Fga.Net.DependencyInjection
: Provides dependency injection/configuration extensions for OpenFga.Sdk
Fga.Net.AspNetCore
: Authorization middleware to perform FGA checks for inbound requests.
This package is compatible with the OSS OpenFGA as well as the managed Auth0 FGA service. Usage of DSL v1.1 is required.
Please ensure you have a basic understanding of how FGA works before continuing: OpenFGA Docs or Auth0 FGA Docs
This tutorial assumes you have authentication setup within your project, such as JWT bearer authentication via Auth0.
Install Fga.Net.AspNetCore
from Nuget before continuing.
Ensure you have a Store ID, Client ID, and Client Secret ready from How to get your API keys.
- Add your
StoreId
,ClientId
andClientSecret
to your application configuration, ideally via the dotnet secrets manager. - Add the following code to your ASP.NET Core services configuration:
builder.Services.AddOpenFgaClient(config =>
{
config.ConfigureAuth0Fga(x =>
{
x.WithAuthentication(builder.Configuration["Auth0Fga:ClientId"]!, builder.Configuration["Auth0Fga:ClientSecret"]!);
});
config.SetStoreId(builder.Configuration["Auth0Fga:StoreId"]!);
});
builder.Services.AddOpenFgaMiddleware();
The ConfigureAuth0Fga
extension will configure the client to work with the Auth0 US environment. An environment selector will be added as additional regions come online.
- Add the FGA
ApiUrl
&StoreId
to your application configuration. - Add the following code to your ASP.NET Core configuration:
services.AddOpenFgaClient(config =>
{
config.ConfigureOpenFga(x =>
{
x.SetConnection(context.Configuration["Fga:ApiUrl"]);
});
config.SetStoreId(context.Configuration["Fga:StoreId"]);
});
builder.Services.AddOpenFgaMiddleware();
Authentication can be added to OpenFGA connections via the relevant extensions:
config.ConfigureOpenFga(x =>
{
x.SetConnection(context.Configuration["Fga:ApiUrl"]);
// Add API key auth
x.WithApiKeyAuthentication(context.Configuration["Fga:ApiKey"]);
// or OIDC auth
x.WithOidcAuthentication(
context.Configuration["Fga:ClientId"],
context.Configuration["Fga:ClientSecret"],
context.Configuration["Fga:Issuer"],
context.Configuration["Fga:Audience"]);
});
Your authorization policy should be configured with RequireAuthenticatedUser
and AddFgaRequirement
at minimum:
builder.Services.AddAuthorization(options =>
{
options.AddPolicy(FgaAuthorizationDefaults.PolicyKey,
p => p
.RequireAuthenticatedUser()
.AddFgaRequirement());
});
A constant authorization key is included for convenience, but AddFgaRequirement
can be used with any additional policy as required.
Fga.Net.AspNetCore
ships with a number of attributes that should cover the most common authorization sources for FGA checks:
FgaHeaderObjectAttribute
- Computes the Object via a value in the requests headerFgaPropertyObjectAttribute
- Computes the Object via a root-level property on the requests JSON bodyFgaQueryObjectAttribute
- Computes the Object via a value in the query stringFgaRouteObjectAttribute
- Computes the Object via a value in the routes path
If you want to use these attributes, you need to configure how the user's identifier is constructed from the users claims. The example below uses the Name, which is mapped to the User ID in a default Auth0 integration.
builder.Services.AddOpenFgaMiddleware(config =>
{
//'user' should be the name of the user type that you're using within your FGA model
config.SetUserIdentifier("user", principal => principal.Identity!.Name!);
});
These attributes can then be used in both minimal APIs & in your controller(s):
// Traditional Controllers
[ApiController]
[Route("[controller]")]
[Authorize(FgaAuthorizationDefaults.PolicyKey)]
public class DocumentController : ControllerBase
{
[HttpGet("view/{documentId}")]
[FgaRouteObject("read", "document", nameof(documentId))]
public string GetByConvention(string documentId)
{
return documentId;
}
}
// Minimal APIs
app.MapGet("/viewminimal/{documentId}", (string documentId) => Task.FromResult(documentId))
.RequireAuthorization(FgaAuthorizationDefaults.PolicyKey)
// Extensions methods are included for the built-in attributes
.WithFgaRouteCheck("read", "document", "documentId")
// You can apply custom attributes like so
.WithMetadata(new ComputedRelationshipAttribute("document", "documentId"));
If your requirements are more bespoke than can be covered by the built-in attributes, then you may want to implement your own.
