OTRS is the Open-source Ticket Request System, which is a Perl application that runs on an Apache web server. OTRS has two different web interfaces:
- The customer interface. This is for people who submit tickets.
- The agent interface. This is for people working on tickets ('admins' if you will)
Both the interfaces can use various authentication methods, such as a local database, or Active Directory/LDAP. It is also possible to use external authentication (HTTPBasicAuth) in which case OTRS does not take responsibility for authentication any more, but instead relies on an Apache environment variable to provide the username. The is the way forward if you want to use SAML or federated authentication, but there are some issues with.
The biggest issue is that is not possible to provision accounts in OTRS before users have logged in. This is because there is no way of knowing a user's details until they have authenticated. To overcome this I wrote a new customer authentication module for OTRS that creates customer accounts on the fly (auto-provisioning).
At the moment we have no use case yet for auto-provisioning agents. This is left as a future exercise, one idea is to auto-provisioning agents based on the value of a specific SAML attribute.
The standard HTTPBasicAuth can be used for the agent interface.
Below is the recipe for getting OTRS to work with federated authentication using Ubuntu 14.04, OTRS 3.3.8 and mod_auth_mellon 0.7. If you manage to implement it on another combination of software, please let me know.
Prerequisites
Before you start, make sure you have these bits in place:
- A correctly configured Apache web server that is able to serve an HTTPS web site (https://otrs.example.com).
- A SAML Identity Provider (IdP).
- An account on that IdP.
- An attribute that can be used as username in OTRS (for example eduPersonPrincipalName). Attributes for first name, last name, and e-mail are optional but highly recommended as the service would be pretty useless without these. In this case we assume that 'givenName', 'sn', and 'mail' can be used.
- The user name of the to-be administrator account. So, if you choose eduPersonPrincipalName as the attribute for username, you need to know your own value (for instance 'dvisser@surfnet.nl').
OTRS
Go to https://www.otrs.com/try/, scroll to Source, and pick the latest version of OTRS Help Desk.
Follow the instructions at http://otrs.github.io/doc/manual/admin/stable/en/html/index.html, do a standard install and make sure everything works.
Pay special attention to the phrase "Please install OTRS from source, and do not use the OTRS packages that Debian/Ubuntu provides."
It will require some fiddling to get all the Perl modules sorted, I suggest to use the packages modules as much as possible.
The docs all seem to assume that you'd want to run OTRS inside a subdirectory (https://example.com/otrs), but we want it to be the root of our vhost (https://otrs.example.com), in which case this configuration is a little bit different, see below (you should have the HTTPS stuff already configured, probably in /etc/apache2/mods-enabled/ssl.conf):
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
ServerName otrs.example.com
Alias /otrs-web/ "/opt/otrs/var/httpd/htdocs/"
Alias / "/opt/otrs/bin/cgi-bin/"
<IfModule mod_perl.c>
# Setup environment and preload modules
Perlrequire /opt/otrs/scripts/apache2-perl-startup.pl
# Reload Perl modules when changed on disk
PerlModule Apache2::Reload
PerlInitHandler Apache2::Reload
# mod_perl2 options for GenericInterface
<Location /nph-genericinterface.pl>
PerlOptions -ParseHeaders
</Location>
</IfModule>
<Directory "/opt/otrs/bin/cgi-bin/">
AllowOverride None
DirectoryIndex customer.pl
AddHandler perl-script .pl .cgi
PerlResponseHandler ModPerl::Registry
Options +ExecCGI
PerlOptions +ParseHeaders
PerlOptions +SetupEnv
# mod_auth_mellon placeholder
<IfModule mod_version.c>
<IfVersion < 2.4>
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</IfVersion>
<IfVersion >= 2.4>
Require all granted
</IfVersion>
</IfModule>
<IfModule !mod_version.c>
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</IfModule>
<IfModule mod_deflate.c>
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/html text/javascript text/css text/xml application/json text/json
</IfModule>
</Directory>
<Directory "/opt/otrs/var/httpd/htdocs/">
AllowOverride None
<IfModule mod_version.c>
<IfVersion < 2.4>
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</IfVersion>
<IfVersion >= 2.4>
Require all granted
</IfVersion>
</IfModule>
<IfModule !mod_version.c>
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</IfModule>
<IfModule mod_deflate.c>
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/html text/javascript text/css text/xml application/json text/json
