OpenIddict aims at providing a versatile solution to implement OpenID Connect client, server and token validation support in .NET applications.
Tip
While the client, server and token validation features can be used in any ASP.NET 4.6.1+ or ASP.NET Core 2.1+ web application, the client feature can also be used in Android, iOS, Linux, Mac Catalyst, macOS and Windows applications to integrate with OpenIddict-based identity providers or any other OAuth 2.0/OpenID Connect-compliant implementation.
OpenIddict fully supports the code/implicit/hybrid flows, the client credentials/resource owner password grants and the device authorization flow.
OpenIddict natively supports Entity Framework Core, Entity Framework 6 and MongoDB out-of-the-box and custom stores can be implemented to support other providers.
To implement a custom OpenID Connect server using OpenIddict, read Getting started.
Samples demonstrating how to use OpenIddict with the different OAuth 2.0/OpenID Connect flows can be found in the dedicated repository.
Developers looking for a simple and turnkey solution are strongly encouraged to use OrchardCore and its OpenID module, which is based on OpenIddict, comes with sensible defaults and offers a built-in management GUI to easily register OpenID client applications.
Looking to integrate with a SAML2P Identity Provider (IDP) or Service Provider (SP)? Rock Solid Knowledge, a sponsor of OpenIddict, is developing a range of identity components to enhance your OpenIddict solution. The first of these is their popular SAML2P component.
Unlike many other identity providers, OpenIddict is not a turnkey solution but a framework that requires writing custom code to be operational (typically, at least an authorization controller), making it a poor candidate for the certification program.
While a reference implementation could be submitted as-is, this wouldn't guarantee that implementations deployed by OpenIddict users would be standard-compliant.
Instead, developers are encouraged to execute the conformance tests against their own deployment once they've implemented their own logic.
Tip
The samples repository contains a dedicated sample specially designed to be used with the OpenID Connect Provider Certification tool and demonstrate that OpenIddict can be easily used in a certified implementation. To allow executing the certification tests as fast as possible, that sample doesn't include any membership or consent feature (two hardcoded identities are proposed for tests that require switching between identities).
Looking for additional resources to help you get started with OpenIddict? Don't miss these interesting blog posts:
- OpenIddict on AWS Serverless: Flexible OAuth2/OIDC Provider by Anton Ganhammar
- OpenIddict 5.0 general availability by Kévin Chalet
- Introducing native applications, per-client token lifetimes and client assertions support in OpenIddict 5.0 preview1 by Kévin Chalet
- Can you use the ASP.NET Core Identity API endpoints with OpenIddict? by Kévin Chalet
- OpenID Connect and OAuth 2.0 server in ASP.NET Core using OpenIddict by Siarhei Kharlap
- Transparent Auth Gateway by Alex Klaus
- Introducing system integration support for the OpenIddict client by Kévin Chalet
- OpenIddict 4.0 general availability by Kévin Chalet
- Getting started with the OpenIddict web providers by Kévin Chalet
- Introducing the OpenIddict-powered providers by Kévin Chalet
- Introducing the OpenIddict client by Kévin Chalet
- Secure a Blazor WASM ASP.NET Core hosted APP using BFF and OpenIddict by Damien Bowden
- Setting up an Authorization Server with OpenIddict by Robin van der Knaap
- Adding OpenIddict 3.0 to an OWIN application by Kévin Chalet
- Creating an OpenID Connect server proxy with OpenIddict 3.0's degraded mode by Kévin Chalet
OpenIddict-based projects maintained by third parties:
- ABP Framework OpenIddict module: full-stack Web application framework for .NET
- OpenIddict.AmazonDynamoDB by ganhammar: Amazon DynamoDB stores for OpenIddict
- OpenIddict UI by Thomas Duft: headless UI for managing client applications and scopes
- OrchardCore OpenID module: turnkey OpenID Connect server and token validation solution, built with multitenancy in mind
- P41.OpenIddict.CouchDB by Panos Athanasiou: CouchDB stores for OpenIddict
- pixel-identity by Nishant Singh: Ready to host OpenID Connect service using OpenIddict and ASP.NET Identity with a Blazor-based UI for managing users, roles, applications and scopes with support for multiple databases.
- SharpGrip.OpenIddict.Api by SharpGrip: SharpGrip OpenIddict API is an extension of the OpenIddict library exposing the OpenIddict entities through a RESTful API.
Security issues and bugs should be reported privately by emailing security@openiddict.com. You should receive a response within 24 hours. If for some reason you do not, please follow up via email to ensure we received your original message.
If you need support, please first make sure you're sponsoring the project. Depending on the tier you selected, you can open a GitHub ticket or send an email to contact@openiddict.com for private support.
Alternatively, you can also post your question on Gitter.
Important
With OpenIddict 5.x now being generally available, the previous version, OpenIddict 4.x, stops being supported and won't receive bug fixes or security updates. As such, it is recommended to migrate to OpenIddict 5.x to continue receiving bug and security fixes.
There are, however, two exceptions to this policy:
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ABP Framework 7.x users will still receive patches for OpenIddict 4.x for as long as ABP Framework 7.x itself is supported by Volosoft (typically a year following the release of ABP 8.x), whether they have a commercial ABP license or just use the free packages.
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OpenIddict sponsors who have opted for a $250+/month sponsorship are now offered extended support:
- $250/month sponsors get full support for OpenIddict 4.x until June 18, 2024 (6 months).
- $500/month sponsors get full support for OpenIddict 4.x until December 18, 2024 (12 months).
- $1,000/month sponsors get full support for OpenIddict 4.x until December 18, 2025 (24 months).
If you want to try out the latest features and bug fixes, there is a MyGet feed with nightly builds of OpenIddict.
To reference the OpenIddict MyGet feed, create a NuGet.config
file (at the root of your solution):
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<configuration>
<packageSources>
<add key="nuget" value="https://api.nuget.org/v3/index.json" />
<add key="openiddict" value="https://www.myget.org/F/openiddict/api/v3/index.json" />
</packageSources>
</configuration>
OpenIddict is actively maintained by Kévin Chalet. Contributions are welcome and can be submitted using pull requests.
Special thanks to our sponsors for their incredible support:
This project is licensed under the Apache License. This means that you can use, modify and distribute it freely. See http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0.html for more details.