# Running Examples The quickest way to start experimenting with dex is to run a single dex-worker locally, with an in-process database, and then interact with it using the example programs in this directory. ## Build Everything and Start dex-worker First, build the example webapp client and example CLI client. ```console ./build ``` Now copy the example configurations into place to get dex configured. You can customize these later but the defaults should work fine. ```console cp static/fixtures/connectors.json.sample static/fixtures/connectors.json cp static/fixtures/users.json.sample static/fixtures/users.json cp static/fixtures/emailer.json.sample static/fixtures/emailer.json ``` With `dex-worker` configuration in place we can start dex in local mode. ```console ./bin/dex-worker --no-db & ``` ## Example Webapp Client Build and run the example app webserver by pointing the discovery URL to local Dex, and supplying the client information from `./static/fixtures/clients.json` into the flags. ```console ./bin/example-app \ --client-id=example-app \ --client-secret=example-app-secret \ --discovery=http://127.0.0.1:5556 ``` Visit [http://localhost:5555](http://localhost:5555) in your browser and click "login" link. Next click "Login with Email" and enter the sample credentials from `static/fixtures/connectors.json`: * email: `elroy77@example.com` * password: `bones` The example app will dump out details of the JWT issued by Dex which means that authentication was successful and the application has authenticated you as a valid user. You can play with adding additional users in connectors.json and users.json. ## Example CLI Client The example CLI will start, connect to the Dex instance to gather discovery information, listen on `localhost:8000`, and then acquire a client credentials JWT and print it out. ```console ./bin/example-cli \ --client-id example-cli --client-secret examplie-cli-secret --discovery=http://127.0.0.1:5556 ```