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Okta React Native

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The Okta React Native library makes it easy to add authentication to your React Native app. This library is a wrapper around Okta OIDC Android and Okta OIDC iOS.

This library follows the current best practice for native apps using:

This library also exposes APIs to interact with Authentication API directly to implement native UI for authentication.

You can learn more on the Okta + ReactNative page in our documentation. You can also download our sample application

Prerequisites

  • If you do not already have a Developer Edition Account, you can create one at https://developer.okta.com/signup/.
  • If you don't have a React Native app, or are new to React Native, please continue with the React Native CLI Quickstart guide. It will walk you through the creation of a React Native app and other application development essentials.
  • If you are developing with an Android device emulator, make sure to check out the React Native - Android Development setup instructions.

Add an OpenID Connect Client in Okta

In Okta, applications are OpenID Connect clients that can use Okta Authorization servers to authenticate users. Your Okta Org already has a default authorization server, so you just need to create an OIDC client that will use it.

  • Log into the Okta Developer Dashboard, click Applications then Add Application.
  • Choose Native as the platform, then submit the form the default values, which should look similar to this:
Setting Value
App Name My Native App
Login redirect URIs com.mynativeapp:/
Grant Types Allowed Authorization Code, Refresh Token

After you have created the application there are two more values you will need to gather:

Setting Where to Find
Client ID In the applications list, or on the "General" tab of a specific application.
Org URL On the home screen of the developer dashboard, in the upper right.

Note: As with any Okta application, make sure you assign Users or Groups to the OpenID Connect Client. Otherwise, no one can use it.

These values will be used in your React application to setup the OpenID Connect flow with Okta.

Getting started

This library is available through npm. To install it, simply add it to your project:

$ npm install @okta/okta-react-native --save
$ react-native link @okta/okta-react-native

Perform the following Manual installation steps if you're not using react-native link.

Manual installation (Optional)

iOS
  1. In XCode, in the project navigator, right click Libraries âžś Add Files to [your project's name]
  2. Go to node_modules âžś @okta/okta-react-native and add ReactNativeOktaSdkBridge.xcodeproj
  3. In XCode, in the project navigator, select your project. Add libReactNativeOktaSdkBridge.a to your project's Build Phases âžś Link Binary With Libraries
  4. Run your project (Cmd+R)<
Android
  1. Open up android/app/src/main/java/[...]/MainApplication.java
  • Add import com.oktareactnative.OktaSdkBridgePackage; to the imports at the top of the file
  • Add new OktaSdkBridgePackage() to the list returned by the getPackages() method
  1. Append the following lines to android/settings.gradle:
    include ':@okta/okta-react-native'
    project(':@okta/okta-react-native').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/@okta/okta-react-native/android')
    
  2. Insert the following lines inside the dependencies block in android/app/build.gradle:
    compile project(':@okta_okta-react-native')
    

iOS Setup

To setup iOS, there are three steps that you must take.

  1. Make sure your iOS app's deployment target is 11.0 and above.
  2. Install Okta Open ID Connect iOS.
  3. Make sure you also configure Swift.

Set iOS Deployment Target

This library supports iOS version 11.0 and above. Go to your project -> Build settings -> iOS Deployment Target, and set it to at least version 11.0.

Install Okta Open ID Connect iOS

This library depends on the native Okta OIDC iOS library. It is not distributed as part of the React Native library to keep your dependency management consistent.

You can currently add Okta OIDC iOS through CocoaPods:

  1. CocoaPods

    React Native >= 0.60: With React Native 0.60 pods are added to podfile automatically. Run pod install command to install dependecies:

    cd ios
    pod install
    

    React Native < 0.60: Make sure your Podfile looks like this:

    platform :ios, '11.0'
    
    target '{YourTargetName}' do
    
    pod 'OktaOidc', '~> 3.0'
    
    end
    

    Then run pod install.

  2. Carthage With Carthage, add the following line to your Cartfile:

    github "okta/okta-oidc-ios" ~> 3.5.0
    

    Then run carthage update --platform iOS.

    Open project settings and choose your application target. Then open Build Phases and add OktaOidc.framework from ios/Carthage/Build/iOS into Embed Frameworks section

Swift Configuration

Since React Native uses Objective-C, and Okta React Native library is a Swift wrapper, you will need to have at least one Swift file in your iOS project for the project to compile. To add a dummy Swift file, follow the following steps:

  1. Right click on your project, then New file.
  2. Select Swift file, enter a title, and save.
  3. If prompted for a header file, it is not required to create one.
  4. Go to Build Settings, look for Swift Compiler - Language, set Swift Language Version to 4.2.

