.

Important Note: If you find an error in this documentation please make a Pull Request, start a Discussion, or contact us on a Chat Room.

Tested Versions

Before You Begin

Important Reading

This section contains important elements that you should carefully consider before configuration of an OpenID Connect 1.0 Registered Client.

Common Notes

  1. The OpenID Connect 1.0 client_id parameter:
    1. This must be a unique value for every client.
    2. The value used in this guide is merely for readability and demonstration purposes and you should not use this value in production and should instead utilize the How do I generate a client identifier or client secret? FAQ. We recommend 64 random characters but you can use any arbitrary value that meets the other criteria.
    3. This must only contain RFC3986 Unreserved Characters.
    4. This must be no more than 100 characters in length.
  2. The OpenID Connect 1.0 client_secret parameter:
    1. The value used in this guide is merely for demonstration purposes and you should absolutely not use this value in production and should instead utilize the How do I generate a client identifier or client secret? FAQ.
    2. This string may be stored as plaintext in the Authelia configuration but this behaviour is deprecated and is not guaranteed to be supported in the future. See the Plaintext guide for more information.
    3. When the secret is stored in hashed form in the Authelia configuration (heavily recommended), the cost of hashing can, if too great, cause timeouts for clients. See the Tuning the work factors guide for more information.
  3. The configuration example for Authelia:
    1. Only contains an example configuration for the client registration and you MUST also configure the required elements from the OpenID Connect 1.0 Provider Configuration guide.
    2. Only contains a small portion of all of the available options for a registered client and users may wish to configure portions that are not part of this guide or configure them differently, as such it’s important to both familiarize yourself with the other options available and the effect of each of the options configured in this section by looking at the OpenID Connect 1.0 Clients Configuration guide.

Assumptions

This example makes the following assumptions:

  • Application Root URL: https://ai.example.com/
  • Authelia Root URL: https://auth.example.com/
  • Client ID: open-webui
  • Client Secret: insecure_secret

Some of the values presented in this guide can automatically be replaced with documentation variables.

Configuration

Authelia

The following YAML configuration is an example Authelia client configuration for use with Open WebUI which will operate with the application example:

configuration.yml
identity_providers:
  oidc:
    ## The other portions of the mandatory OpenID Connect 1.0 configuration go here.
    ## See: https://www.authelia.com/c/oidc
    clients:
      - client_id: 'open-webui'
        client_name: 'Open WebUI'
        client_secret: '$pbkdf2-sha512$310000$c8p78n7pUMln0jzvd4aK4Q$JNRBzwAo0ek5qKn50cFzzvE9RXV88h1wJn5KGiHrD0YKtZaR/nCb2CJPOsKaPK0hjf.9yHxzQGZziziccp6Yng'  # The digest of 'insecure_secret'.
        public: false
        authorization_policy: 'two_factor'
        redirect_uris:
          - 'https://ai.example.com/oauth/oidc/callback'
        scopes:
          - 'openid'
          - 'profile'
          - 'groups'
          - 'email'
        userinfo_signed_response_alg: 'RS256'
        token_endpoint_auth_method: 'client_secret_basic'

Application

To configure Open WebUI there is one method, using the Environment Variables.

Environment Variables

Did you know?

This configuration limits who can log in to those with the openwebui or openwebui-admin groups. This is configured via the OAUTH_ALLOWED_ROLES environment variable. Anyone with the openwebui-admin group will be an admin for the application. This is configured via the OAUTH_ADMIN_ROLES environment variable.

To configure Open WebUI to utilize Authelia as an OpenID Connect 1.0 Provider, use the following environment variables:

Standard
.env
ENABLE_OAUTH_SIGNUP=true
OAUTH_MERGE_ACCOUNTS_BY_EMAIL=true
OAUTH_CLIENT_ID=open-webui
OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET=insecure_secret
OPENID_PROVIDER_URL=https://auth.example.com/.well-known/openid-configuration
OAUTH_PROVIDER_NAME=Authelia
OAUTH_SCOPES=openid email profile groups
ENABLE_OAUTH_ROLE_MANAGEMENT=true
OAUTH_ALLOWED_ROLES=openwebui,openwebui-admin
OAUTH_ADMIN_ROLES=openwebui-admin
OAUTH_ROLES_CLAIM=groups
Docker Compose
comppse.yml
services:
  open-webui:
    environment:
      ENABLE_OAUTH_SIGNUP: 'true'
      OAUTH_MERGE_ACCOUNTS_BY_EMAIL: 'true'
      OAUTH_CLIENT_ID: 'open-webui'
      OAUTH_CLIENT_SECRET: 'insecure_secret'
      OPENID_PROVIDER_URL: 'https://auth.example.com/.well-known/openid-configuration'
      OAUTH_PROVIDER_NAME: 'Authelia'
      OAUTH_SCOPES: 'openid email profile groups'
      ENABLE_OAUTH_ROLE_MANAGEMENT: 'true'
      OAUTH_ALLOWED_ROLES: 'openwebui,openwebui-admin'
      OAUTH_ADMIN_ROLES: 'openwebui-admin'
      OAUTH_ROLES_CLAIM: 'groups'

See Also