</IfModule>
# Make sure CSS and JS files are read as UTF8 by the browsers.
AddCharset UTF-8 .css
AddCharset UTF-8 .js
# Set explicit mime type for woff fonts since it is relatively new and apache may not know about it.
AddType application/font-woff .woff
</Directory>
<IfModule mod_headers.c>
# Cache css-cache for 30 days
<Directory "/opt/otrs/var/httpd/htdocs/skins/*/*/css-cache">
<FilesMatch "\.(css|CSS)$">
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=2592000 must-revalidate"
</FilesMatch>
</Directory>
# Cache css thirdparty for 4 hours, including icon fonts
<Directory "/opt/otrs/var/httpd/htdocs/skins/*/*/css/thirdparty">
<FilesMatch "\.(css|CSS|woff|svg)$">
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=14400 must-revalidate"
</FilesMatch>
</Directory>
# Cache js-cache for 30 days
<Directory "/opt/otrs/var/httpd/htdocs/js/js-cache">
<FilesMatch "\.(js|JS)$">
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=2592000 must-revalidate"
</FilesMatch>
</Directory>
# Cache js thirdparty for 4 hours
<Directory "/opt/otrs/var/httpd/htdocs/js/thirdparty/">
<FilesMatch "\.(js|JS)$">
Header set Cache-Control "max-age=14400 must-revalidate"
</FilesMatch>
</Directory>
</IfModule> |
The site is now configured so that the bare URL will go to the customer interface. This makes the most sense because typically customers will have less clue about where to go.
The agent interface is where you should log in to with the default root@localhost account.
Once you're in, you should create a new agent with full permissions, and make sure the username is your eduPersonPrincipalName.
mod_auth_mellon
mod_auth_mellon is an Apache module, which is available in Ubuntu 14.04 and later. To get this working with Ubuntu 12.04, I recompiled the Debian source packages from the University of Tilburg and made them available in our own APT repository. Either way, it's easy to install:
Code Block |
---|
apt-get install libapache2-mod-auth-mellon
a2enmod auth_mellon |
Create a directory /etc/apache/mellon, and store the Identity Provider metadata in XML format to a file called idp.xml.
Create the cryptographic material for mod_auth_mellon:
Code Block |
---|
openssl req -new -newkey rsa:2048 -days 3650 -nodes -x509 -keyout sp.key -out sp.crt |
Now add this to the configuration of the vhost at the mod_auth_mellon placeholder:
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
MellonEnable "info"
MellonSecureCookie On
MellonSessionDump Off
MellonUser eduPersonPrincipalName
MellonSamlResponseDump Off
MellonEndpointPath "/mellon"
MellonSPPrivateKeyFile /etc/apache2/mellon/sp.key
MellonSPCertFile /etc/apache2/mellon/sp.crt
MellonIdPMetadataFile /etc/apache2/mellon/idp.xml |
As you can see, the attribute eduPersonPrincipalName is being used as the username. This is the attribute that should always be sent by the IdP. In other words, you have to make that authentication doesn't go through when there is an eduPersonPrincipalName. mod_auth_mellon populate the REMOTE_USER environment variable with the value of this SAML attribute.
Info |
---|
Keep in mind that eduPersonPrincipalName might work well in a controller environment, such a a national identity federation, where the attribute is always present, validated, etc. It might not be so smart if you use a SAML proxy, in which case you could end up with different users with the same eduPersonPrincipalName. |
By this time, you should be able to download the Service Provider metadata from https://otrs.example.com/mellon/metadata, and use it to add it to your IdP, thereby creating a trust relationship.
And once that is done, you should be able to authenticate by going to https://otrs.example.org/mellon.
