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Logto team
The better identity infrastructure for developers
For our new friends:

Every app needs authentication and authorization. Logto is an Auth0 alternative designed for modern apps and SaaS products.

In this article, we will go through the steps to quickly build the SAML sign-in experience (user authentication) with Vue and  Logto.

Prerequisites

  • A running Logto instance. Check out the introduction page to get started.
  • Basic knowledge of Vue.
  • A usable SAML account.

Create an application in Logto

In you browser, open a new tab and enter the link of Logto Admin Console.

Get Started

Once the page is loaded, in the "Get Started" section click the View all link to open the application framework list page.

Choose your application type

Framework List

In the opening modal, scroll to the "Single page app" section or filter all the available " Single page app" frameworks using the quick filter checkboxes on the left.

Click the "Vue" framework card to start creating your application.

Enter application name

Create Application modal

Enter the application name, e.g., "Bookstore," and click "Create application."

🎉 Ta-da! You just created your first application in Logto. You'll see a congrats page which includes a detailed integration guide. Follow the guide to see what the experience will be in your application.

Integrate Logto SDK

tip:
  • Logto Vue SDK is built with the composition API and leveraging the composables, therefore it is only compatible with Vue 3.
  • The tutorial video is available on our YouTube channel.
  • The full sample project is available on our SDK repository.

Installation

npm i @logto/vue

Init LogtoClient

Import and use createLogto to install Logto plugin:

main.ts
import { createLogto, LogtoConfig } from '@logto/vue';
import { createApp } from 'vue';
import App from './App.vue';

const config: LogtoConfig = {
endpoint: '<your-logto-endpoint>',
appId: '<your-application-id>',
};

const app = createApp(App);

app.use(createLogto, config);
app.mount('#app');

Configure redirect URIs

Before we dive into the details, here's a quick overview of the end-user experience. The sign-in process can be simplified as follows:

  1. Your app invokes the sign-in method.
  2. The user is redirected to the Logto sign-in page. For native apps, the system browser is opened.
  3. The user signs in and is redirected back to your app (configured as the redirect URI).

Regarding redirect-based sign-in

  1. This authentication process follows the OpenID Connect (OIDC) protocol, and Logto enforces strict security measures to protect user sign-in.
  2. If you have multiple apps, you can use the same identity provider (Logto). Once the user signs in to one app, Logto will automatically complete the sign-in process when the user accesses another app.

To learn more about the rationale and benefits of redirect-based sign-in, see Logto sign-in experience explained.


nota:

In the following code snippets, we assume your app is running on http://localhost:3000/.

Configure redirect URIs

Switch to the application details page of Logto Console. Add a redirect URI http://localhost:3000/callback.

Redirect URI in Logto Console

Just like signing in, users should be redirected to Logto for signing out of the shared session. Once finished, it would be great to redirect the user back to your website. For example, add http://localhost:3000/ as the post sign-out redirect URI section.

Then click "Save" to save the changes.

Handle redirect

There are still things to do after the user is redirected back to your application from Logto. Let's handle it properly.

First let's create a callback page:

views/CallbackView.vue
import { useHandleSignInCallback } from '@logto/vue';
import router from '@/router';

const { isLoading } = useHandleSignInCallback(() => {
// Do something when finished, e.g. redirect to home page
});
<template>
<!-- When it's working in progress -->
<p v-if="isLoading">Redirecting...</p>
</template>

Insert the code below in your /callback route which does NOT require authentication:

router/index.ts
// Assuming vue-router
const router = createRouter({
routes: [
{
path: '/callback',
name: 'callback',
component: CallbackView,
},
],
});

Implement sign-in and sign-out

We provide two composables useHandleSignInCallback() and useLogto() which can help you easily manage the authentication flow.

nota:

Before calling .signIn(), make sure you have correctly configured Redirect URI in Admin Console.

views/HomeView.vue
import { useLogto } from '@logto/vue';

const { signIn, signOut, isAuthenticated } = useLogto();

const onClickSignIn = () => signIn('http://localhost:3000/callback');
const onClickSignOut = () => signOut('http://localhost:3000');
<template>
<button v-if="!isAuthenticated" @click="onClickSignIn">Sign In</button>
<button v-else @click="onClickSignOut">Sign Out</button>
</template>

Calling .signOut() will clear all the Logto data in memory and localStorage if they exist.

