Descope Vue SDK
The Descope Vue SDK provides convenient access to the Descope for an application written on top of Vue.
You can read more on the Descope Website.
Requirements
Installing the SDK
Install the package with:
npm i --save @descope/vue-sdk
Usage
Add Descope plugin to your application
import { createApp } from 'vue';
import App from './App.vue';
import descope from '@descope/vue-sdk';
const app = createApp(App);
app.use(descope, {
projectId: 'my-project-id',
});
app.mount('#app');
Use Descope to render specific flow
<template>
<p v-if="isFlowLoading">Loading...</p>
<Descope flowId="my-flow-id" @success="handleSuccess" @error="handleError" @ready="handleReady" />
<!-- additional props -->
<!-- theme="dark" theme can be "light", "dark" or "os", which auto select a theme based on the OS theme. Default is "light" -->
<!-- v-bind:debug="true" debug can be set to true to enable debug mode -->
<!-- locale="en" locale can be any supported locale which the flow's screen translated to, if not provided, the locale is taken from the browser's locale. -->
<!-- tenant="tenantId" tenant ID for SSO (SAML) login. If not provided, Descope will use the domain of available email to choose the tenant -->
<!-- redirectUrl="redirectUrl" Redirect URL for OAuth and SSO (will be used when redirecting back from the OAuth provider / IdP), or for "Magic Link" and "Enchanted Link" (will be used as a link in the message sent to the the user) -->
<!-- autoFocus="skipFirstScreen" autoFocus can be true, false or "skipFirstScreen". Default is true. - true: automatically focus on the first input of each screen - false: do not automatically focus on screen's inputs - "skipFirstScreen": automatically focus on the first input of each screen, except first screen -->
<!-- validateOnBlur can be true in order to show input validation errors on blur, in addition to on submit. Default is false. -->
<!-- restartOnError if set to true, in case of flow version mismatch, will restart the flow if the components version was not changed. Default is false. -->
<!-- errorTransformer="errorTransformer" errorTransformer is a function that receives an error object and returns a string. The returned string will be displayed to the user. NOTE: errorTransformer is not required. If not provided, the error object will be displayed as is. -->
<!-- form="{ email: 'test@domain.com' }" form is an object the initial form context that is used in screens inputs in the flow execution. Used to inject predifined input values on flow start such as custom inputs, custom attrbiutes and other inputs. Keys passed can be accessed in flows actions, conditions and screens prefixed with "form.". NOTE: form is not required. If not provided, 'form' context key will be empty before user input. -->
<!-- client="{ version: '1.2.3' }" client is an object the initial client context in the flow execution. Keys passed can be accessed in flows actions and conditions prefixed with "client.". NOTE: client is not required. If not provided, context key will be empty. -->
<!-- styleId="my-awesome-style" Use a custom style name or keep empty to use the default style. -->
</template>
<script setup>
import { Descope } from '@descope/vue-sdk';
import { ref } from 'vue';
const isFlowLoading = ref(true);
const handleSuccess = (e) => {
console.log('Logged in!', e);
};
const handleError = (e) => {
console.log('Could not log in', e);
};
const handleReady = () => {
isFlowLoading.value = false;
};
// let tenantId = '<tenantId>'; // replace with your tenant ID
// let redirectUrl = '<redirectUrl>'; // replace with your redirect URL
// const errorTransformer = (error) => {
// const translationMap = {
// SAMLStartFailed: 'Failed to start SAML flow'
// };
// return translationMap[error.type] || error.text;
// };
</script>
Use the useDescope
, useSession
and useUser
functions in your components in order to get authentication state, user details and utilities
This can be helpful to implement application-specific logic. Examples:
- Render different components if current session is authenticated
- Render user's content
- Logout button
<template>
<div>
<div v-if="isSessionLoading || isUserLoading">Loading ...</div>
<div v-else-if="isAuthenticated">
<div>Hello {{ user?.name }}</div>
<button @click="logout()">Logout</button>
</div>
<div v-else>You are not logged in</div>
</div>
</template>
<script setup>
import { useDescope, useSession, useUser } from '@descope/vue-sdk';
const { isAuthenticated, isLoading: isSessionLoading } = useSession();
const { user, isLoading: isUserLoading } = useUser();
const { logout } = useDescope();
</script>
Note: useSession
triggers a single request to the Descope backend to attempt to refresh the session. If you don't useSession
on your app, the session will not be refreshed automatically. If your app does not require useSession
, you can trigger the refresh manually by calling refresh
from useDescope
hook.