If you're getting Swift linker issues, try adding this line to your project's library search path:

  $(TOOLCHAIN_DIR)/usr/lib/swift/$(PLATFORM_NAME)

Android Setup

For Android, there are two steps that you must take:

  1. Installing Okta Open Id Connect Android.
  2. Add a redirect scheme to your project.

Install Okta Open ID Connect Android

This library depends on the native Okta OIDC Android library. You have to add this library through Gradle. Follow the following steps:

  1. Add this line to android/build.gradle, under allprojects -> repositories.

    maven {
      url  "https://dl.bintray.com/okta/com.okta.android"
    }
    
  2. Make sure your minSdkVersion is 21 in android/build.gradle.

Add redirect scheme

Defining a redirect scheme to capture the authorization redirect. In android/app/build.gradle, under android -> defaultConfig, add:

manifestPlaceholders = [
  appAuthRedirectScheme: 'com.sampleapplication'
]

Usage

You will need the values from the OIDC client that you created in the previous step to set up. You will also need to know your Okta Org URL, which you can see on the home page of the Okta Developer console.

Before calling any other method, it is important that you call createConfig to set up the configuration properly on the native modules.

Importing methods would follow this pattern:

import { createConfig, signIn, signOut, getAccessToken } from '@okta/okta-react-native';

createConfig

This method will create a configured client on the native modules. Resolves true if successfully configures a client. Note: requireHardwareBackedKeyStore is a configurable setting only on android devices. If you're a developer testing on android emulators, set this field to false.

Note: issuer is an optional field in config, for more information please refer to About the Issuer

Note: androidChromeTabColor is an optional field in config, and is used only by Android for the Chrome Custom Tabs color for the OIDC flow.

await createConfig({
  issuer: "https://{yourOktaDomain}/oauth2/default", // optional
  clientId: "{clientId}",
  redirectUri: "{redirectUri}",
  endSessionRedirectUri: "{endSessionRedirectUri}",
  discoveryUri: "https://{yourOktaDomain}",
  scopes: ["openid", "profile", "offline_access"],
  requireHardwareBackedKeyStore: true,
  androidChromeTabColor: "#FF00AA"
});

getAuthClient

This method will return an instance of @okta/okta-auth-js client to communicate with Okta Authentication API. For more information, please checkout Okta AuthJs Node JS and React Native Usage section.

signIn

This method will handle both browser-sign-in and custom-sign-in scenarios based on provided options.

This async method will automatically redirect users to your Okta organziation for authentication. It will emit an event once a user successfully signs in. Make sure your event listeners are mounted and unmounted. Note: on iOS there isn't a onCancelled event. If the sign in process is cancelled, onError will be triggered.

browser-sign-in

browser-sign-in leverages device's native browser to automatically redirect users to your Okta organziation for authentication. By providing no argument, this method will trigger the browser-sign-in flow. It will emit an event once a user successfully signs in. Make sure your event listeners are mounted and unmounted. Note: on iOS there isn't a onCancelled event. If the sign in process is cancelled, onError will be triggered.

signIn();

custom-sign-in

custom-sign-in provides the way to authenticate the user within the native application. By providing options object with username and password fields, this method will retrieve sessionToken then exchange it for accessToken. Both Promise and Event listeners are supported. This method is leveraging @okta/okta-auth-js SDK to perform authentication API request. For more information, please checkout Okta AuthJs signIn options section.

Sample Usage
signIn({ username: "{username}", password: "{password}" })
  .then(token => {
    // consume accessToken from token.access_token
  })
  .catch(error => {
    // handle error
  })
Sample Usage
import { signIn, EventEmitter } from '@okta/okta-react-native';

componentDidMount() {
  this.signInSuccess = EventEmitter.addListener('signInSuccess', function(e: Event) {
    console.log(e.access_token);
    // Do something ...
  });
  this.signOutSuccess = EventEmitter.addListener('signOutSuccess', function(e: Event) {
    //...
  });
  this.onError = EventEmitter.addListener('onError', function(e: Event) {
    //...
  });
  this.onCancelled = EventEmitter.addListener('onCancelled', function(e: Event) {
    //...
  });
}

componentWillUnmount() {
  this.signInSuccess.remove();
  this.signOutSuccess.remove();
  this.onError.remove();
  this.onCancelled.remove();
}

authenticate

If you already logged in to Okta and have a valid session token, you can complete authorization by calling authenticate method. It will emit an event once a user successfully signs in. Make sure your event listeners are mounted and unmounted. Note: on iOS there isn't a onCancelled event. If the authenticate process is cancelled, onError will be triggered.