Test your integration:

Open your Vue app to test if the integration works. When you click the "Sign In" button, the page should be redirected to a Logto sign-in page, and you should be able to create a new account by entering username and password and complete the sign-in process.

Add SAML connector

To add a social connector, go to the "Connector" tab in the Admin Console, then click on "Social connectors". From there, click "Add social connector".

Connector tab

In the openning modal, select "SAML" and click "Next".

On the next page, you will see a two-column layout with the README content on the left and configuration on the right.

Feel free to follow the README file in place or read the following section to complete the configuration process. If you follow the in-place guide, you can skip the next section.

Set up Standard SAML app

Create social IdP's account and register SAML application (IdP)

Let's go through configurations of SAML connector.

Before we kicking off, you can go to a social identity provider which supports SAML protocol and create your own account. Okta, OneLogin, Salesforce and some other platforms support authentication based on SAML protocol.

If your IdP mandate the encryption of SAML assertion and receiving of signed authentication requests, you should generate your private key and corresponding certificate using RSA algorithm. Keep the private key for your SP use and upload the certificate to IdP.

You also need to configure the ACS (Assertion Consumer Service) URL as ${your_logto_origin}/api/authn/saml/${connector_id} to handle IdP's SAML assertion. Where you can find your connectorId at SAML connector's details page in Logto's Admin Console.

ℹ️ Note

Per current Logto's design, we only support Redirect-binding for sending authentication request and POST-binding for receiving SAML assertion. Although this sounds not cool, but we believe that the current design can handle most of your use cases. If you have any problems, feel free to reach out!

Configure SAML connector (SP)

In this section, we will introduce each attribute in detail.

entityID Required

entityID (i.e. issuer) is Entity identifier. It is used to identify your entity (SAML SP entity), and match the equivalence in each SAML request/response.

signInEndpoint Required

The IdP's endpoint that you send SAML authentication requests to. Usually, you can find this value in IdP details page (i.e. IdP's SSO URL or Login URL).

x509Certificate Required

The x509 certificate generated from IdPs private key, IdP is expected to have this value available.

The content of the certificate comes with -----BEGIN CERTIFICATE----- header and -----END CERTIFICATE----- tail.

idpMetadataXml Required

The field is used to place contents from your IdP metadata XML file.

ℹ️ Note

The XML parser we are using does not support customized namespace. If the IdP metadata comes with namespace, you should manually remove them. For namespace of XML file, see reference.

assertionConsumerServiceUrl Required

The assertion consumer service (ACS) URL is the SP's endpoint to receive IdP's SAML Assertion POST requests. As we mentioned in previous part, it is usually configured at IdP settings but some IdP get this value from SAML authentication requests, we hence also add this value as a REQUIRED field. It's value should look like ${your_logto_origin}/api/authn/saml/${connector_id}.

signAuthnRequest

The boolean value that controls whether SAML authentication request should be signed, whose default value is false.

encryptAssertion

encryptAssertion is a boolean value that indicates if IdP will encrypt SAML assertion, with default value false.

ℹ️ Note

signAuthnRequest and encryptAssertion attributes should align with corresponding parameters of IdP setting, otherwise error will be thrown to show that configuration does not match. All SAML responses need to be signed.

requestSignatureAlgorithm

This should be aligned with the signature algorithms of IdP so that Logto can verify the signature of the SAML assertion. Its value should be either http://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#rsa-sha1, http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#rsa-sha256 or http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#rsa-sha512 and the default value is http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#rsa-sha256.

messageSigningOrder

messageSigningOrder indicates the signing and encrypting order of IdP, it's value should be either sign-then-encrypt or encrypt-then-sign and the default value is sign-then-encrypt.

privateKey and privateKeyPass

privateKey is an OPTIONAL value and is required when signAuthnRequest is true.

privateKeyPass is the password you've set when creating privateKey, required when necessary.

If signAuthnRequest is true, the corresponding certificate generated from privateKey is required by IdP for checking the signature.

encPrivateKey and encPrivateKeyPass

encPrivateKey is an OPTIONAL value and is required when encryptAssertion is true.

encPrivateKeyPass is the password you've set when creating encPrivateKey, required when necessary.