For more SDK usage examples refer to docs
Session token server validation (pass session token to server API)
When developing a full-stack application, it is common to have private server API which requires a valid session token:
Note: Descope also provides server-side SDKs in various languages (NodeJS, Go, Python, etc). Descope's server SDKs have out-of-the-box session validation API that supports the options described bellow. To read more about session validation, Read this section in Descope documentation.
There are 2 ways to achieve that:
- Using
getSessionToken
to get the token, and pass it on the Authorization
Header (Recommended) - Passing
sessionTokenViaCookie
boolean option when initializing the plugin (Use cautiously, session token may grow, especially in cases of using authorization, or adding custom claim)
1. Using getSessionToken
to get the token
An example for api function, and passing the token on the Authorization
header:
import { getSessionToken } from '@descope/vue-sdk';
export const fetchData = async () => {
const sessionToken = getSessionToken();
const res = await fetch('/path/to/server/api', {
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${sessionToken}`,
},
});
};
2. Passing sessionTokenViaCookie
option when initializing the plugin
When doing so, Descope SDK will automatically store session token on the DS
cookie.
Note: Use this option if session token will stay small (less than 1k). Session token can grow, especially in cases of using authorization, or adding custom claims
Example:
import { createApp } from 'vue';
import App from './components/App.vue';
import descope from '@descope/vue-sdk';
const app = createApp(App);
app.use(descope, {
projectId: 'project-id',
sessionTokenViaCookie: true,
});
Now, whenever you call fetch
, the cookie will automatically be sent with the request.
Descope backend SDKs also support extracting the token from the DS
cookie.
Get the Descope SDK instance
In case you need the SDK instance outside the Vue application, you can use the getSdk
function
Make sure to call it only after initializing the descope plugin, this is where the SDK instance is actually created, otherwise you will no instance.
For example:
import { createApp } from 'vue';
import App from './components/App.vue';
import descope, { getSdk } from '../src';
const app = createApp(App);
app.use(descope, {
projectId: 'project-id',
});
const sdk = getSdk();
sdk?.onSessionTokenChange((newSession) => {
});
Helper Functions
You can also use the following functions to assist with various actions managing your JWT.
getSessionToken()
- Get current session token.
getRefreshToken()
- Get current refresh token.
refresh(token = getRefreshToken())
- Force a refresh on current session token using an existing valid refresh token.
isSessionTokenExpired(token = getSessionToken())
- Check whether the current session token is expired. Provide a session token if is not persisted.
isRefreshTokenExpired(token = getRefreshToken())
- Check whether the current refresh token is expired. Provide a refresh token if is not persisted.
getJwtRoles(token = getSessionToken(), tenant = '')
- Get current roles from an existing session token. Provide tenant id for specific tenant roles.
getJwtPermissions(token = getSessionToken(), tenant = '')
- Fet current permissions from an existing session token. Provide tenant id for specific tenant permissions.
Refresh token lifecycle
Descope SDK is automatically refreshes the session token when it is about to expire. This is done in the background using the refresh token, without any additional configuration.
If the Descope project settings are configured to manage tokens in cookies.
you must also configure a custom domain, and set it as the baseUrl
to the descope
plugin. See the above plugin
usage for usage example.
Token Persistence
Descope stores two tokens: the session token and the refresh token.
- The refresh token is either stored in local storage or an
httpOnly
cookie. This is configurable in the Descope console. - The session token is stored in either local storage or a JS cookie. This behavior is configurable via the
sessionTokenViaCookie
prop in the Descope plugin.
However, for security reasons, you may choose not to store tokens in the browser. In this case, you can pass persistTokens: false
to the Descope plugin. This prevents the SDK from storing the tokens in the browser.
Notes:
- You must configure the refresh token to be stored in an
httpOnly
cookie in the Descope console. Otherwise, the refresh token will not be stored, and when the page is refreshed, the user will be logged out. - You can still retrieve the session token using the
useSession
hook.
Last User Persistence
Descope stores the last user information in local storage. If you wish to disable this feature, you can pass storeLastAuthenticatedUser: false
to the Descope plugin. Please note that some features related to the last authenticated user may not function as expected if this behavior is disabled.
Widgets
Widgets are components that allow you to expose management features for tenant-based implementation. In certain scenarios, your customers may require the capability to perform managerial actions independently, alleviating the necessity to contact you. Widgets serve as a feature enabling you to delegate these capabilities to your customers in a modular manner.
Important Note:
- For the user to be able to use the widget, they need to be assigned the
Tenant Admin
Role.
User Management
The UserManagement
widget lets you embed a user table in your site to view and take action.
The widget lets you:
- Create a new user
- Edit an existing user
- Activate / disable an existing user
- Reset an existing user's password
- Remove an existing user's passkey
- Delete an existing user
Note:
- Custom fields also appear in the table.
