Single Sign-On with Ping Identity
This guide explains how to enable single sign-on (SSO) for applications being proxied by F5 NGINX Plus. The solution uses OpenID Connect as the authentication mechanism, with Ping Identity (PingFederate or PingOne) as the Identity Provider (IdP), and NGINX Plus as the Relying Party.
This guide applies to NGINX Plus Release 35 and later. In earlier versions, NGINX Plus relied on an njs-based solution, which required NGINX JavaScript files, key-value stores, and advanced OpenID Connect logic. In the latest NGINX Plus version, the new OpenID Connect module simplifies this process to just a few directives.
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PingFederate Enterprise Federation Server or PingOne Cloud deployment with a Ping Identity account.
-
An NGINX Plus subscription and NGINX Plus Release 35 or later. For installation instructions, see Installing NGINX Plus.
-
A domain name pointing to your NGINX Plus instance, for example,
demo.example.com
.
These steps outline an example with the cloud offering of PingOne. If you are using the on‑premises PingFederate, the user interface might slightly differ.
Create a new application for NGINX Plus:
-
Log in to your Ping Identity admin console.
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Go to Applications > Applications.
-
Click the + (plus) symbol to create a new OIDC Application.
-
On the New Application screen:
-
Enter the Name of your application, for example,
nginx-demo-app
. -
Select the Application Type OIDC Web App.
-
Select Save.
-
-
In your OIDC application, Select the Overview tab:
-
in the General section, copy your Client ID and Client Secret values. You will need then later when configuring NGINX Plus.
-
In the Connection Details section, copy your Issuer ID. You will need it later when configuring NGINX Plus.
For PingOne Cloud, the Issuer ID generally structured as
https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as
.For PingFederate, the Issuer ID generally structured as
https://pingfederate.example.com:9031
appended with the realm path of your environment.
-
-
On the Configuration tab of your OIDC application:
- In the Redirect URIs field, add the NGINX Plus callback URI, for example:
https://demo.example.com/oidc_callback
.- In the Post Logout Redirect URIs field, add the post logout redirect URI, for example:
https://demo.example.com/post_logout/
.- Select Save.
-
Assign the application to the appropriate Groups or Users who will be allowed to log in.
Check the OpenID Connect Discovery URL. By default, Ping Identity publishes the .well-known/openid-configuration
document at the following address:
For PingOne: https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as/.well-known/openid-configuration
For PingFederate: https://pingfederate.example.com:9031/<realm_path>/.well-known/openid-configuration
-
Run the following
curl
command in a terminal:curl https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as/.well-known/openid-configuration | jq
where:
-
the
auth.pingone.com
is your PingOne server address (or your PingFederate server for on-premises) -
the
<environment_id>
is your PingOne environment ID -
the
/as
is the authorization server path -
the
/.well-known/openid-configuration
is the default address for Ping Identity for document location -
the
jq
command (optional) is used to format the JSON output for easier reading and requires the jq JSON processor to be installed.
The configuration metadata is returned in the JSON format:
{ ... "issuer": "https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as", "authorization_endpoint": "https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as/authorize", "token_endpoint": "https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as/token", "jwks_uri": "https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as/jwks", "userinfo_endpoint": "https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as/userinfo", "end_session_endpoint": "https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as/signoff", ... }
-
-
Copy the issuer value, you will need it later when configuring NGINX Plus. Typically, the OpenID Connect Issuer for PingOne is
https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as
.
You will need the values of Client ID, Client Secret, and Issuer in the next steps.
With PingOne or PingFederate configured, you can enable OIDC on NGINX Plus. NGINX Plus serves as the Rely Party (RP) application — a client service that verifies user identity.
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Ensure that you are using the latest version of NGINX Plus by running the
nginx -v
command in a terminal:nginx -v
The output should match NGINX Plus Release 35 or later:
nginx version: nginx/1.29.0 (nginx-plus-r35)
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Ensure that you have the values of the Client ID, Client Secret, and Issuer obtained during PingOne or PingFederate Configuration.
-
In your preferred text editor, open the NGINX configuration file (
/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
for Linux or/usr/local/etc/nginx/nginx.conf
for FreeBSD). -
In the
http {}
context, make sure your public DNS resolver is specified with theresolver
directive: By default, NGINX Plus re‑resolves DNS records at the frequency specified by time‑to‑live (TTL) in the record, but you can override the TTL value with thevalid
parameter:http { resolver 10.0.0.1 ipv4=on valid=300s; # ... }
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In the
http {}
context, define the PingOne or PingFederate provider namedping
by specifying theoidc_provider {}
context:http { resolver 10.0.0.1 ipv4=on valid=300s; oidc_provider ping { # ... } # ... }
-
In the
oidc_provider {}
context, specify:-
your actual Ping Client ID obtained in Ping Configuration with the
client_id
directive -
your Client Secret obtained in Ping Configuration with the
client_secret
directive -
the Issuer URL obtained in Ping Configuration with the
issuer
directiveThe
issuer
is typically your Ping Identity OIDC URL.For PingOne Cloud, the URL is
https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as
.For PingFederate, the URL is
https://pingfederate.example.com:9031
followed by your environment’s realm path.By default, NGINX Plus creates the OpenID metadata URL by appending the
/.well-known/openid-configuration
part to the Issuer URL. If your metadata URL is different, you can explicitly specify the metadata document with theconfig_url
directive. -
The logout_uri is URI that a user visits to start an RP‑initiated logout flow.