If encryptAssertion is true, the corresponding certificate generated from encPrivateKey is required by IdP for encrypting SAML assertion.

ℹ️ Note

For keys and certificates generation, openssl is a wonderful tool. Here is sample command line that might be helpful:

openssl genrsa -passout pass:${privateKeyPassword} -out ${encryptPrivateKeyFilename}.pem 4096
openssl req -new -x509 -key ${encryptPrivateKeyFilename}.pem -out ${encryptionCertificateFilename}.cer -days 3650

privateKey and encPrivateKey files are enforced to be encoded in pkcs1 scheme as pem string, which means the private key files should start with -----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY----- and end with -----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----.

nameIDFormat

nameIDFormat is an OPTIONAL attribute that declares the name id format that would respond. The value can be among urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:unspecified, urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:emailAddress, urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:X509SubjectName, urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:nameid-format:persistent and urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:nameid-format:transient, and the default value is urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:nameid-format:unspecified.

timeout

timeout is the time tolerance for time validation, since the time between your SP entity and IdP entity could be different and network connection may also bring some delay. The unit is in millisecond, and the default value is 5000 (i.e. 5s).

profileMap

Logto also provide a profileMap field that users can customize the mapping from the social vendors' profiles which are usually not standard. Each profileMap keys is Logto's standard user profile field name and corresponding value should be social profiles field name. In current stage, Logto only concern 'id', 'name', 'avatar', 'email' and 'phone' from social profile, only 'id' is REQUIRED and others are optional fields.

Config types

NameTypeRequiredDefault Value
signInEndpointstringtrue
x509certificatestringtrue
idpMetadataXmlstringtrue
entityIDstringtrue
assertionConsumerServiceUrlstringtrue
messageSigningOrderencrypt-then-sign | sign-then-encryptfalsesign-then-encrypt
requestSignatureAlgorithmhttp://www.w3.org/2000/09/xmldsig#rsa-sha1 | http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#rsa-sha256 | http://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#rsa-sha512falsehttp://www.w3.org/2001/04/xmldsig-more#rsa-sha256
signAuthnRequestbooleanfalsefalse
encryptAssertionbooleanfalsefalse
privateKeystringfalse
privateKeyPassstringfalse
nameIDFormaturn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:unspecified | urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:emailAddress | urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:X509SubjectName | urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:nameid-format:persistent | urn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:2.0:nameid-format:transientfalseurn:oasis:names:tc:SAML:1.1:nameid-format:unspecified
timeoutnumberfalse5000
profileMapProfileMapfalse
ProfileMap fieldsTypeRequiredDefault value
idstringfalseid
namestringfalsename
avatarstringfalseavatar
emailstringfalseemail
phonestringfalsephone

Reference

Save your configuration

Double check you have filled out necessary values in the Logto connector configuration area. Click "Save and Done" (or "Save changes") and the SAML connector should be available now.

Enable SAML connector in Sign-in Experience

Switch to the "Sign-in experience" tab, then click the "Sign-up and sign-in" tab.

nota:

If it's the first time you enter the tab, you will see a quick introduction about Sign-in Experience and its basic configuration.

Sign-in Experience tab

Select "None" for the "Sign-up identifier" to provide minimum sign-up effort for SAML sign-in, which may increase your conversion rate.

In the "Social sign-in" section, add "Add Social Connector" and choose "SAML". Then you should be able to see a button with text "Continue with SAML" in the preview section.

Save changes

Finally, click "Save changes" on the bottom right corner.

Testing and Validation

Return to your Vue app. You should now be able to sign in with SAML. Enjoy!

Further readings

Protect your API For native and single page apps, you'll need to call one or more API endpoints to retrieve and update data.
Learn more about identifying who's who and keeping your API secure.

User management We know you care about user management and activities, as we also do.
Learn more about how to know your users and see the figures like DAU and MAU graphically.

Localization From one regional business to a global corporate, the willingness to offer the best user experience won't change.
You can change current language phrases or add a new language without friction.

Customer IAM series Our serial blog posts about Customer (or Consumer) Identity and Access Management, from 101 to advanced topics and beyond.