Adding the new module to OTRS
Create the file Kernel/System/CustomerAuth/HTTPBasicAuthMellon.pm and copy the code below in it:
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
# --
# Kernel/System/CustomerAuth/HTTPBasicAuthMellon.pm
# Provides HTTPBasic authentication for use with Apache's mod_auth_mellon.
# This module auto-provisions customer users.
# Dick Visser <visser@terena.org> 2014-08-22
# Copyright (C) TERENA, http://www.terena.org
# --
# This software comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY. For details, see
# the enclosed file COPYING for license information (AGPL). If you
# did not receive this file, see http://www.gnu.org/licenses/agpl.txt.
# --
package Kernel::System::CustomerAuth::HTTPBasicAuthMellon;
use strict;
use warnings;
sub new {
my ( $Type, %Param ) = @_;
# allocate new hash for object
my $Self = {};
bless( $Self, $Type );
# check needed objects
for (qw(LogObject ConfigObject DBObject MainObject EncodeObject)) {
$Self->{$_} = $Param{$_} || die "No $_!";
}
$Self->{CustomerUserObject} = Kernel::System::CustomerUser->new( %{$Self} );
# Mellon environment vars
$Self->{MailEnvVar}
= $Self->{ConfigObject}->Get( 'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuthMellon::MailEnvVar')
|| 'MELLON_mail';
$Self->{FirstNameEnvVar}
= $Self->{ConfigObject}->Get('Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuthMellon::FirstNameEnvVar')
|| 'MELLON_givenName';
$Self->{LastNameEnvVar}
= $Self->{ConfigObject}->Get( 'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuthMellon::LastNameEnvVar')
|| 'MELLON_sn';
$Self->{CustomerIDEnvVar}
= $Self->{ConfigObject}->Get( 'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuthMellon::CustomerIDEnvVar')
|| 'MELLON_customer_id';
# Debug 0=off 1=on
$Self->{Debug} = 1;
$Self->{Count} = $Param{Count} || '';
return $Self;
}
sub GetOption {
my ( $Self, %Param ) = @_;
# check needed stuff
if ( !$Param{What} ) {
$Self->{LogObject}->Log( Priority => 'error', Message => "Need What!" );
return;
}
# module options
my %Option = ( PreAuth => 1, );
# return option
return $Option{ $Param{What} };
}
sub Auth {
my ( $Self, %Param ) = @_;
# Get attributes values from environment variables
my $User = $ENV{REMOTE_USER};
my $Mail = $ENV{$Self->{MailEnvVar}} || 'invalid_email@noreply.com';
my $FirstName = $ENV{$Self->{FirstNameEnvVar}} || 'first_name';
my $LastName = $ENV{$Self->{LastNameEnvVar}} || 'last_name';
my $CustomerID = $ENV{$Self->{CustomerIDEnvVar}} || 'default_customer';
my $RemoteAddr = $ENV{REMOTE_ADDR} || 'Got no REMOTE_ADDR env!';
# return on no user
if ( !$User ) {
$Self->{LogObject}->Log(
Priority => 'notice',
Message =>
"No \$ENV{REMOTE_USER}, so not authenticated yet. Redirecting to authenticate (client REMOTE_ADDR: $RemoteAddr).",
);
return;
}
# replace parts of login
my $Replace = $Self->{ConfigObject}->Get(
'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuth::Replace' . $Self->{Count},
);
if ($Replace) {
$User =~ s/^\Q$Replace\E//;
}
# regexp on login
my $ReplaceRegExp = $Self->{ConfigObject}->Get(
'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuth::ReplaceRegExp' . $Self->{Count},
);
if ($ReplaceRegExp) {
$User =~ s/$ReplaceRegExp/$1/;
}
# Log Apache environment vars in debug mode
if ( $Self->{Debug} > 0 ) {
$Self->{LogObject}->Log(
Priority => 'debug',
Message => 'Apache environment vars:'
);
foreach my $var (sort keys %ENV) {
$Self->{LogObject}->Log(
Priority => 'debug',
Message => $var . "=" . $ENV{$var},
);
}
}
# log
$Self->{LogObject}->Log(
Priority => 'notice',
Message => "User '$User' Authentication ok (REMOTE_ADDR: $RemoteAddr).",
);
# Auto-provisiong.
# First check if customer exists
my %UserTest = $Self->{CustomerUserObject}->CustomerUserDataGet( User => $User );
if (! %UserTest) {
$Self->{LogObject}->Log(
Priority => 'notice',
Message => "User '$User' doesn't have an account here yet, provisioning it now",
);
# Add new customer
my $newuser = $Self->{CustomerUserObject}->CustomerUserAdd( |
This is probably my longest standing action item in TERENA : implement a federated version of Confluence.
