Home-Assistant
What is Home-Assistant
Open source home automation that puts local control and privacy first. Powered by a worldwide community of tinkerers and DIY enthusiasts. Perfect to run on a Raspberry Pi or a local server.
You might run into CSRF errors, this is caused by a technology Home-assistant uses and not authentik, see this GitHub issue.
Preparation
The following placeholders will be used:
hass.company
is the FQDN of the Home-Assistant install.authentik.company
is the FQDN of the authentik install.
Home-Assistant
This guide requires https://github.com/BeryJu/hass-auth-header, which can be installed as described in the Readme.
Afterwards, make sure the trusted_proxies
setting contains the IP(s) of the Host(s) authentik is running on.
Use this configuration to match on the user's authentik username.
auth_header:
username_header: X-authentik-username
If this is not the case, you can simply add an additional header for your user, which contains the Home-Assistant Name and authenticate based on that.
For example add this to your user's properties and set the Header to X-ak-hass-user
.
additionalHeaders:
X-ak-hass-user: some other name
authentik
Create a Proxy Provider with the following values
-
Internal host
If Home-Assistant is running in docker, and you're deploying the authentik proxy on the same host, set the value to
http://homeassistant:8123
, where Home-Assistant is the name of your container.If Home-Assistant is running on a different server than where you are deploying the authentik proxy, set the value to
http://hass.company:8123
. -
External host
Set this to the external URL you will be accessing Home-Assistant from.
Create an application in authentik and select the provider you've created above.
Deployment
Create an outpost deployment for the provider you've created above, as described here. Deploy this Outpost either on the same host or a different host that can access Home-Assistant.
The outpost will connect to authentik and configure itself.