Skip to content

IamthatIam777/auth0.js

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

auth0.js

Build Status NPM version Coverage License Downloads FOSSA Status

Client Side JavaScript toolkit for Auth0 API.

If you want to read the full API documentation of auth0.js, see here.

Index

  1. Install
  2. auth0.WebAuth
  3. auth0.Authentication
  4. auth0.Management
  5. Documentation
  6. Migration
  7. Develop
  8. Issue Reporting
  9. Author
  10. License

Install

From CDN:

<!-- Latest patch release -->
<script src="https://cdn.auth0.com/js/auth0/9.14.3/auth0.min.js"></script>

From npm:

npm install auth0-js

After installing the auth0-js module, you'll need bundle it up along with all of its dependencies.

auth0.WebAuth

Provides support for all the authentication flows.

Initialize

var auth0 = new auth0.WebAuth({
  domain: '{YOUR_AUTH0_DOMAIN}',
  clientID: '{YOUR_AUTH0_CLIENT_ID}'
});

Parameters:

  • domain {REQUIRED, string}: Your Auth0 account domain such as 'example.auth0.com' or 'example.eu.auth0.com'.
  • clientID {REQUIRED, string}: The Client ID found on your Application settings page.
  • redirectUri {OPTIONAL, string}: The URL where Auth0 will call back to with the result of a successful or failed authentication. It must be added to the "Allowed Callback URLs" in your Auth0 Application's settings.
  • scope {OPTIONAL, string}: The default scope used for all authorization requests.
  • audience {OPTIONAL, string}: The default audience, used if requesting access to an API.
  • responseType {OPTIONAL, string}: Response type for all authentication requests. It can be any space separated list of the values code, token, id_token. If you don't provide a global responseType, you will have to provide a responseType for each method that you use.
  • responseMode {OPTIONAL, string}: The default responseMode used, defaults to 'fragment'. The parseHash method can be used to parse authentication responses using fragment response mode. Supported values are query, fragment and form_post. The query value is only supported when responseType is code.
  • _disableDeprecationWarnings {OPTIONAL, boolean}: Indicates if deprecation warnings should be output to the browser console, defaults to false.
  • maxAge {OPTIONAL, number}: Used during token validation. Specifies the maximum elapsed time in seconds since the last time the user was actively authenticated by the authorization server. If the elapsed time is greater than this value, the token is considered invalid and the user must be re-authenticated.
  • leeway {OPTIONAL, number}: Used during ID token validation. Specifies the number of seconds to account for clock skew when validating time-based claims such as iat and exp. The default is 60 seconds.

API

  • authorize(options): Redirects to the /authorize endpoint to start an authentication/authorization transaction. Auth0 will call back to your application with the results at the specified redirectUri. The default scope for this method is openid profile email.
auth0.authorize({
  audience: 'https://mystore.com/api/v2',
  scope: 'read:order write:order',
  responseType: 'token',
  redirectUri: 'https://example.com/auth/callback'
});
  • parseHash(options, callback): Parses a URL hash fragment to extract the result of an Auth0 authentication response.

This method requires that your tokens are signed with RS256. Please check our Migration Guide for more information.

auth0.parseHash({ hash: window.location.hash }, function(err, authResult) {
  if (err) {
    return console.log(err);
  }

  // The contents of authResult depend on which authentication parameters were used.
  // It can include the following:
  // authResult.accessToken - access token for the API specified by `audience`
  // authResult.expiresIn - string with the access token's expiration time in seconds
  // authResult.idToken - ID token JWT containing user profile information

  auth0.client.userInfo(authResult.accessToken, function(err, user) {
    // Now you have the user's information
  });
});
  • checkSession(options, callback): Allows you to acquire a new token from Auth0 for a user who already has an SSO session established against Auth0 for your domain. If the user is not authenticated, the authentication result will be empty and you'll receive an error like this: {error: 'login_required'}.The method accepts any valid OAuth2 parameters that would normally be sent to /authorize. Everything happens inside an iframe, so it will not reload your application or redirect away from it.
auth0.checkSession(
  {
    audience: 'https://mystore.com/api/v2',
    scope: 'read:order write:order'
  },
  function(err, authResult) {
    // Authentication tokens or error
  }
);

The contents of authResult are identical to those returned by parseHash().

Important: If you're not using the hosted login page to do social logins, you have to use your own social connection keys. If you use Auth0's dev keys, you'll always get login_required as an error when calling checkSession.

Important: Because there is no redirect in this method, responseType: 'code' is not supported and will throw an error.

Remember to add the URL where the authorization request originates from to the Allowed Web Origins list of your Auth0 Application in the Dashboard under your Applications's Settings.

  • client.login(options, callback): Authenticates a user with username and password in a realm using /oauth/token. This will not initialize a SSO session at Auth0, hence can not be used along with silent authentication.
auth0.client.login(
  {
    realm: 'Username-Password-Authentication', //connection name or HRD domain
    username: '[email protected]',
    password: 'areallystrongpassword',
    audience: 'https://mystore.com/api/v2',
    scope: 'read:order write:order'
  },
  function(err, authResult) {
    // Auth tokens in the result or an error
  }
);

The contents of authResult are identical to those returned by parseHash().

auth0.Authentication

Provides an API client for the Auth0 Authentication API.

Initialize

var auth0 = new auth0.Authentication({
  domain: '{YOUR_AUTH0_DOMAIN}',
  clientID: '{YOUR_AUTH0_CLIENT_ID}'
});

API

auth0.Management

Provides an API Client for the Auth0 Management API (only methods meant to be used from the client with the user token). You should use an access_token with the https://YOUR_DOMAIN.auth0.com/api/v2/ audience to make this work. For more information, read the user management section of the Auth0.js documentation.

Initialize

var auth0 = new auth0.Management({
  domain: '{YOUR_AUTH0_DOMAIN}',
  token: '{ACCESS_TOKEN_FROM_THE_USER}'
});

API

Documentation

For a complete reference and examples please check our docs.

Migration

If you need help migrating to v9, please refer to the v9 Migration Guide.

If you need help migrating to v8, please refer to the v8 Migration Guide.

Develop

Run npm install to set up the environment.

Run npm start to point your browser to https://localhost:3000/ to verify the example page works.

Run npm test to run the test suite.

Run npm run ci:test to run the tests that ci runs.

Run npm run test:watch to run the test suite while you work.

Run npm run test:coverage to run the test suite with coverage report.

Run npm run lint to run the linter and check code styles.

Run npm install && npm run build && npm run test:es-check:es5 && npm run test:es-check:es2015:module to check for JS incompatibility.

See .circleci/config.yml for additional checks that might be run as part of circleci integration tests.

Issue Reporting

If you have found a bug or if you have a feature request, please report them at this repository issues section. Please do not report security vulnerabilities on the public GitHub issue tracker. The Responsible Disclosure Program details the procedure for disclosing security issues.

For auth0 related questions/support please use the Support Center.

Author

Auth0

License

This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.

FOSSA Status

About

Auth0 headless browser sdk

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 95.0%
  • HTML 4.0%
  • Shell 1.0%