Below is the recipe for getting this to work with Ubuntu 12.04, Confluence 5.1.1, Apache, and mod_auth_mellon.
I choose modmellon because it seemed like a cleaner solution than mod_shib, requiring no additional daemons and much simpler configuration.
The wiki will be open to the public, and logins will only be federated. New users will have their account automatically created, and are put in the confluence-users group.
Prerequisites
Before you start, make sure you have these bits:
- A correctly configured apache web server that is able to serve an HTTPS web site (https://example.com).
- A SAML Identity Provider (IdP).
- An account on that IdP.
- An attribute that can be used as username in Confluence (for example eduPersonPrincipalName). Attributes for full name and e-mail are optional but recommended. In this case we assume 'mail' and 'displayName' can be used.
- The user name of the to-be administrator account. So, if you choose eduPersonPrincipalName as the attribute for username, you need to know your own value (for instance 'dvisser@surfnet.nl').
PostgreSQL
Code Block |
---|
apt-get install postgresql |
Create a dedicated database user, and a database:
Code Block |
---|
sudo su - postgres
createuser -S -d -r -P -E confuser
createdb -O confuser confluence |
Confluence - part 1
This is a default install of Confluence, which has only local account and no federated logins - that comes later in part 2.
Install OpenJDK:
Code Block |
---|
apt-get --no-install-recommends install openjdk-7-jdk |
Download the source http://www.atlassian.com/software/confluence/downloads/binary/atlassian-confluence-5.5.3.tar.gz and unpack it to /opt/confluence
. All relative paths mentioned below are relative to this directory.
Create a home directory for Confluence (/home/confluence
).
Edit confluence/WEB-INF/classes/confluence-init.properties
and configure confluence.home=/home/confluence
.
Upstart script for Confluence
Ubuntu uses the new upstart init scripts, which we should use.
Create the upstart script /etc/init/confluence
:
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
# Upstart script for confluence
description "Atlassian Confluence"
start on runlevel [2345]
stop on runlevel [!2345]
kill timeout 30
env RUN_AS_USER=root
env BASEDIR=/opt/confluence
script
LOGFILE=$BASEDIR/logs/catalina.out
exec su - $RUN_AS_USER -c "$BASEDIR/bin/catalina.sh run" >> $LOGFILE 2>&1
end script |
Once this script is here, issue "start confluence" to get going, and watch the log file /opt/confluence/log/catalina.out
. After some time you should see something like this:
Code Block |
---|
INFO: Starting Coyote HTTP/1.1 on http-8090
Apr 09, 2013 5:14:43 PM org.apache.catalina.startup.Catalina start
INFO: Server startup in 65971 ms |
By this time you can point your browser to http://example.com:8090, and it should come up with a configuration wizard that will ask for a license key, database credentials, a local admin account, etc. Once that is all done, things should be working, but nothing federated yet, only local accounts.
At this point you need to do some preparation so that stuff will work properly later on through Apache:
- Create a new admin account with the correct federated username. For instance, if you have decided on using eduPersonPrincipalName as the username, and the value of that attribute for your federated account is 'dvisser@surfnet.nl', create an account with that exactly that username.
- Make sure this newly created account is a member of "confluence-administrators".
- Configure the
Modmellon
Modmellon is an Apache module. To get this working I recompiled the Debian source packages from the University of Tilburg for Ubuntu 12.04 and made them available in our own APT repository.
Once that is done, the needed packages can be installed:
Code Block |
---|
apt-get install libapache2-mod-auth-mellon
a2enmod auth_mellon |
Create a directory /etc/apache/mellon, and store the Identity Provider metadata in XML format to a file called idp.xml.
Create the cryptographic material for the mellon SP:
Code Block |
---|
openssl req -new -newkey rsa:2048 -days 3650 -nodes -x509 -keyout sp.key -out sp.crt |
Now add this to the configuration of the vhost (note that this is not the entire config - you should have the HTTPS stuff etc already configured):
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
ServerName example.com
ProxyRequests Off
<Proxy http://ip6-localhost:8090>
Order deny,allow
Allow from all
</Proxy>
ProxyPass /mellon/ !
