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Logto team
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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 SendGrid sign-in experience (user authentication) with Python and  Logto.

Prerequisites

  • A running Logto instance. Check out the get started page if you don't have one.
  • Basic knowledge of Python.
  • A usable SendGrid 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 "Traditional web" section or filter all the available " Traditional web" frameworks using the quick filter checkboxes on the left.

Click the "Flask" 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
  • The example uses Flask, but the concepts are the same for other frameworks.
  • The Python sample project is available on our Python SDK repo.
  • Logto SDK leverages coroutines, remember to use await when calling async functions.

Installation

Execute in the project root directory:

pip install logto # or `poetry add logto` or whatever you use

Init LogtoClient

First, create a Logto config:

client.py
from logto import LogtoClient, LogtoConfig

client = LogtoClient(
LogtoConfig(
endpoint="https://you-logto-endpoint.app", # Replace with your Logto endpoint
appId="replace-with-your-app-id",
appSecret="replace-with-your-app-secret",
),
)
tip

You can find and copy "App Secret" from application details page in Admin Console:

App Secret

Also replace the default memory storage with a persistent storage, for example:

client.py
from logto import LogtoClient, LogtoConfig, Storage
from flask import session
from typing import Union

class SessionStorage(Storage):
def get(self, key: str) -> Union[str, None]:
return session.get(key, None)

def set(self, key: str, value: Union[str, None]) -> None:
session[key] = value

def delete(self, key: str) -> None:
session.pop(key, None)

client = LogtoClient(
LogtoConfig(...),
storage=SessionStorage(),
)

See Storage for more details.

Implement sign-in and sign-out

In your web application, add a route to properly handle the sign-in request from users. Let's use /sign-in as an example:

flask.py
@app.route("/sign-in")
async def sign_in():
# Get the sign-in URL and redirect the user to it
return redirect(await client.signIn(
redirectUri="http://localhost:3000/callback",
))

Replace http://localhost:3000/callback with the callback URL you set in your Logto Console for this application.

If you want to show the sign-up page on the first screen, you can set interactionMode to signUp:

flask.py
@app.route("/sign-in")
async def sign_in():
return redirect(await client.signIn(
redirectUri="http://localhost:3000/callback",
interactionMode="signUp", # Show the sign-up page on the first screen
))

Now, whenever your users visit http://localhost:3000/sign-in, it will start a new sign-in attempt and redirect the user to the Logto sign-in page.

Note Creating a sign-in route isn't the only way to start a sign-in attempt. You can always use the signIn method to get the sign-in URL and redirect the user to it.

After the user makes a signing-out request, Logto will clear all user authentication information in the session.

To clean up the Python session and Logto session, a sign-out route can be implemented as follows:

flask.py
@app.route("/sign-out")
async def sign_out():
return redirect(
# Redirect the user to the home page after a successful sign-out
await client.signOut(postLogoutRedirectUri="http://localhost:3000/")
)

Handle authentication status

In Logto SDK, we can use client.isAuthenticated() to check the authentication status, if the user is signed in, the value will be true, otherwise, the value will be false.

Here we also implement a simple home page for demonstration:

  • If the user is not signed in, show a sign-in button;
  • If the user is signed in, show a sign-out button.
@app.route("/")
async def home():
if client.isAuthenticated() is False:
return "Not authenticated <a href='/sign-in'>Sign in</a>"
return "Authenticated <a href='/sign-out'>Sign out</a>"
Test your integration

Open your Python 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 SendGrid connector

To add or change Email connector, go to the "Connector" tab in the Admin Console, then click on "Email and SMS connectors". From there, click "Set up" or go to detail page and click "Change Email connector".

Connector tab

In the openning modal, select "SendGrid" 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 SendGrid email connector

Register SendGrid account

Create a new account at SendGrid website. You may skip this step if you've already registered an account.

Verify senders

Go to the SendGrid console page and sign in with your SendGrid account.

Senders indicate the addresses our verification code email will be sent from. In order to send emails via the SendGrid mail server, you need to verify at least one sender.

Starting from the SendGrid console page, go to "Settings" -> "Sender Authentication" from the sidebar.

Domain Authentication is recommended but not obligatory. You can click "Get Started" in "Authenticate Your Domain" card and follow the upcoming guide to link and verify a sender to SendGrid.

By clicking the "Verify a Single Sender" button in the panel, you are now focusing on a form requiring some critical information to create a sender. Follow the guide, fill out all these fields, and hit the "Create" button.

After the single sender is created, an email with a verification link should be sent to your sender's email address. Go to your mailbox, find the verification mail and finish verifying the single sender by clicking the link given in the email. You can now send emails via SendGrid connector using the sender you've just verified.

Create API keys

Let's start from the SendGrid console page, go to "Settings" -> "API Keys" from the sidebar.

Click the "Create API Key" in the top-right corner of the API Keys page. Type in the name of the API key and customize "API Key Permission" per your use case. A global Full Access or Restricted Access with full access to Mail Send is required before sending emails with this API key.

The API Key is presented to you on the screen as soon as you finished the Create API Key process. You should save this API Key somewhere safe because this is the only chance that you can see it.

Configure your connector

Fill out the apiKey field with the API Key created in "Create API keys" section.

Fill out the fromEmail and fromName fields with the senders' From Address and Nickname. You can find the sender's details on the "Sender Management" page. fromName is OPTIONAL, so you can skip filling it.

You can add multiple SendGrid mail connector templates for different cases. Here is an example of adding a single template:

  • Fill out the subject field, which works as the title of emails.
  • Fill out the content field with arbitrary string-typed contents. Do not forget to leave the {{code}} placeholder for the random verification code.
  • Fill out usageType field with either Register, SignIn, ForgotPassword, Generic for different use cases.
  • Fill out type field with either text/plain or text/html for different types of content.

In order to enable full user flows, templates with usageType Register, SignIn, ForgotPassword and Generic are required.

Here is an example of SendGrid connector template JSON.

[
{
"subject": "<register-template-subject>",
"content": "<Logto: Your verification code is {{code}}. (register template)>",
"usageType": "Register",
"type": "text/plain",
},
{
"subject": "<sign-in-template-subject>",
"content": "<Logto: Your verification code is {{code}}. (sign-in template)>",
"usageType": "SignIn",
"type": "text/plain",
},
{
"subject": "<forgot-password-template-subject>",
"content": "<Logto: Your verification code is {{code}}. (forgot-password template)>",
"usageType": "ForgotPassword",
"type": "text/plain",
},
{
"subject": "<generic-template-subject>",
"content": "<Logto: Your verification code is {{code}}. (generic template)>",
"usageType": "Generic",
"type": "text/plain",
},
]

Test SendGrid Email connector

You can type in an email address and click on "Send" to see whether the settings can work before "Save and Done".

That's it. Don't forget to enable connector in sign-in experience.

Config types

NameType
apiKeystring
fromEmailstring
fromNamestring (OPTIONAL)
templatesTemplate[]
Template PropertiesTypeEnum values
subjectstringN/A
contentstringN/A
usageTypeenum string'Register' | 'SignIn' | 'ForgotPassword' | 'Generic'
typeenum string'text/plain' | 'text/html'

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 SendGrid connector should be available now.

Enable SendGrid connector in Sign-in Experience

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

note

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 "Email address" or "Email address or phone number" for the "Sign-up identifier" to provide sign-up for Email passwordless sign-in, which may increase your conversion rate.

Save changes

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

Testing and Validation

Return to your Python app. You should now be able to sign in with SendGrid. 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.

🧑‍🚀 Manage users 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.