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Align with RFC2606 for example email addresses, using example.com in place of coreos.com where appropriate. |
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emailtester | ||
tls-setup | ||
README.md |
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.
./build
Now copy the example configurations into place to get dex configured. You can customize these later but the defaults should work fine.
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.
./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.
./bin/example-app \
--client-id=example-app \
--client-secret=example-app-secret \
--discovery=http://127.0.0.1:5556
Visit http://localhost:5555 in your browser and click "login" link.
Next click "Login with Local" 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.
./bin/example-cli \
--client-id example-cli
--client-secret examplie-cli-secret
--discovery=http://127.0.0.1:5556