- Install NuGet
Install-Package Auth0.WindowsPhone
- Instantiate Auth0Client and save into static property in App class
Auth0 = new Auth0Client(
"{YOUR_AUTH0_DOMAIN}", // e.g. contoso.auth0.com
"{YOUR_CLIENT_ID}"); // it's in Auth0 app settings
- Trigger login (with Widget)
try
{
var user = await App.Auth0.LoginAsync();
/* Use user.Profile to do wonderful things, e.g.:
- get user email => user.Profile["email"].ToString()
- get facebook/google/twitter/etc access token => user.Profile["identities"][0]["access_token"]
- get Windows Azure AD groups => user.Profile["groups"]
- etc.
*/
}
catch (AuthenticationCancelException)
{
// Handle case when user canceled authentication
}
catch (AuthenticationErrorException)
{
// Handle case when some error happen while authentication
}
catch (AuthenticationException)
{
// Handle all Auth0 Authentication error cases
}
Or you can use the connection as a parameter (e.g. here we login with a Windows Azure AD account):
var user = await App.Auth0.LoginAsync("auth0waadtests.onmicrosoft.com");
Or a database connection:
var user = await App.Auth0.LoginAsync("my-db-connection", "username", "password");
Note: if the user pressed the back button
LoginAsync
throws aAuthenticationCancelException
. If consent was not given (on social providers) or some other error happened it will throw aAuthenticationErrorException
.
You can obtain a delegation token specifying the ID of the target client (targetClientId
) and, optionally, an IDictionary<string, string>
object (options
) in order to include custom parameters like scope or id_token:
var targetClientId = "{TARGET_CLIENT_ID}";
var options = new Dictionary<string, string>
{
{ "scope", "openid name email" }, // default: openid // Details: https://auth0.com/docs/scopes
{ "id_token", "USER_ID_TOKEN" } // default: id_token of the authenticated user (auth0.CurrentUser.IdToken)
};
auth0.GetDelegationToken(targetClientId, options)
.ContinueWith(t =>
{
// Call your API using t.Result["id_token"]
});
You can obtain a refresh_token
which never expires (unless explicitly revoked) and use it to renew the id_token
.
To do that you need to first explicitly request it when logging in:
var user = await auth0.LoginAsync(withRefreshToken: true);
// you can access the refresh token this way
var refreshToken = user.RefreshToken;
You should store that token in a safe place. The next time, instead of asking the user to log in you will be
able to use the following code to get a valid id_token
:
var idToken = auth0.CurrentUser.IdToken;
if (TokenValidator.HasExpired(idToken))
{
// refresh it
var result = await auth0.RefreshToken();
idToken = (string)result["id_token"];
auth0.CurrentUser.IdToken = idToken;
}
Auth0 helps you to:
- Add authentication with multiple authentication sources, either social like Google, Facebook, Microsoft Account, LinkedIn, GitHub, Twitter, Box, Salesforce, amont others, or enterprise identity systems like Windows Azure AD, Google Apps, Active Directory, ADFS or any SAML Identity Provider.
- Add authentication through more traditional username/password databases.
- Add support for linking different user accounts with the same user.
- Support for generating signed Json Web Tokens to call your APIs and flow the user identity securely.
- Analytics of how, when and where users are logging in.
- Pull data from other sources and add it to the user profile, through JavaScript rules.
- Go to Auth0 and click Sign Up.
- Use Google, GitHub or Microsoft Account to login.
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.
This project is licensed under the MIT license. See the LICENSE file for more info.