casdoor
IdentityServer
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casdoor | IdentityServer | |
---|---|---|
37 | 16 | |
8,028 | 1,323 | |
- | 3.3% | |
0.0 | 9.5 | |
2 months ago | 14 days ago | |
Go | JavaScript | |
Apache License 2.0 | DUENDE™ SOFTWARE LICENSE AGREEMENT |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
casdoor
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Keycloak open redirect: wildcard redirect URIs can be exploited to steal tokens
I'm using Casdoor: https://github.com/casbin/casdoor and glad to see it only has ~77,000 LOC according to the shared link.
Keycloak was good but has too much legacy for 10+ years. Casdoor is pretty new and has become a good replacement for Keycloak for me with more functionalities.
- CSRF Vulnerability Leads to Account Takeover in Casdoor IdP
- Casdoor: Open source Payment Gateway (PayPal, Stripe), SSO and SaaS subscription management platform in Golang
- 📦⚡️ Casdoor
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Help needed - is there a product that provides the auth functionality we need?
Access keys & secrets are supported: https://github.com/casdoor/casdoor/pull/1971
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Keycloak – Open-Source Identity and Access Management Interview
Looking at your username, it would be nice to mention that you are one of the main developers behind the tool instead of making it sound like you are unrelated: https://github.com/casbin/casbin/graphs/contributors https://github.com/casdoor/casdoor/graphs/contributors
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Casdoor: a new open source SSO/IAM written in Go, with beautiful web UI, OIDC, OAuth 2.0, SAML, CAS, LDAP, WebAuthn and 2FA
Apparently they even removed the Chinese Tracker to Baidu now.
- An open-source Identity and Access Management (IAM) / Single-Sign-On (SSO) SaaS platform with web UI supporting OAuth 2.0, OIDC, SAML, CAS, SMS, 2FA, Captcha, Casbin and subscription management
- Casdoor: an open-source Identity and Access Management (IAM) platform with beautiful web UI supporting OAuth 2.0, OIDC, SAML and CAS
IdentityServer
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Identity server 4
Its deprecated in favor of Duende Identityserver which introduced a license model.
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How does cookie based authentication work?
Tokens usually have a lifetime and they are separate from the user's authentication principals like username and password. Unless you are rolling your own form of token provider (not something that would be recommended) the token creation is handled for you. Take a look at https://identityserver4.readthedocs.io/en/latest/ or if your organization makes under 1M in income a year the free version of what Identity Server progressed into https://duendesoftware.com/products/identityserver
- Ask HN: Examples of Top C# Code?
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ImageSharp leaving the .NET Foundation due to licensing change
I think Duende (Identity Server) handled the situation pretty well.
https://duendesoftware.com/products/identityserver
> Standard License Pricing
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Seeking people for collaboration on open source projects I started. Also open to ideas. Preferably long-term. I can help you learn and you can help me with other things, such as coding, UI and more. Beginner friendly. Safe environment.
Thanks for your message. No, the idea was not to re-implement OAuth nor OpenID stuff. What I had in mind for the authentication thingy was something like this: https://laravel.com/docs/9.x/sanctum. If we want to go the OAuth/OpenID way, in .NET we have this one: https://github.com/DuendeSoftware/IdentityServer.
- If you were tasked with implementing Identity and Access Management today, what would you do?
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Bytebase: 20-Person Startup, 30 SaaS Services, and $1,183 Monthly Bill
> As you said, there are plenty of local options that you only need to run.
I think managed databases are a good analogy here. While I might run my own PostgreSQL/MariaDB instance, many out there won't be overjoyed at the idea of actually needing to run and manage the damned thing, as well as set up some kind of alerting and handling the need to eventually scale it up.
> It also has the largest risk of compromise and data leaking from any service you may use...
PII is definitely a big concern, even if something like password hashes aren't too useful on their own (provided that they're salted), though in cases like that it might actually make a lot of sense to utilize a widely used and tested solution that's specialized for this particular use case.
In many cases, thousands of people across the globe will be able to develop something and squash any bugs in it better than you might be able to do individually or with your own team, though there might be a few exceptions out there. Auth is probably not one of the cases where you want to write code without a lot of eyes on it.
> ...the largest amount of potential lock-in...
This is debatable: standards like OAuth2 and OIDC technically make many of the solutions and libraries way more pluggable and make it easier to choose between various implementations, depending on your needs.
Of course, something like Keycloak also has its own API (as do many of the cloud offerings) so if you build too much automation around a particular implementation, then that advantage partially goes out the window.
> ...and the least need for integration.
I'm not sure about this, it probably depends on your architecture. If you have a monolithic web app, then you probably don't need a separate turnkey/SaaS solution, whereas if you have an ever growing number of services, whilst you want to manage authentication and accounts against all of them centrally, then something like Keycloak (or one of the cloud alternatives) become way more lucrative.
That said, I'd still opt for self-hostable options whenever possible, albeit I also don't trust cloud based password managers and such, preferring something like KeePass instead. I've probably just come to a different conclusion in regards to usability/responsibility/features/security than some other people.
Sadly, there aren't that many good options out there at the moment, apart from Keycloak. For example, IdentityServer is promising, but went in a commercial direction: https://duendesoftware.com/products/identityserver#pricing
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Why is authentication such a sh*t show with .NET 6?
He's referring to IdentityServer 3/4, which was open sourced, and was not owned by Microsoft. That 3rd party is commercializing their work (and to be fair, it's a lot of work) as https://duendesoftware.com/products/identityserver , and has a different commercial licensing model.
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Show HN: Open-Source Identity Server Written in Go (Ory Kratos)
https://github.com/DuendeSoftware/IdentityServer/blob/main/L... does not seem to square with any definition of "open source" I'm familiar with, and that goes double for having an in-repo file that just says "read this unversioned pdf on some other site"
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Creating JWT token auth yourself - is it secure?
I would not recommend it. There is a server named Duende identity server which you can host locally.
What are some alternatives?
casbin - An authorization library that supports access control models like ACL, RBAC, ABAC in Golang: https://discord.gg/S5UjpzGZjN
Keycloak - Open Source Identity and Access Management For Modern Applications and Services
Ory Hydra - OpenID Certified™ OpenID Connect and OAuth Provider written in Go - cloud native, security-first, open source API security for your infrastructure. SDKs for any language. Works with Hardware Security Modules. Compatible with MITREid.
openiddict-core - Flexible and versatile OAuth 2.0/OpenID Connect stack for .NET
zitadel - ZITADEL - The best of Auth0 and Keycloak combined. Built for the serverless era.
authelia - The Single Sign-On Multi-Factor portal for web apps
node-oidc-provider - OpenID Certified™ OAuth 2.0 Authorization Server implementation for Node.js
Grant - OAuth Proxy
YARP - A toolkit for developing high-performance HTTP reverse proxy applications.
pam-keycloak-oidc - PAM module connecting to Keycloak for user authentication using OpenID Connect/OAuth2, with MFA/2FA/TOTP support
Hot Chocolate - Welcome to the home of the Hot Chocolate GraphQL server for .NET, the Strawberry Shake GraphQL client for .NET and Banana Cake Pop the awesome Monaco based GraphQL IDE.