react-oidc-context
Lightweight auth library using the
oidc-client-ts library for React
single page applications (SPA). Support for
hooks and
higher-order components (HOC).
Table of Contents
Documentation
This library implements an auth context provider by making use of the
oidc-client-ts
library. Its configuration is tight coupled to that library.
The User and UserManager is hold in this context, which is accessible from the
React application. Additionally it intercepts the auth redirects by looking at
the query/fragment parameters and acts accordingly. You still need to setup a
redirect uri, which must point to your application, but you do not need to
create that route.
Installation
Using npm
npm install react-oidc-context
Getting Started
Configure the library by wrapping your application in AuthProvider
:
import React from "react";
import ReactDOM from "react-dom";
import { AuthProvider } from "react-oidc-context";
import App from "./App";
const oidcConfig = {
authority: "<your authority>",
client_id: "<your client id>",
redirect_uri: "<your redirect uri>",
};
ReactDOM.render(
<AuthProvider {...oidcConfig}>
<App />
</AuthProvider>,
document.getElementById("app")
);
Use the useAuth
hook in your components to access authentication state
(isLoading
, isAuthenticated
and user
) and authentication methods
(signinRedirect
, removeUser
and signOutRedirect
):
import React from "react";
import { useAuth } from "react-oidc-context";
function App() {
const auth = useAuth();
switch (auth.activeNavigator) {
case "signinSilent":
return <div>Signing you in...</div>;
case "signoutRedirect":
return <div>Signing you out...</div>;
}
if (auth.isLoading) {
return <div>Loading...</div>;
}
if (auth.error) {
return <div>Oops... {auth.error.message}</div>;
}
if (auth.isAuthenticated) {
return (
<div>
Hello {auth.user?.profile.sub}{" "}
<button onClick={auth.removeUser}>Log out</button>
</div>
);
}
return <button onClick={auth.signinRedirect}>Log in</button>;
}
export default App;
Use with a Class Component
Use the withAuth
higher-order component to add the auth
property to class
components:
import React from "react";
import { withAuth } from "react-oidc-context";
class Profile extends React.Component {
render() {
const auth = this.props.auth;
return <div>Hello {auth.user?.profile.sub}</div>;
}
}
export default withAuth(Profile);
Call a protected API
As a child of AuthProvider
with a user containing an access token:
import React from "react";
import { useAuth } from "react-oidc-context";
const Posts = () => {
const auth = useAuth();
const [posts, setPosts] = useState(null);
React.useEffect(() => {
(async () => {
try {
const token = auth.user?.access_token;
const response = await fetch("https://api.example.com/posts", {
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${token}`,
},
});
setPosts(await response.json());
} catch (e) {
console.error(e);
}
})();
}, [auth]);
if (!posts) {
return <div>Loading...</div>;
}
return (
<ul>
{posts.map((post, index) => {
return <li key={index}>{post}</li>;
})}
</ul>
);
};
export default Posts;
As not a child of AuthProvider
(e.g. redux slice) when using local storage
(WebStorageStateStore
) for the user containing an access token:
import { User } from "oidc-client-ts"
function getUser() {
const oidcStorage = localStorage.getItem(`oidc.user:<your authority>:<your client id>`)
if (!oidcStorage) {
return null;
}
return User.fromStorageString(oidcStorage);
}
export const getPosts = createAsyncThunk(
"store/getPosts",
async () => {
const user = getUser()
const token = user?.access_token
return fetch("https://api.example.com/posts", {
headers: {
Authorization: `Bearer ${token}`,
},
});
},
)
Contributing
We appreciate feedback and contribution to this repo!
Influences
This library is inspired by oidc-react,
which lacks error handling and
auth0-react, which is focused on auth0.
License
This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the
LICENSE file
for more info.