To do this, inherit from either FgaBaseObjectAttribute
, which uses the configuration's user resolver, or from FgaAttribute
which is the root attribute and permits you to implement a custom user source.
For example, an equivalent to the How To Integrate Within A Framework tutorial would be:
public class ComputedRelationshipAttribute : FgaBaseObjectAttribute
{
private readonly string _prefix;
private readonly string _routeValue;
public ComputedRelationshipAttribute(string prefix, string routeValue)
{
_prefix = prefix;
_routeValue = routeValue;
}
public override ValueTask<string> GetRelation(HttpContext context)
=> ValueTask.FromResult(context.Request.Method switch
{
"GET" => "viewer",
"POST" => "writer",
_ => "owner"
});
public override ValueTask<string> GetObject(HttpContext context)
=> ValueTask.FromResult(FormatObject(_type, context.GetRouteValue(_routeValue)!.ToString()!));
}
An additional pre-made attribute that allows all tuple values to be hardcoded strings ships with the package (FgaStringAttribute
). This attribute is useful for testing and debug purposes, but should not be used in a real application.
This package registers both the OpenFgaApi
and OpenFgaClient
types in the DI container. OpenFgaClient
is a higher level abstraction and preferred over OpenFgaApi
for general use.
When running tests against your API or service collection, you likely want a different client configuration than usual. You can achieve this by calling PostConfigureFgaClient
on your services configuration:
// Replaces existing configuration
services.PostConfigureFgaClient(config =>
{
config.SetStoreId(storeId);
config.ConfigureOpenFga(x =>
{
x.SetConnection(context.Configuration["Fga:ApiUrl"]);
});
});
Fga.Net.DependencyInjection
ships with the AddOpenFgaClient
service collection extension that handles all required wire-up.
To get started:
- Install
Fga.Net.DependencyInjection
- Add your
StoreId
,ClientId
andClientSecret
Auth0 FGA configuration ORApiUrl
&StoreId
OpenFGA configuration to your application configuration, ideally via the dotnet secrets manager. - Register the authorization client:
var host = Host.CreateDefaultBuilder(args)
.ConfigureServices((context, services) =>
{
// Auth0 FGA
services.AddOpenFgaClient(config =>
{
config.ConfigureAuth0Fga(x =>
{
x.WithAuthentication(context.Configuration["Auth0Fga:ClientId"], context.Configuration["Auth0Fga:ClientSecret"]);
});
config.SetStoreId(context.Configuration["Auth0Fga:StoreId"]);
});
// OpenFGA
services.AddOpenFgaClient(config =>
{
config.ConfigureOpenFga(x =>
{
x.SetConnection(context.Configuration["Fga:ApiUrl"]);
// Optionally add authentication settings
x.WithApiKeyAuthentication(context.Configuration["Fga:ApiKey"]);
x.WithOidcAuthentication(
context.Configuration["Fga:ClientId"],
context.Configuration["Fga:ClientSecret"],
context.Configuration["Fga:Issuer"],
context.Configuration["Fga:Audience"]);
});
config.SetStoreId(context.Configuration["Fga:StoreId"]);
});
services.AddHostedService<MyBackgroundWorker>();
})
.Build();
await host.RunAsync();
- Request the client in your services:
public class MyBackgroundWorker : BackgroundService
{
private readonly OpenFgaClient _fgaClient;
public MyBackgroundWorker(OpenFgaClient fgaClient)
{
_fgaClient = fgaClient;
}
protected override Task ExecuteAsync(CancellationToken stoppingToken)
{
// Do work with the client
}
}
See the OpenFGA.Sdk docs
I am not affiliated with nor represent Auth0 or OpenFGA. All support queries regarding the underlying service should go to the Auth0 Labs Discord.