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piral-oauth2
Advanced tools
This is a plugin that only has a peer dependency to piral-core
. What piral-oauth2
brings to the table is a direct integration with OAuth 2.0 identity providers on basis of the client-oauth2 library that can be used with piral
or piral-core
.
The set includes the getAccessToken
API to retrieve the current user's access token.
By default, these Pilet API extensions are not integrated in piral
, so you'd need to add them to your Piral instance.
If you are using authorization with an OAuth 2 provider then piral-oauth2
might be a useful plugin. It uses the client-oauth2
library under the hood and exposes token functionality in common HTTP mechanisms (e.g., using fetch
or a library such as axios
). Pilets can get the currently available token via the pilet API.
Alternatives: Use a plugin that is specific to your method of authentication (e.g., piral-auth
for generic user management, piral-adal
for Microsoft, piral-oidc
for generic OpenID Connect, etc.) or just a library.
The following functions are brought to the Pilet API.
getAccessToken()
Gets the currently authenticated user's token or undefined
if no user is authenticated.
::: summary: For pilet authors
You can use the getAccessToken
function from the Pilet API. This returns a promise.
Example use:
import { PiletApi } from '<name-of-piral-instance>';
export async function setup(piral: PiletApi) {
const userToken = await piral.getAccessToken();
// do something with userToken
}
Note that this value may change if the Piral instance supports an "on the fly" login (i.e., a login without redirect/reloading of the page).
:::
::: summary: For Piral instance developers
The provided library only brings API extensions for pilets to a Piral instance.
For the setup of the library itself you'll need to import createOAuth2Api
from the piral-oauth2
package.
import { createOAuth2Api } from 'piral-oauth2';
The integration looks like:
import { createOAuth2Api, setupOAuth2Client } from 'piral-oauth2';
const client = setupOAuth2Client({ clientId, ... });
const instance = createInstance({
// important part
plugins: [createOAuth2Api(client)],
// ...
});
The separation into setupOAuth2Client
and createOAuth2Api
was done to simplify the standard usage.
Normally, you would want to have different modules here. As an example consider the following code:
// module oauth2.ts
import { setupOAuth2Client } from 'piral-oauth2';
export const client = setupOAuth2Client({ ... });
// app.tsx
import * as React from 'react';
import { createOAuth2Api } from 'piral-oauth2';
import { createInstance } from 'piral-core';
import { client } from './oauth2';
import { render } from 'react-dom';
export function render() {
const instance = createInstance({
// ...
plugins: [createOAuth2Api(client)],
});
render(<Piral instance={instance} />, document.querySelector('#app'));
}
// index.ts
import { client } from './oauth2';
if (location.pathname !== '/auth') {
if (client.account()) {
import('./app').then(({ render }) => render());
} else {
client.login();
}
}
This way we evaluate the current path and act accordingly. Note that the actually used path may be different for your application.
The chosen OAuth 2 flow makes a difference. The example above works fine with the implicit
flow (default). If you want to use the code
flow then the integration looks a bit different.
Example integration using the code
flow:
// index.ts
import { client } from './oauth2';
if (location.pathname !== '/auth') {
client.login();
} else {
client.token().then(
// all good we are logged in
() => import('./app').then(({ render }) => render()),
// something went bad, we should show some error
() => import('./error').then(({ render }) => render()),
);
}
The code flow will automatically return from /auth
to /
once authenticated. Therefore, the application's routing does not have to consider /auth
, which can remain a special path.
:::
Piral is released using the MIT license. For more information see the license file.
FAQs
Plugin to integrate OAuth 2.0 authentication in Piral.
The npm package piral-oauth2 receives a total of 207 weekly downloads. As such, piral-oauth2 popularity was classified as not popular.
We found that piral-oauth2 demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 0 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
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