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Introduction

This page includes useful information for the consideration of an environment specification and system recommendation for running Ubisecure Identity Server. Below you will find the currently supported software, actively tested browsers and hardware requirements and recommendations. All recommendations are based on an example reference environment of 100 000 active users with 100 logins per second as normal sustainable, non-impacting load.

These are not intended to highlight the minimum requirements but instead Ubisecure's recommendations in order to effectively run the Identity Server in a production environment.  Ubisecure performs release testing on a variety of environments for each release, using a combination of single and dual-node installations on Linux and Windows Server operating systems and with automated and manual regression testing performed by a variety of the listed supported browsers in their latest stable distribution. 

Your exact environment needs may need to be reviewed and altered depending on what types of workloads you run. Your workload is influenced for example by these factors (but not limited to):

  • Active users having user account in Ubisecure Directory and CustomerID database

  • Number of internal and external authentications 

  • Number of requests to Identity Server APIs

  • Number of interactions with CustomerID registration flows and Self-Service UI

Supported Browsers

Ubisecure Identity Server has been tested with the following desktop browsers

  • Google Chrome

  • Mozilla Firefox

  • Safari

  • Microsoft Edge

Tip

Ubisecure recommends to use the latest version of each browser

Supported Operating Systems

Ubisecure Identity Server supports a number of Linux distributions and Microsoft Windows Server

InfoWhile RedHat 7 / Centos 7 are still being supported, it is possible to continue using those operating systems. Before their end of support, in June 2024, we recommend updating the operating system to RedHat 8 / Rocky Linux 8 or RedHat 9 / Rocky Linux 9

Platform

Distribution

Versions

EOL

Linux distributions

Rocky Linux 

8

May 2029

Rocky Linux

9*

May 2032

RedHat Enterprise Linux7June 2024

RedHat Enterprise Linux

May 2029

RedHat Enterprise Linux

9*

May 2032

Microsoft Windows

Windows Server

2016

January 2027

2019

January 2029

*) libxcrypt-compat package must be installed when using OpenLDAP on RHEL 9 based Linux distribution

Software Requirements

The following chapter lists the required software that is used to run Ubisecure Identity Server. Ubisecure lists the software that it uses internally to develop, test and operate Identity Server.

Java

Java 8 or 11 is required in order to run Ubisecure applications, including SSO, CustomerID and related components. Identity Server has been tested with the following Java builds. Releases from prior IDS 2022.1 (SSO 9.x.x and CustomerID 6.x.x) and later require a Java11 installation.are Java 8 based and are no longer supported by Ubisecure.

Customers are encouraged to update their installed Java version with the latest available patch release. The patch version noted in the table below was used at the time of release, but later Java patch versions will ensure the best available security levels are met. For example, Java 11 (11.0.14) was tested, but Java 11 (11.0.22) is available for customer use.

SSO

CustomerID

Build

Version

8

9.x.x

5

6.x.x

Adoptium

Java

8

11 (

1

11.

8

0.

0_312

14)

Oracle Corporation

Java

8

11 (

1

11.

8

0.

0_312)9

14)

Unsupported Legacy versions require older Java

8.x.x

6

5.x.x

Adoptium

Java

11

8 (

11

1.8.0

.14

_312)

Oracle Corporation

Java

11

8 (

11

1.8.0

.14

_312)

Note

title

RedHat OpenJDK

While we do support Centos 7, unfortunately

Unfortunately, RedHat OpenJDK does not support an extensive amount of ciphers. Due to this limitation, we have not tested and therefore cannot recommend using RedHat OpenJDK. Please ensure you use one of the supported versions of Java shown above.

Databases

Ubisecure Directory

Ubisecure Directory requires an LDAP implementation. Identity Server supports the following LDAP implementations

LDAP implementation

Version

Notes

OpenLDAP

2.5.16

Included in the SSO Linux distribution package. The used database backend is Memory-Mapped Database (MDB)

Microsoft AD-LDS

Windows Server 2016, Windows Server 2019

Tested with the version included in the respective Microsoft Windows Server version

Relational Databases

CustomerID and Accounting support the following Relational Databases

Database

Version

Upgrade

EOL

PostgreSQL

16

14 → 16

November 2028

PostgreSQL

14

12 → 14

November 2026

PostgreSQL

9.6

9.5->9.6

November 2021

PostgreSQL

12

9.6 → 12

November 2024

PostgreSQL1412 → 14

November 2026PostgreSQL1614 → 16November 2028

Info

title

PostgreSQL 16

We have completed testing of PostgreSQL 16.1 with IDS 2024.1 releases. This offers support for installations through November 2028. If you have any concerns, please open a ticket with support. We will be happy to review your environment and ensure that it will continue to operation smoothly. 