Usage
<template>
<UserManagement tenant="tenant-id" widget-id="user-management-widget" />
</template>
<script setup>
import { UserManagement } from '@descope/vue-sdk';
</script>
Example:
Manage Users
Role Management
The RoleManagement
widget lets you embed a role table in your site to view and take action.
The widget lets you:
- Create a new role
- Change an existing role's fields
- Delete an existing role
Note:
- The
Editable
field is determined by the user's access to the role - meaning that project-level roles are not editable by tenant level users. - You need to pre-define the permissions that the user can use, which are not editable in the widget.
Usage
<template>
<RoleManagement tenant="tenant-id" widget-id="role-management-widget" />
</template>
<script setup>
import { RoleManagement } from '@descope/vue-sdk';
</script>
Example:
Manage Roles
Access Key Management
The AccessKeyManagement
widget lets you embed an access key table in your site to view and take action.
The widget lets you:
- Create a new access key
- Activate / deactivate an existing access key
- Delete an exising access key
Usage
<template>
<!-- admin view: manage all tenant users' access keys -->
<AccessKeyManagement tenant="tenant-id" widget-id="access-key-management-widget" />
<!-- user view: mange access key for the logged-in tenant's user -->
<AccessKeyManagement tenant="tenant-id" widget-id="user-access-key-management-widget" />
</template>
<script setup>
import { AccessKeyManagement } from '@descope/vue-sdk';
</script>
Example:
Manage Access Keys
Audit Management
The AuditManagement
widget lets you embed an audit table in your site.
Usage
<template>
<AuditManagement tenant="tenant-id" widget-id="audit-management-widget" />
</template>
<script setup>
import { AuditManagement } from '@descope/vue-sdk';
</script>
Example:
Manage Audit
User Profile
The UserProfile
widget lets you embed a user profile component in your app and let the logged in user update his profile.
The widget lets you:
- Update user profile picture
- Update user personal information
- Update authentication methods
- Logout
Usage
<template>
<UserProfile widget-id="user-profile-widget" @logout="onLogout" />
</template>
<script setup>
import { UserProfile } from '@descope/vue-sdk';
const onLogout = () => (window.location.href = '/login');
</script>
Example:
User Profile
Applications Portal
The ApplicationsPortal
lets you embed an applications portal component in your app and allows the logged-in user to open applications they are assigned to.
Usage
<template>
<ApplicationsPortal widget-id="applications-portal-widget" />
</template>
<script setup>
import { ApplicationsPortal } from '@descope/vue-sdk';
</script>
Example:
User Profile
Code Example
You can find an example Vue app in the example folder.
Setup
To run the examples, set your Project ID
by setting the VUE_APP_DESCOPE_PROJECT_ID
env var or directly
in the sample code.
Find your Project ID in the Descope console.
export VUE_APP_DESCOPE_PROJECT_ID=<Project-ID>
Alternatively, put the environment variable in .env.local
file in the project root directory.
See bellow for an .env.local
file template with more information.
Run Example
Run the following command in the root of the project to build and run the example:
npm i && npm start
Open your browser and navigate to http://localhost:3000.
Example Optional Env Variables
See the following table for customization environment variables for the example app:
Env Variable | Description | Default value |
---|
VUE_APP_DESCOPE_FLOW_ID | Which flow ID to use in the login page | sign-up-or-in |
VUE_APP_DESCOPE_BASE_URL | Custom Descope base URL | None |
VUE_APP_DESCOPE_BASE_STATIC_URL | Custom Descope base static URL | None |
Example for .env.local
file template:
# Your project ID
VUE_APP_DESCOPE_PROJECT_ID="<Project-ID>"
# Login flow ID
VUE_APP_DESCOPE_FLOW_ID=""
# Descope base URL
VUE_APP_DESCOPE_BASE_URL=""
# Descope base static URL
VUE_APP_DESCOPE_BASE_STATIC_URL=""
Q & A
I updated the user in my backend, but the user / session token are not updated in the frontend
// adjust the answer to vue sdk
The Descope SDK caches the user and session token in the frontend. If you update the user in your backend (using Descope Management SDK/API for example), you can call me
/ refresh
from useDescope
hook to refresh the user and session token. Example:
const sdk = useDescope();
const handleUpdateUser = () => {
myBackendUpdateUser().then(() => {
sdk.me();
sdk.refresh();
});
};
Learn More
To learn more please see the Descope Documentation and API reference page.
Contact Us
If you need help you can email Descope Support
License
The Descope SDK for React is licensed for use under the terms and conditions of the MIT license Agreement.