-
The post_logout_uri is absolute HTTPS URL where Ping Identity should redirect the user after a successful logout. This value must also be configured in the Ping Identity application’s Post Logout Redirect URIs.
-
If the logout_token_hint directive set to
on
, NGINX Plus sends the user’s ID token as a hint to Ping Identity. This directive is required by PingOne. -
If the userinfo directive is set to
on
, NGINX Plus will fetch userinfo from Ping Identity and append the claims from userinfo to the$oidc_claims_
variables. -
Important: All interaction with the IdP is secured exclusively over SSL/TLS, so NGINX must trust the certificate presented by the IdP. By default, this trust is validated against your system’s CA bundle (the default CA store for your Linux or FreeBSD distribution). If the IdP’s certificate is not included in the system CA bundle, you can explicitly specify a trusted certificate or chain with the
ssl_trusted_certificate
directive so that NGINX can validate and trust the IdP’s certificate.
http { resolver 10.0.0.1 ipv4=on valid=300s; oidc_provider ping { issuer https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as; client_id <client_id>; client_secret <client_secret>; logout_uri /logout; post_logout_uri https://demo.example.com/post_logout/; logout_token_hint on; userinfo on; } # ... }
-
-
Make sure you have configured a server that corresponds to
demo.example.com
, and there is a location that points to your application (see Step 10) athttp://127.0.0.1:8080
that is going to be OIDC-protected:http { # ... server { listen 443 ssl; server_name demo.example.com; ssl_certificate /etc/ssl/certs/fullchain.pem; ssl_certificate_key /etc/ssl/private/key.pem; location / { # ... proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080; } } # ... }
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Protect this location with Ping Identity OIDC by specifying the
auth_oidc
directive that will point to theping
configuration specified in theoidc_provider {}
context in Step 5:# ... location / { auth_oidc ping; # ... proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080; } # ...
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Pass the OIDC claims as headers to the application (Step 10) with the
proxy_set_header
directive. These claims are extracted from the ID token returned by Ping:-
$oidc_claim_sub
- a uniqueSubject
identifier assigned for each user by Ping Identity -
$oidc_claim_email
- the e-mail address of the user -
$oidc_claim_name
- the full name of the user -
any other OIDC claim using the
$oidc_claim_
variable
Ensure theopenid
,profile
,email
Scopes are enabled in Ping Identity.# ... location / { auth_oidc ping; proxy_set_header sub $oidc_claim_sub; proxy_set_header email $oidc_claim_email; proxy_set_header name $oidc_claim_name; proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080; } # ...
-
-
Provide endpoint for completing logout:
# ... location /post_logout/ { return 200 "You have been logged out.\n"; default_type text/plain; } # ...
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Create a simple test application referenced by the
proxy_pass
directive which returns the authenticated user’s full name and email upon successful authentication:# ... server { listen 8080; location / { return 200 "Hello, $http_name!\nEmail: $http_email\nPing Identity sub: $http_sub\n"; default_type text/plain; } }
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Save the NGINX configuration file and reload the configuration:
nginx -s reload
This configuration example summarizes the steps outlined above. It includes only essential settings such as specifying the DNS resolver, defining the OIDC provider, configuring SSL, and proxying requests to an internal server.
http {
# Use a public DNS resolver for Issuer discovery, etc.
resolver 10.0.0.1 ipv4=on valid=300s;
oidc_provider ping {
# The issuer is typically something like:
# https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as
issuer https://auth.pingone.com/<environment_id>/as;
# Your Ping Identity Client ID and Secret
client_id <client_id>;
client_secret <client_secret>;
# RP‑initiated logout
logout_uri /logout;
post_logout_uri https://demo.example.com/post_logout/;
logout_token_hint on;
# Fetch userinfo claims
userinfo on;
}
server {
listen 443 ssl;
server_name demo.example.com;
ssl_certificate /etc/ssl/certs/fullchain.pem;
ssl_certificate_key /etc/ssl/private/key.pem;
location / {
# Enforce OIDC with Ping Identity
auth_oidc ping;
# Forward OIDC claims as headers if desired
proxy_set_header sub $oidc_claim_sub;
proxy_set_header email $oidc_claim_email;
proxy_set_header name $oidc_claim_name;
proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080;
}
location /post_logout/ {
return 200 "You have been logged out.\n";
default_type text/plain;
}
}
server {
# Simple test upstream server
listen 8080;
location / {
return 200 "Hello, $http_name!\nEmail: $http_email\nPing Identity sub: $http_sub\n";
default_type text/plain;
}
}
}
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Open
https://demo.example.com/
in a browser. You will be automatically redirected to the PingOne sign-in page. -
Enter valid Ping Identity credentials of a user who has access the application. Upon successful sign-in, PingOne redirects you back to NGINX Plus, and you will see the proxied application content (for example, “Hello, Jane Doe!”).
-
Navigate to
https://demo.example.com/logout
. NGINX Plus initiates an RP‑initiated logout; Ping Identity ends the session and redirects back tohttps://demo.example.com/post_logout/
. -
Refresh
https://demo.example.com/
again. You should be redirected to Ping Identity for a fresh sign‑in, proving the session has been terminated.
If you are running NGINX Plus R33 and earlier or if you still need the njs-based solution, refer to the Legacy njs-based Ping Identity Guide for details. The solution uses the nginx-openid-connect
GitHub repository and NGINX JavaScript files.
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Version 2 (August 2025) – Added RP‑initiated logout (logout_uri, post_logout_uri, logout_token_hint) and userinfo support.
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Version 1 (March 2025) – Initial version for NGINX Plus Release 34