"ReRoutes": [ { # The url we are forwarding the request to "UpstreamTemplate": "/identityserverexample", # The path we are listening on for this re route "UpstreamTemplate": "/identityserverexample", # The method we are listening for on this re route "UpstreamHttpMethod": "Get", # Only support identity server at the moment "AuthenticationOptions": { "Provider": "IdentityServer", "ProviderRootUrl": "http://localhost:52888", "ScopeName": "api", "AdditionalScopes": [ "openid", "offline_access" ], # Required if using reference tokens "ScopeSecret": "secret" }, # WARNING - will overwrite any headers already in the request with these values. # Ocelot will look in the user claims for the key in [] then return the value and save # it as a header with the given key before the colon (:). The index selection on value # means that Ocelot will use the delimiter specified after the next > to split the # claim value and return the index specified. "AddHeadersToRequest": { "CustomerId": "Claims[CustomerId] > value", "LocationId": "Claims[LocationId] > value", "UserType": "Claims[sub] > value[0] > |", "UserId": "Claims[sub] > value[1] > |" }, # WARNING - will overwrite any claims already in the request with these values. # Ocelot will look in the user claims for the key in [] then return the value and save # it as a claim with the given key before the colon (:). The index selection on value # means that Ocelot will use the delimiter specified after the next > to split the # claim value and return the index specified. "AddClaimsToRequest": { "CustomerId": "Claims[CustomerId] > value", "LocationId": "Claims[LocationId] > value", "UserType": "Claims[sub] > value[0] > |", "UserId": "Claims[sub] > value[1] > |" }, # WARNING - will overwrite any query string entries already in the request with these values. # Ocelot will look in the user claims for the key in [] then return the value and save # it as a query string with the given key before the colon (:). The index selection on value # means that Ocelot will use the delimiter specified after the next > to split the # claim value and return the index specified. "AddQueriesToRequest": { "CustomerId": "Claims[CustomerId] > value", "LocationId": "Claims[LocationId] > value", "UserType": "Claims[sub] > value[0] > |", "UserId": "Claims[sub] > value[1] > |" }, # This specifies any claims that are required for the user to access this re route. # In this example the user must have the claim type UserType and # the value must be registered "RouteClaimsRequirement": { "UserType": "registered" }, # This tells Ocelot to look for a header and use its value as a request/correlation id. # If it is set here then the id will be forwarded to the downstream service. If it # does not then it will not be forwarded "RequestIdKey": "OcRequestId", # If this is set the response from the downstream service will be cached using the key that called it. # This gives the user a chance to influence the key by adding some random query string paramter for # a user id or something that would get ignored by the downstream service. This is a hack and I # intend to provide a mechanism the user can specify for the ttl caching. Also want to expand # the caching a lot. "FileCacheOptions": { "TtlSeconds": 15 } }