Integrations with Ory
This repository contains integrations for connecting with Ory Cloud.
Table of Contents
NextJS
To connect a NextJS app with Ory, do the following in your NextJS App:
$ npm i --save @ory/integrations
Then create a file at <your-nextjs-app>/api/.ory/[...paths].ts
with the
following contents:
import { config, createApiHandler } from "@ory/integrations/next-edge"
export { config }
export default createApiHandler({
})
You need to set the environment variable ORY_SDK_URL
to your
Ory Cloud Project SDK URL. For
a list of available options head over to
src/nextjs/index.ts
.
Vercel
To connect a non NextJS vercel app, do the following in your vercel app:
$ npm i --save @ory/integrations
Then create a file at <your-vercel-app>/api/oryproxy.js
with the following
contents:
import { config, createApiHandler } from "@ory/integrations/next-edge"
export { config }
const ah = createApiHandler({
})
const apiHandlerWrapper = (req, res) => {
req.query.paths = req.url.replace(/^\/api\/.ory\//, "").split("?")[0]
ah(req, res)
}
export default apiHandlerWrapper
Then add the following contents to <your-vercel-app>/vercel.json
:
{
"rewrites": [
{ "source": "/api/.ory/:match*", "destination": "/api/oryproxy" }
]
}
SDK Helpers
This package contains several helpers for using the Ory SDKs with TypeScript,
JavaScript, and NodeJS.
Type Guards
This package includes type guards for identifying UI nodes.
import {
isUiNodeImageAttributes,
isUiNodeInputAttributes,
isUiNodeScriptAttributes,
isUiNodeTextAttributes,
} from "@ory/integrations/ui"
if (isUiNodeImageAttributes(node.attributes)) {
console.log("it is an image: ", node.attributes.src)
}
UI Node Helpers
This package contains convenience functions for UI nodes:
import { getNodeLabel } from '@ory/integrations/ui'
: Returns the node's
label.import { getNodeId } from '@ory/integrations/ui'
: Returns a node's ID.import { filterNodesByGroups } from '@ory/integrations/ui'
: Filters nodes by
their groups.
An example of using the filterNodesByGroups
function could be to map the
UiNode[] to a certain JSX components.
The example below is from the ory/themes
repository and is used to map out the UI Nodes to JSX Components.
Understanding filterNodesByGroups
is quite easy if you think about it as a
hierarchy:
const nodes = [
{
group: "webauthn",
attributes: {
node_type: "input",
type: "input",
},
},
{
group: "oidc",
attributes: {
node_types: "button",
type: "submit",
},
},
{
group: "oidc",
attributes: {
node_types: "input",
type: "checkbox"
}
}
{
group: "foo",
attributes: {
node_types: "bar",
type: "bar",
},
},
]
filterNodesByGroups({
nodes: nodes,
groups: "oidc,webauthn",
attributes: "submit",
withoutDefaultAttributes: true,
excludeAttributes: "checkbox",
})
How will our output look like?
[
- {
- group: "webauthn",
- attributes: {
- node_type: "input",
- type: "input",
- },
- },
+ {
+ group: "oidc",
+ attributes: {
+ node_types: "button",
+ type: "submit",
+ },
+ },
- {
- group: "oidc", //<-- take note here, we have 2 oidc groups
- attributes: {
- node_types: "input",
- type: "checkbox"
- }
- }
- {
- group: "foo",
- attributes: {
- node_types: "bar",
- type: "bar",
- },
- },
]
An example is we have a UINode containing the group "totp" and attributes node
type "input".
{
group: "totp",
attributes: {
name: "f",
type: "input",
node_type: "input",
},
}
Our end goal is to map it to HTML, something like this.
<input type="input" name="f" />
To achieve that, we could wrap it in a nifty JSX component which returns the
correct component based on our UI node type.
We accept a filter
object which is basically the FilterNodesByGroups
type
and return a <Node />
component, which is a component that helps us return our
specific HTML.
export const FilterFlowNodes = ({
filter,
includeCSRF,
}: {
filter: FilterNodesByGroups
includeCSRF?: boolean
}): JSX.Element | null => {
const getInputName = (node: UiNode): string =>
isUiNodeInputAttributes(node.attributes) ? node.attributes.name : ""
const nodes = filterNodesByGroups(filter)
.filter((node) =>
getInputName(node) === "csrf_token" && !includeCSRF ? false : true,
)
.map((node, k) =>
["hidden"].includes(getNodeInputType(node.attributes))
? {
node: <Node node={node} key={k} />,
hidden: true,
}
: {
node: <Node node={node} key={k} />,
hidden: false,
},
)
return nodes.length > 0 ? (
<>
// we don't want hidden fields to create new gaps
{nodes.filter((node) => node.hidden).map((node) => node.node)}
<div className={gridStyle({ gap: 16 })}>
{nodes.filter((node) => !node.hidden).map((node) => node.node)}
</div>
</>
) : null
}
Now we can use our wrapper to return the HTML we want based on the nodes
.
Here we only want nodes that do not have the hidden
attribute.
<FilterFlowNodes
filter={{
nodes: nodes,
excludeAttributes: "hidden",
}}
/>
Another more complex example is to filter out the UI nodes to only retrieve the
oidc
and password
groups. We also exclude the default
group here with
withoutDefaultGroup: true
. Furthermore we do some exclusions on the
submit and
hiddenattributes, so any group which has an attribute containing a node type
submitor
hidden`
will be filtered out.
<FilterFlowNodes
filter={{
nodes: nodes,
groups: ["oidc", "password"],
withoutDefaultGroup: true,
excludeAttributes: ["submit", "hidden"],
}}
/>
Another example of us wanting the oidc
and webauthn
group (note: we can use
comma seperated strings instead of an array). We also exclude default attributes
with withoutDefaultAttributes: true
which are hidden
and script
elements.
This will also only return us the nodes which have a submit
attribute.
<FilterFlowNodes
filter={{
nodes: flow.ui.nodes,
groups: "oidc,webauthn",
withoutDefaultAttributes: true,
attributes: "submit",
}}
/>