ProxyPass / http://ip6-localhost:8090/
ProxyPassReverse / http://ip6-localhost:8090/
# Mobile theme does not honour new seraph values for login URL, so we have to redirect that
RewriteEngine on
RewriteCond %{QUERY_STRING} ^originalUrl=(.*)$ [NC]
Rewriterule ^/plugins/servlet/mobile/login /mellon/login?ReturnTo=%1 [R,NE]
# Remove the jsessionid from the URL, to prevent 404 errors when
# unauthenticated visitors try to access a protected resource.
ReWriteRule ^(.*);jsessionid=[A-Za-z0-9]+(.*)$ $1$2 [R,NE]
<Location />
MellonEnable "info"
MellonSecureCookie On
MellonSessionDump Off
MellonSamlResponseDump Off
MellonEndpointPath "/mellon"
MellonSPPrivateKeyFile /etc/apache2/mellon/sp.key
MellonSPCertFile /etc/apache2/mellon/sp.crt
MellonIdPMetadataFile /etc/apache2/mellon/idp.xml
# To avoid security holes, first unset any existing header
RequestHeader unset REMOTE_USER
# Then conditionally set it
RequestHeader set REMOTE_USER "%{MELLON_eduPersonPrincipalName}e" env=MELLON_eduPersonPrincipalName
RequestHeader unset CONF_FULL_NAME
RequestHeader set CONF_FULL_NAME "%{MELLON_displayName}e" env=MELLON_displayName
RequestHeader unset CONF_EMAIL
RequestHeader set CONF_EMAIL "%{MELLON_mail}e" env=MELLON_mail
</Location> |
By this time, you should be able to download the Service Provider metadata from https://example.com/mellon/metadata, and use it to add it to your IdP, thereby creating a trust relationship.
And once that is done, you should be able to use federated authentication by going to https://example.com/mellon/login?ReturnTo=%2F
Confluence - part 2
Now everything is in place to federate Confluence. Make sure that Confluence isn't running any more.
...
Edit confluence/WEB-INF/classes/seraph-config.xml
and change this section in the beginning:
...
language | html/xml |
---|
...
|
...
Source => 'CustomerUser', UserFirstname |
...
=> $FirstName, |
...
UserLastname |
...
=> $LastName, |
...
UserCustomerID => $CustomerID, |
...
UserLogin => $User, UserPassword |
...
To this:
...
language | html/xml |
---|
...
=> $Self->{CustomerUserObject}->GenerateRandomPassword(), |
...
UserEmail |
...
=> $Mail, |
...
ValidID |
...
=> 1, |
...
UserID |
...
=> 1, ); |
...
} # return user |
...
return $User;
}
1; |
Configuration
When creating a new customer, we also need data for several other fields: first name, last name, e-mail, and customID. Since mod_auth_mellon copies all the SAML attributes into Apache environment variables anyway, we can use them. The module uses the standard SAML attributes (prefixed with MELLON_ because that's their environment variable name) wherever possible:
Apache environment variable | |
---|---|
First name | MELLON_givenName |
Last name | MELLON_sn |
e-mail address | MELLON_mail |
customerID | MELLON_otrs_customer_id |
System/Config.pm
) , which at the minimum looks like this:
Code Block | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|
| ||||
# Customer Auth
$Self->{'Customer::AuthModule'} = 'Kernel::System::CustomerAuth::HTTPBasicAuthMellon';
# Because auto-provisioned users will all have the same e-mail address
$Self->{CustomerUser}->{CustomerUserEmailUniqCheck} = 0;
$Self->{'CustomerPanelLoginURL'} = 'https://otrs.example.com/mellon/login?ReturnTo=/customer.pl';
$Self->{'CustomerPanelLogoutURL'} = 'https://otrs.example.com/mellon/logout?ReturnTo=http://www.terena.org';
# Uncomment to override the environment vars to be used
#$Self->{'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuthMellon::UsernameEnvVar'} = 'MELLON_eduPersonPrincipalName';
#$Self->{'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuthMellon::MailEnvVar'} = 'MELLON_mail';
#$Self->{'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuthMellon::FirstNameEnvVar'} = 'MELLON_givenName';
#$Self->{'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuthMellon::LastNameEnvVar'} = 'MELLON_sn';
#$Self->{'Customer::AuthModule::HTTPBasicAuthMellon::CustomerIDEnvVar'} = 'MELLON_otrs_customer_id';