Note: PostgreSQL 9.6 is no longer recommended for use with any SSO 9.x.x or CID 6.x.x release versions. 

Tip

title

PostgreSQL JDBC Driver

Currently tested PostgreSQL JDBC driver version is 42.7.

1

4

Note

For upgrading PostgreSQL from 9.6 to 12, follow PostgreSQL official documentation for upgrading with pg_dumpall (https://www.postgresql.org/docs/12/upgrading.html). We have created Knowledge Base "How-to" article with information how we have tested the upgrade and also include estimated migration times. See Upgrade and migrate to new version of PostgreSQL

Redis

In high-performance deployments Ubisecure Identity Server uses Redis as a session storage. Identity Server has been tested with version 7.2.4. For more information, please refer to Use Redis with Identity ServerRedis Configuration - SSO.

Hardware recommendations

These hardware recommendations can easily sustain a deployment with 100 000 active users and 100 logins per second. Complex organisational structures or specific use cases may require the use of Redis to support session load and remove replication requirements from OpenLDAP or AD-LDS.

Tip
title

Reverse Proxy

Ubisecure recommends always deploying a reverse proxy or load balancer in front of any operational environment. This is useful for security and traffic management of any internet facing environment.

Storage

Identities

Ubisecure Identity Server uses two persistent data stores for storing identity related information; PostgreSQL and LDAP. The necessary storage size largely depends on the number of users, roles, organisations and custom attributes stored in the Ubisecure Identity Server.  

Info

Note that while using Ubisecure Directory (OpenLDAP) on Linux you need to make sure that the storage allocation is sufficient to handle the expected increase of identities. If the identities in the system go above allocated storage, the system will stop working. 

Make sure that you chose a proper openldap.maxsize that suits your needs. The default value (10GB) that comes with the installation is meant for handling 1 000 000 user accounts

Increasing the openldap.maxsize will require a restart of the service to take effect

Also note that openldap.idlexp will need to be revised if you increase the openldap.maxsize. The default value for the openldap.idlexp is set to 20, which will handle 1 000 000 user accounts

The following table lists the actual size of data on disk for a typical deployment storing users in 100 different organisations, including 5 roles for each organisation and 5 custom attributes for each user:

Number of user accounts

Ubisecure Directory size (GB)

CustomerID database size (GB)

100 000

1.0

0.4

250 000

2.4

0.8

500 000

4.8

1.6

1 000 000

8.0

2.4

On average, each LDAP user account entry takes roughly a bit less than 10 kB whereas CustomerID database entry takes roughly 3 kB. Deployments that do not use Redis as a session storage, an additional 10 kB per single-sign-on session should be considered. The single-sign-on sessions are stored in Ubisecure Directory.

Accounting login events

In addition to identity data, as of IDS 2019.1 login events are collected into the Accounting Service database. The following table lists the actual size of data on disk for a system which contains roughly 100 000 monthly active users each able to select any of 10 configured authentication methods. Daily and monthly reports will require additional space depending on the complexity of the supported environment. The numbers shown in the table below should be used as an indication of the disk space required for the accounting service as of this release.

Number of login events

Accounting database size (GB)

100 000

0.2

250 000

0.5

500 000

0.7

1 000 000

1.0

5 000 000

4.0

10 000 000

8.0

Tip

title

Configure login event data cleanup

It is highly recommended to configure the cleanup of old login event related data. See Accounting Service additional configuration for more details.

CPU

Application

CPU cores

SSO and Accounting*

2

CustomerID

2

Ubisecure Directory

2

PostgreSQL

2

*) Currently Accounting is installed alongside SSO thus the processes share the same resources.

Memory

Ubisecure applications

For running the Identity Server applications, the following table lists the memory recommendations. 

Info

For optimal performance of Ubisecure Directory (OpenLDAP) on Linux it is recommended that the system has at least the amount of RAM that can fit the max size of the user data storage as described above in the Storage section

Application

Recommended amount of RAM (GB)

SSO

2

Ubisecure Directory (OpenLDAP) Linux

8

Ubisecure Directory Windows

1

CustomerID

4

Accounting

1

PostgreSQL

4

For more information on memory configurations, please refer to

Redis memory considerations

When deploying Redis with Ubisecure Identity Server each single-sign-on session takes maximum of 10 kB of memory in Redis. In a typical Redis deployment (3 primary instances backed up by 3 secondary instances) this would mean

Number of concurrent sessions

Number of Redis primary instances

Memory required per Redis instance (GB)

1 000

3

0.01

10 000

3

0.07

100 000

3

0.67

250 000

3

1.67

500 000

3

3.33

1 000 000

3

6.67

Note that the sessions are sharded shared between the three primary instances. For  For more information, please refer to How to use Redis with Identity ServerRedis Configuration - SSO.

Contents

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