Displayr.AspNetSaml
1.0.3
See the version list below for details.
dotnet add package Displayr.AspNetSaml --version 1.0.3
NuGet\Install-Package Displayr.AspNetSaml -Version 1.0.3
<PackageReference Include="Displayr.AspNetSaml" Version="1.0.3" />
paket add Displayr.AspNetSaml --version 1.0.3
#r "nuget: Displayr.AspNetSaml, 1.0.3"
// Install Displayr.AspNetSaml as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=Displayr.AspNetSaml&version=1.0.3 // Install Displayr.AspNetSaml as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=Displayr.AspNetSaml&version=1.0.3
AspNetSaml
Very simple SAML 2.0 "consumer" implementation in C#. It's a SAML client library, not a SAML server, allows adding SAML single-sign-on to your ASP.NET app, but not to provide auth services to other apps.
Consists of one short C# file you can throw into your project (or install via nuget) and start using it. Originally forked from OneLogin's .NET SAML library, but we had to fix a lot of stuff...
Usage
How SAML works?
SAML workflow has 2 steps:
- User is redirected to the SAML provider (where he authenticates)
- User is redirected back to your app, where you validate the payload
Here's how you do it:
1. Redirecting the user to the saml provider:
//specify the SAML provider url here, aka "Endpoint"
var samlEndpoint = "http://saml-provider-that-we-use.com/login/";
var request = new AuthRequest(
"http://www.myapp.com", //put your app's "unique ID" here
"http://www.myapp.com/SamlConsume" //assertion Consumer Url - the redirect URL where the provider will send authenticated users
);
//generate the provider URL
string url = request.GetRedirectUrl(samlEndpoint);
//then redirect your user to the above "url" var
//for example, like this:
Response.Redirect(url);
2. User has been redirected back
User is sent back to your app - you need to validate the SAML response ("assertion") that you recieved via POST.
Here's an example of how you do it in ASP.NET MVC
//ASP.NET MVC action method... But you can easily modify the code for Web-forms etc.
public ActionResult SamlConsume()
{
//specify the certificate that your SAML provider has given to you
string samlCertificate = @"-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
BLAHBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAHBLAH123543==
-----END CERTIFICATE-----";
Saml.Response samlResponse = new Response(samlCertificate);
samlResponse.LoadXmlFromBase64(Request.Form["SAMLResponse"]); //SAML providers usually POST the data into this var
if (samlResponse.IsValid())
{
//WOOHOO!!! user is logged in
//YAY!
//Some more optional stuff for you
//lets extract username/firstname etc
string username, email, firstname, lastname;
try
{
username = samlResponse.GetNameID();
email = samlResponse.GetEmail();
firstname = samlResponse.GetFirstName();
lastname = samlResponse.GetLastName();
}
catch(Exception ex)
{
//insert error handling code
//no, really, please do
return null;
}
//user has been authenticated, put your code here, like set a cookie or something...
//or call FormsAuthentication.SetAuthCookie() or something
}
}
Dependencies
Project should reference System.Security
Nuget
I've published this to Nuget.
Install-Package Displayr.AspNetSaml
This will add a reference to a compiled version of this assembly.
About Displayr
Powerful business intelligence and online reporting for survey data. Now hiring...
Company: https://www.displayr.com
Careers: https://www.displayr.com/careers/
Product | Versions Compatible and additional computed target framework versions. |
---|---|
.NET Framework | net is compatible. |
This package has no dependencies.
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Added getter for Audience value