authenticate({sessionToken: sessionToken});

signOut

Clear the browser session and clear the app session (stored tokens) in memory. Fires an event once a user successfully logs out. For sample usage, refer to signIn.

Note: This method apply for browser-sign-in scenario only. Use a combination of revokeToken (optional) and clearTokens methods to signOut when use custom-sign-in.

browser-sign-in sample

signOut();

custom-sign-in sample

await revokeAccessToken(); // optional
await revokeIdToken(); // optional
await clearTokens();

isAuthenticated

Returns a promise that resolves to true if there is a valid access token or ID token. Otherwise false.

await isAuthenticated();
Sample Response

If authenticated:

{
  "authenticated": true
}

Else:

{
  "authenticated": false
}

getAccessToken

This method returns a promise that will return the access token as a string. If no access token is available (either does not exist, or expired), then the promise will be rejected.

await getAccessToken();
Sample Response

If an access token is available:

{
  "access_token": "{accessToken}"
}

getIdToken

This method returns a promise that will return the identity token as a string. The promise will be rejected if no id token is available.

await getIdToken();
Sample Response

If an id token is available:

{
  "id_token": "{idToken}"
}

getUser

Returns a promise that will fetch the most up-to-date user claims from the OpenID Connect /userinfo endpoint.

await getUser();
Sample Response

If a user is available:

{
  "sub": "00uid4BxXw6I6TV4m0g3",
  "name" :"John Doe",
  "nickname":"Jimmy",
  "given_name":"John",
  "middle_name":"James",
  "family_name":"Doe",
  "profile":"https://example.com/john.doe",
  "zoneinfo":"America/Los_Angeles",
  "locale":"en-US",
  "updated_at":1311280970,
  "email":"[email protected]",
  "email_verified":true,
  "address" : { "street_address":"123 Hollywood Blvd.", "locality":"Los Angeles", "region":"CA", "postal_code":"90210", "country":"US" },
  "phone_number":"+1 (425) 555-1212"
}

getUserFromIdToken

Returns the user claims decoded from the identity token.

await getUserFromIdToken();
Sample Response

Sample user claims:

{
  "sub": "00uid4BxXw6I6TV4m0g3", 
  "name": "John Doe", 
  "preferred_username": "[email protected]"
  "ver": 1, 
  "iss": "https://dev-example.okta.com", 
  "aud": "00uid4BxXw6I6TV4m0g3",
  "auth_time": 1561679776,
  "exp": 1561683377,
  "iat": 1561679777,
  "idp": "00uid4BxXw6I6TV4m0g3"
}

revokeAccessToken

Revoke the access token to make it inactive. Resolves true if access token has been successfully revoked.

await revokeAccessToken();

revokeIdToken

Revoke the identity token to make it inactive. Resolves true if id token has been successfully revoked.

await revokeIdToken();

revokeRefreshToken

Revoke the refresh token to make it inactive. Resolves true if refresh token has been successfully revoked.

await revokeRefreshToken();

clearTokens

Removes all tokens from local storage. Resolves true if tokens were successfully cleared.

await clearTokens();

introspectAccessToken

Introspect the access token.

await introspectAccessToken();
Sample Response

Sample responses can be found here

introspectIdToken

Introspect the id token.

await introspectIdToken();
Sample Response

Sample responses can be found here

introspectRefreshToken

Introspect the id token.

await introspectRefreshToken();
Sample Response

Sample responses can be found here

refreshTokens

Refreshes all tokens. Resolves with the refreshed tokens.

await refreshTokens();
Sample Response
{ 
  "access_token": "{accessToken}", 
  "id_token": "{idToken}", 
  "refresh_token": "refreshToken" 
}

Contributing

We welcome contributions to all of our open-source packages. Please see the contribution guide to understand how to structure a contribution.

Installing dependencies for contributions

We use yarn for dependency management when developing this package:

yarn install

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