Auth0 is an authentication broker that supports social identity providers as well as enterprise identity providers such as Active Directory, LDAP, Google Apps, Salesforce.
Lock makes it easy to integrate SSO in your app. You won't have to worry about:
- Having a professional looking login dialog that displays well on any resolution and device.
- Finding the right icons for popular social providers.
- Remembering what was the identity provider the user chose the last time.
- Solving the home realm discovery challenge with enterprise users (i.e.: asking the enterprise user the email, and redirecting to the right enterprise identity provider).
- Implementing a standard sign in protocol (OpenID Connect / OAuth2 Login)
You can try it out yourself online at our Auth0 Lock playground.
From npm:
npm install auth0-lock
From bower:
bower install auth0-lock
Or our CDN:
<!-- Latest major release -->
<script src="http://cdn.auth0.com/js/lock-7.min.js"></script>
<!-- Latest minor release -->
<script src="http://cdn.auth0.com/js/lock-7.x.min.js"></script>
<!-- Latest patch release (recommended for production) -->
<script src="http://cdn.auth0.com/js/lock-7.x.y.min.js"></script>
If you are targeting mobile audiences, it's recommended that you add:
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1, maximum-scale=1, user-scalable=0"/>
If you are using browserify to build your project, you will need to add the following transformations required by Auth0 Lock:
{
"devDependencies": {
"brfs": "0.0.8",
"ejsify": "0.1.0",
"packageify": "^0.2.0"
}
}
You can use Auth0Lock with Popup mode or Redirect mode. To learn more about these modes, you can read the Authentication Modes page. There are different ways of implementing them according to your application needs. To see what kind of settings you should be using you can check the Types of Applications article.
// Initialize Auth0Lock with your `clientID` and `domain`
var lock = new Auth0Lock('xxxxxx', '<account>.auth0.com');
// and deploy it
var login = document.querySelector('a#login')
login.onclick = function (e) {
e.preventDefault();
lock.show(function onLogin(err, profile, id_token) {
if (err) {
// There was an error logging the user in
return alert(err.message);
}
// User is logged in
});
};
This is just one example of how Auth0Lock could work with a Single Page Application (SPA). Read the Single Page Applications and the Regular Web Applications articles for a full explanation on how to implement those scenarios with Auth0 Lock and when to use each.
Initialize Auth0Lock
with a clientID
and the account's domain
.
var lock = new Auth0Lock('xxxxxx', '<account>.auth0.com');
Note: For a full detail on options and parameters you can check the Auth0Lock initialization wiki notes.
Open the widget on signin
mode with signup
and reset
button actions if enabled for the configured/default account connection.
You may call this method with a single parameter, two or even none. The following examples ilustrate this:
var lock = new Auth0Lock('xxxxxx', '<account>.auth0.com');
// using defaults and resolved configuration
// from you account details
lock.show();
// passing some options
lock.show(options);
// provide with a callback `fn` to be invoked
// at success or error authentication
lock.show(function (err, profile, token) {});
// or both options and callback
lock.show(options, function (err, profile, token) {});
Check the Auth0Lock customization article for more examples and options specification. Or enter the Authentication modes notes to learn more about implementing different authentication mechanics.
Open the widget on signin
mode, but withouht the bottom signup
nor reset
button actions. This method is useful when your site has custom signup and reset links at a different form.
You may call this method with a single parameter, two or even none. The following examples ilustrate this:
var lock = new Auth0Lock('xxxxxx', '<account>.auth0.com');
// using defaults and resolved configuration
// from you account details
lock.showSignin();
// passing some options
lock.showSignin(options);
// provide with a callback `fn` to be invoked
// on `reset` success or error
lock.showSignin(function (err, profile, token) {});
// or both options and callback
lock.showSignin(options, function (err, profile, token) {});
Check the Auth0Lock customization article for more examples and options specification. Or enter the Authentication modes notes to learn more about implementing different authentication mechanics.
Open the widget on signup
mode, but withouht the cancel
button action to go back to signin
. This method is useful when your site has custom signin and reset links at a different form.
You may call this method with a single parameter, two or even none. The following examples ilustrate this:
var lock = new Auth0Lock('xxxxxx', '<account>.auth0.com');
// using defaults and resolved configuration
// from you account details
lock.showSignup();
// passing some options
lock.showSignup(options);
// provide with a callback `fn` to be invoked
// on `reset` success or error
lock.showSignup(function (err) {});
// or both options and callback
lock.showSignup(options, function (err) {});
Check the Auth0Lock customization article for more examples and options specification. Or enter the Authentication modes notes to learn more about implementing different authentication mechanics.
Open the widget on reset
mode, but withouht the bottom cancel
button action to go back to signin
. This method is useful when your site has custom signin and signup links at a different form.
You may call this method with a single parameter, two or even none. The following examples ilustrate this:
var lock = new Auth0Lock('xxxxxx', '<account>.auth0.com');
// using defaults and resolved configuration
// from you account details
lock.showReset();
// passing some options
lock.showReset(options);
// provide with a callback `fn` to be invoked
// on `reset` success or error
lock.showReset(function (err) {});
// or both options and callback
lock.showReset(options, function (err) {});
Check the Auth0Lock customization article for more examples and options specification. Or enter the Authentication modes notes to learn more about implementing different authentication mechanics.
Close the widget and invoke callback
when removed from DOM.
var lock = new Auth0Lock('xxxxxx', '<account>.auth0.com');
// normal display
lock.show(options);
// trigger hide when esc key pressed
document.addEventListener('keypress', function(e) {
// hide if esc
lock.hide();
}, false);
Log out loggedin user with optional query parameters for the GET
request.
var lock = new Auth0Lock('xxxxxx', '<account>.auth0.com');
// Call logout with query parameters
lock.logout({ ref: window.location.href });
The example directory has a ready-to-go app. In order to run it you need node installed.
Then execute npm i
to install dependencies (only once) and npm example
from the root of this project.
Finally, point your browser at http://localhost:3000/
and play around.
We ensure browser compatibility in Chrome
, Safari
, Firefox
and IE >= 9
. We currently use zuul along with Saucelabs to run integration tests on each push.
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.
- Complete API
- UI customization
- Single Page Applications implementation notes.
- Regular Web Applications implementing notes.
- Overlay vs Embedded mode
- Popup vs Redirect mode notes. What are the authentication modes?.
- Error customization notes.
- I18n notes.
- Events notes.
- Development notes.
- Release process notes.
- Auth0Lock playground
- Using Refresh Tokens
- Legacy Auth0Widget
< v6.0.0
repository and docs. - Legacy Auth0Widget Migration guide to AuthoLock