# Agents are NOT auto-provisioned. The will have to be created manually.
# To find their username, they could first log in as a customer, so that you can see their username
# in the Customer User Manager overview.
$Self->{'AuthModule'} = 'Kernel::System::Auth::HTTPBasicAuth';
$Self->{'LoginURL'} = 'https://otrs.example.com/mellon/login?ReturnTo=/index.pl';
$Self->{'LogoutURL'} = 'https://otrs.example.com/mellon/logout?ReturnTo=http://www.terena.org';
|
Warning |
---|
I just found out that this set-up won't work unless you put the configuration file ZZZAAuth.pm in |
At this point, you should be able to log in to the site as an admin with your new account.
If you log in to the customer page, your account will be automatically created.
I don't even trust my own Perl skills, so use all of this with care
Known limitations
Customers cannot edit their details
Once customers are auto-provisioned, they cannot edit their name, e-mail, or any other values. This might be an issue in your environment. Only agents can edit this.
Unknown agents get stuck in an authentication loop
When agents that don't have an account try to log in, they get stuck in an endless authentication loop. Another agent should first create a new agent account.
If the username isn't know yet, then the new agent could first log in to the customer interface. The existing agent can then see what username was used, and use this to create an agent account.
You should now be able to use federated logins.
Confluence - mobile theme
The new Confluence feature a dedicated theme for use on mobile devices. This is great, but unfortunately both the login and logout buttons in that theme do not work - they still point to the 'old' static login/logout links.
Login button
I couldn't find any way to do this in Confluence, so I ended up rewriting it in Apache. See the snippet in the Apache config above.
Logout button
Code Block |
---|
apt-get --no-install-recommends install openjdk-7-jdk |
Then do:
mkdir /tmp/jar
cd /tmp/jar
jar xf /opt/confluence/confluence/WEB-INF/lib/confluence-5.5.3.jar
xwork.xml
and change this part:
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
<action name="logout" class="com.atlassian.confluence.user.actions.LogoutAction">
<interceptor-ref name="defaultStack"/>
<result name="error" type="velocity">/logout.vm</result>
<result name="success" type="redirect">/login.action?logout=true</result>
</action> |
to this:
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
<action name="logout" class="com.atlassian.confluence.user.actions.LogoutAction">
<interceptor-ref name="defaultStack"/>
<result name="error" type="velocity">/logout.vm</result>
<result name="success" type="redirect">/mellon/logout?ReturnTo=%2Fdashboard.action</result>
</action> |
Now "jar" everything up again and replace the original jar:
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
cd /tmp/jar
jar cf /opt/confluence/confluence/WEB-INF/lib/confluence-5.5.3.jar . |
Restart Confluence. You should now also be able to use federated logins on your iPad/etc.
jsessionid errors
If unauthenticated users try to access content that is protected, Confluence tries to set jsessionid as part of the URL. This leads to 404 errors like this:
Code Block |
---|
NOT FOUND
The requested URL /mellon/login;jsessionid=8A736F43779F96249F6C3DC41067BB98 was not found on this server. |
Since the jsessionid part isn't needed, it can be removed uses a rewrite statement (see apache config above).
Limit access to the unprotected TCP port
Confluence by default listens to TCP port 8090 on all interface. Since Apache will be the internet facing application, there is no need for Confluence to listen on all interfaces. Even worse, if you do let it listen on the internet then it is trivial to add a REMOTE_USER header and spoof any account. Of course it is good practice to use a firewall to protect this port, but you can limit this in Confluence as well. Since Apache is configured to only connect to the (IPv6) localhost address, this is what you should configure Confluence to use as listening address. As per Tomcat docs, you should add an "address" attribute to the Connector, which is located in conf/server.xml
:
<Connector className="org.apache.coyote.tomcat4.CoyoteConnector" port="8090" address="::1" minProcessors="5"