Skip to content

C# SDK for SSOReady. Add SAML + SCIM support to any C# application this afternoon.

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

ssoready/ssoready-csharp

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

12 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

SSOReady-CSharp: SAML & SCIM for C#

nuget shield

SSOReady.Client is a C# SDK for the SSOReady API.

SSOReady is a set of open-source dev tools for implementing Enterprise SSO. You can use SSOReady to add SAML and SCIM support to your product this afternoon.

For example applications built using SSOReady C#, check out:

Installation

nuget install SSOReady.Client

Usage

This section provides a high-level overview of how SSOReady works, and how it's possible to implement SAML and SCIM in just an afternoon. For a more thorough introduction, visit the SAML quickstart or the SCIM quickstart.

The first thing you'll do is create a SSOReady client instance:

using SSOReady.Client;

// this loads your SSOReady API key from SSOREADY_API_KEY
var ssoready = new SSOReady.Client.SSOReady();

SAML in two lines of code

SAML (aka "Enterprise SSO") consists of two steps: an initiation step where you redirect your users to their corporate identity provider, and a handling step where you log them in once you know who they are.

To initiate logins, you'll use SSOReady's Get SAML Redirect URL endpoint:

// this is how you implement a "Sign in with SSO" button
var redirectResponse = await ssoready.Saml.GetSamlRedirectUrlAsync(new GetSamlRedirectUrlRequest
{
    // the ID of the organization/workspace/team (whatever you call it)
    // you want to log the user into
    OrganizationExternalId = email.Split("@")[1]
});

// redirect the user to `redirectResponse.RedirectUrl`...

You can use whatever your preferred ID is for organizations (you might call them "workspaces" or "teams") as your OrganizationExternalId. You configure those IDs inside SSOReady, and SSOReady handles keeping track of that organization's SAML and SCIM settings.

To handle logins, you'll use SSOReady's Redeem SAML Access Code endpoint:

// this goes in your handler for POST /ssoready-callback
var redeemResponse = await ssoready.Saml.RedeemSamlAccessCodeAsync(new RedeemSamlAccessCodeRequest
{
    SamlAccessCode = "saml_access_code_..."
});

// log the user in as `redeemResponse.Email` inside `redeemResponse.OrganizationExternalId`...

You configure the URL for your /ssoready-callback endpoint in SSOReady.

SCIM in one line of code

SCIM (aka "Enterprise directory sync") is basically a way for you to get a list of your customer's employees offline.

To get a customer's employees, you'll use SSOReady's List SCIM Users endpoint:

var listScimUsersResponse = await ssoready.Scim.ListScimUsersAsync(
    new ScimListScimUsersRequest { OrganizationExternalId = "my_custom_external_id" }
});

// create users from each scimUser
foreach (var scimUser in listScimUsersResponse.ScimUsers) {
    // every scimUser has an Id, Email, Attributes, and Deleted
    // ...
}

Contributing

Issues and PRs are more than welcome. Be advised that this library is largely autogenerated from ssoready/docs. Most code changes ultimately need to be made there, not on this repo.