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@onelogin/sdk
Advanced tools
This SDK will let you execute all the API methods, version/1, described at https://developers.onelogin.com/api-docs/1/getting-started/dev-overview.
This module is under development and incomplete at this time.
You'll need a OneLogin account and a set of API credentials before you get started.
If you don't have an account you can sign up for a free developer account here.
Value | Description |
---|---|
client_id | Required: A valid OneLogin API client_id |
client_secret | Required: A valid OneLogin API client_secret |
region | Optional: 'us' or 'eu'. Defaults to 'us' |
var oneLogin = require('onelogin')(client_id, client_secret, region);
// Now you can make requests
oneLogin.getUsers(function(err, users) {
console.log("Users: ", users);
});
All OneLogin module methods take as their last parameter a standard Node.js error-first callback.
To get access to these methods, do:
var oneLogin = require('onelogin')(client_id, client_secret, region);
And call them like this:
oneLogin.getUser(req.params.id, function(err, user) {
if (err) {
// handle err
} else {
console.log("User:", user);
}
});
The OneLogin module also supplies those same API methods in an asynchronous (promisified) form: instead of taking a callback parameter, each method returns a promise. With these methods, you may handle the returned promise explicity, or if you are using a version of Node.js that supports async/await, you may await them.
To get the async version of OneLogin, do:
var oneLogin = require('onelogin')(client_id, client_secret, region).async();
Then you may use these async methods with explicit promise handling like this:
oneLogin.getUser(req.params.id).then(user => {
console.log("User:", user);
})
.catch(function(err){
// handle err
});
And if you have access to async/await, you can do:
try {
console.log("User:", await oneLogin.getUser(req.params.id));
} catch (err) {
// handle err
}
FAQs
NodeJS client for @onelogin/sdk
The npm package @onelogin/sdk receives a total of 8,341 weekly downloads. As such, @onelogin/sdk popularity was classified as popular.
We found that @onelogin/sdk demonstrated a not healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released a year ago. It has 4 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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